Multiple Iranian drones used in deadly attack on Israeli-operated ship
Several Iranian drones were apparently used in a strike on an oil tanker operated by an Israeli-owned company, killing two on board, unnamed Israeli officials told the New York Times on Saturday.
The Israeli officials told the newspaper that the strike
earlier this week was apparently carried out by a number of Iranian drones that
slammed into the ship’s living quarters underneath the vessel’s command center
as it sailed off the coast of Oman in the Arabian Sea.
An unnamed United States official confirmed to the newspaper
that multiple drones were involved in the attack but it was as yet unknown how
many had hit the vessel.
An Israeli intelligence official also told the paper that
the timing of Thursday’s attack could mean that Iran was expanding its maritime
operations by apparently responding at sea to a land attack which Tehran blamed
on Israel.
Previously Iran carried out sea attacks only in response to
maritime operations it attributed to Israel.
State-owned Iranian news network Al-Alam, citing
“well-informed sources,” said the attack was in response to a reported Israeli
strike in Syria that killed “two resistance men” last week.
The strike on Thursday night on oil tanker Mercer Street
marks the first-known fatal attack, after years of assaults on commercial
shipping in the region linked to tensions with Iran.
Two ship crewmen, a British and Romanian national, died in
the attack — an unnamed senior Israeli official cited by Channels 12 and 13
news said on Friday that the Romanian fatality was apparently the captain,
while the British man was a security guard.
“This is an Iranian terror attack that killed two innocent
men, harming international shipping,” the official said.
The American military said on Saturday that after inspecting
the vessel, US Navy explosive experts believe a “drone strike” targeted the oil
tanker.
The American nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Ronald
Reagan and the guided missile destroyer USS Mitscher were escorting the Mercer
Street as it headed to a safe port, the US Navy’s Mideast-based 5th Fleet said
in a statement early Saturday.
“US Navy explosives experts are aboard to ensure there is no
additional danger to the crew, and are prepared to support an investigation
into the attack,” the 5th Fleet said. “Initial indications clearly point to a
[drone]-style attack.”
The 5th Fleet statement did not explain how it determined a
drone caused the damage, although it described its explosive experts finding
“clear visual evidence that an attack had occurred” aboard the Mercer Street.
The US military’s Central Command did not immediately
respond to a questions on the evidence.
Israel’s defense leadership convened on Friday night to
discuss what it believes to be an Iranian attack on the ship, as a senior
government source accused Tehran of “sowing destruction” and said it was
proving itself to be “a global problem.”
A senior Israeli government source said on condition of
anonymity that “Iran is sowing violence and destruction in every corner of the
region. They were so eager to attack an Israeli target that they’ve embroiled
themselves and incriminated themselves in the killing of foreign citizens.”
The source said that with a new hardline Iranian president
set to be sworn in, “the masks are coming off and no one can pretend they don’t
know the character of the Iranian regime.
“Iran isn’t just Israel’s problem, it is a global problem,
and its behavior endangers free global shipping and trade. Our campaign against
them will continue.”
In a statement on Friday night, Foreign Minister Yair Lapid
said he was in continuous contact with his British counterpart Dominic Raab and
had “noted to him the need to respond severely to the attack.”
“Iran is not just an Israeli problem, but an exporter of
terror, destruction and instability that hurt us all,” he said. “The world must
not be silent in the face of Iranian terror.”
“I’ve instructed the embassies in Washington, London and the
UN to work with their interlocutors in government and the relevant delegations
in the UN headquarters in New York,” Lapid tweeted.
In the wake of the attack, Defense Minister Benny Gantz
called an urgent discussion with Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Aviv
Kohavi and other defense officials on Friday.
An Israeli official cited by the Ynet news site hinted at
possible retaliation, saying it would be difficult for Israel to ignore the
latest attack.
Walla news cited an Israeli official saying, “The only
question is how and when we’ll respond.”
Analysts said the attack bore all the hallmarks of
tit-for-tat exchanges in the shadow war between Israel and Iran, in which
vessels linked to each nation have been targeted in waters around the Gulf.
The assault represented the worst-known maritime violence so
far in regional attacks on shipping since 2019. The US, Israel and others have
blamed the attacks on Iran amid the unraveling of Tehran’s nuclear deal with
world powers.
Zodiac Maritime is a London-based company belonging to
Israeli tycoon Eyal Ofer. Earlier this month, a United Arab Emirates-bound
vessel previously owned by Ofer’s company was struck in the northern Indian
Ocean.
The company said that while it operates the Liberia-flagged
“Mercer Street” oil tanker, the owner of the ship is Japanese.
It added on Friday that it was not aware of any other
injuries apart from the two crewmen who died.
“Our primary concern remains the safety and well-being of
everyone on board and all those affected by the situation. Details of the
incident are still being established, and an investigation into the incident is
currently underway,” the company added.
In recent months, Israel and Iran have accused each other of
attacking a number of merchant ships, damaging them with explosives. The
vessels in each case were only lightly damaged and there were no injuries in
the incidents.
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