Iran released U.S. sailors in international waters
Iran released ten U.S. sailors on
Wednesday after holding them overnight, bringing a swift end to an
incident that had rattled nerves days ahead of the expected
implementation of a landmark nuclear accord between Tehran and world
powers.
DE-ESCALATION
Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) said it had freed the sailors
after determining they had entered Iranian territorial waters by
mistake. The sailors had been detained aboard two U.S. Navy patrol boats
in the Gulf on Tuesday.
"Our technical investigations showed the two U.S. Navy boats
entered Iranian territorial waters inadvertently," the IRGC said in a
statement carried by state television. "They were released in
international waters after they apologized," it added.
IRGC Rear Admiral Ali Fadavi had earlier said that the two U.S. Navy
boats entered Iranian territorial waters due to a broken navigation
system.
The
incident raised tensions between Iran and the United States, which,
along with other world powers, reached a deal last year under which Iran
will curb its nuclear activities in exchange for the lifting of
economic sanctions.
Some
conservatives in both countries, enemies since Iran's 1979 Islamic
revolution, have criticized the deal that is due to be implemented in
the coming days.
Iran's armed forces chief, Major General Hassan Firouzabadi, said the
incident should demonstrate Iranian strength to "troublemakers" in the
U.S. Congress, which has sought to put pressure on Iran after the
nuclear deal.
And at a presidential campaign rally
in the United States, Republican frontrunner Donald Trump, who accuses
President Barack Obama of being weak on foreign policy, described the
incident as "an indication of where the hell we're going".DE-ESCALATION
Attributing the boats' incursion into Iranian waters to a
navigation error marked a de-escalation in rhetoric. Earlier, the Guards
had said the boats were "snooping" in Iranian territory and said
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif had demanded an apology from
Washington.
The IRGC, the
Islamic Republic's praetorian guard, is highly suspicious of U.S.
military activity near Iran's borders and many senior officers suspect
Washington of pursuing regime change in Tehran.
The Guards operate land and naval units separate to the
regular armed forces and stage frequent wargames in the Gulf, which
separates Iran from its regional rival Saudi Arabia and a U.S. naval
base in Bahrain.
Last month, the U.S. Navy said an
IRGC vessel fired unguided rockets near the aircraft carrier USS Harry
S. Truman in the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping route for crude
oil that connects the Gulf to the Indian Ocean. Iran denied the vessel
had done so.
In
April 2015, the Guards seized a container ship belonging to Maersk, one
of the world's major shipping lines, in the Gulf because of a legal
dispute between the company and Iran. The ship and its 24 crew members
were released after 10 days.
The Guards have also seized British servicemen on two
occasions, in 2004 and 2007, and a civilian British yacht crew in 2009.
On each occasion the sailors were released unharmed after several days.
Comments