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US,
others to conduct Gulf naval maneuvers off Iran
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com 10 28 06
The United States will lead international naval maneuvers in the Gulf
off Iran's west coast next week aimed at fighting weapons proliferation,
a US State Department official said Friday.
The announcement came in the context of tensions over Iran's nuclear
program and reports of possible terror threats against oil installations
in the Gulf.
On Monday, Australia, Bahrain, Britain, France, Italy and the United
States will participate in the exercises that will simulate inspection
of ships carrying illicit weapons-related materials, the official said.
Another 19 countries in the US-led Proliferation Security Initiative
(PSI) will take a minor part in the exercise.
There have been 24 PSI exercises since US President George W. Bush launched
the initiative in May 2003, but it will be the first time an exercise
is conducted in the Gulf and the first time countries in the Middle
East will participate.
In addition to Bahrain's active role, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab
Emirates will send observers to the mission.
"This is an exercise that will test our capacity to intercept illicit
traffic," said Robert Joseph, US under secretary of state for arms
control and international security.
The exercise will practice interdicting a "target vessel carrying
materials useful to a nuclear weapon program," destined for a "country
of proliferation concern in the region," a State Department official
explained.
Although the official, who insisted on anonymity, did not mention Iran,
the maneuvers come as the five powers of the United Nations Security
Council mull a resolution to hit Iran with sanctions for ignoring a
UN call to halt uranium enrichment.
The US and key European states believe Iran's enrichment program is
designed to supply material for a nuclear weapon, while Tehran insists
its fuel processing is for peaceful purposes.
The maneuvers also will come as Western naval forces in the Gulf between
Iran and Saudi Arabia said they were on alert for possible terror attacks
in the region.
Officials in Saudi Arabia earlier said oil installations in the country
were a "high-probability potential target", but tight security
measures were in place.
"Coalition forces are taking prudent, precautionary measures and
focusing maritime security operations in the Gulf on these possible
threats," Lieutenant Commander Charlie Brown, a Bahrain-based spokesman
for the Iraq coalition naval forces, told AFP.
Brown said the measures were "in response to recent threats to
oil infrastructure in the Gulf, including public statements by Al-Qaeda
leadership".
He declined to go into details when asked if the threats were aimed
specifically against installations in Saudi Arabia, which operates the
world's largest oil terminal at Ras Tannura on the Gulf.
Saudi Arabia pumps more than nine million barrels of oil per day and
sits on a quarter of global oil reserves.
Joseph said the US knows from Iranian news reports that "the exercise
got the attention of Iran."
However, a US official insisted that the joint maneuvers were planned
months ago and not timed with the new pressure on Iran over its nuclear
program.
On Thursday the UN Security Council's five permanent members -- Russia,
Britain, France, China and the US-- met with Germany to discuss sanctions
on Iran for its nuclear program.
The resolution, drafted by Britain, France and Germany, provides for
a freeze on assets related to Iran's nuclear and missile programs as
well as travel bans on nuclear and weapons scientists involved in those
programs.
The naval exercises also evoke recent UN sanctions voted against North
Korea for its first-ever nuclear test, sanctions which call for the
inspection of ship cargoes going in and out of North Korea when they
are suspected of carrying nuclear and weapons-related materials.
AFP
272302 GMT 10 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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