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Iran briefly seized US naval drone stranded in Persian Gulf to ensure maritime security: Nour News

This US Navy handout image shows a grab from a video showing an IRGC Navy support ship (L) towing a Saildrone Explorer unmanned surface vessel in the Persian Gulf on August 30, 2022. (Via AFP)

A website close to Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) sheds light on the circumstances surrounding the brief seizure by Iranian naval forces of a US unmanned surface vessel stranded in the Persian Gulf, saying the measure was taken to prevent possible maritime incidents and safeguard shipping lanes.

Nour News reported on Tuesday that the naval forces of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) took “timely action” earlier in the day to seize the US vessel, whose “navigational system had failed,” and began towing it with the aim of supporting safe and secure shipping in the Persian Gulf.

The measure was also taken to avert the kind of incidents that the report said had occurred several times over the past weeks.

Nour News also reported that the ship was released on the order of the Iranian support vessel’s commander and only after a US fleet arrived at the scene and was reminded that it must observe shipping security and risk-free navigation.

The report dismissed the “Hollywoodesque narrative” offered by the US Navy with the intention of “covering up some of its failures” against Iranian naval forces in the Persian Gulf.

The US Navy tried to portray the development as an unprovoked attempt by the IRGC to capture the military vessel.

It claimed it kept Iran from seizing a Saildrone Explorer — the uncrewed vessel — in the Persian Gulf after the 5th Fleet noticed a ship operated by Iran’s IRGC Navy towing the American vessel.

The USS Thunderbolt and a Sea Hawk helicopter based in Bahrain responded to the incident, US Naval Forces Central Command said, adding that the Iranian ship eventually disconnected its tow line and left the area.

In provocative comments on the issue, US Central Command (CENTCOM) chief Michael Erik Kurilla charged that the incident demonstrated “Iran’s continued destabilizing, illegal, and unprofessional activity in the Middle East.”

‘Iran will not be passive against troublemakers’

Reacting to those comments, an informed military source told Nour News that the illegitimate presence of US military forces in the Persian Gulf had always caused insecurity.

“This trend, recently [reinforced] by the usage of unmanned vessels, has created new problems for safe shipping in the region,” the source said.

“As in the past, we will not be inactive against measures that cause insecurity in the region and we will continue our legal duties in the framework of our inherent missions of protecting and securing shipping routes to prevent any insecurity and instability,” the unnamed source added.

The source further raised concerns about the recent pouring of the US Navy’s uncrewed vessels into the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman, reiterating that it threatens the security of shipping routes and has already led to a number of maritime incidents.


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