Iran
has called off a deployment of warships to the Atlantic Ocean, the
semi-official Fars news agency said on Sunday, shelving plans for its
vessels to approach U.S. maritime borders in response to the U.S. navy's
presence in the Gulf. A senior Iranian naval
commander was quoted in February as saying that several warships would
be sent towards U.S. maritime borders in the Atlantic although the
Pentagon said at the time that it was not concerned and that many
countries operated in the ocean's international waters. But
on Sunday, Fars quoted Navy commander Admiral Habibollah Sayyari as
saying: "Due to a change in schedule, the battle Group-29 of the naval
forces of the Iranian navy will not head to the open waters of the
Atlantic Ocean and the mission will possibly be given to another group." He
gave no reason for the decision but said warships' missions were likely
to change "depending on the situation in the region", such as a rise in
piracy in the Gulf of Aden. "So
(the) Group-29, which consists of the Sabalan destroyer, Khark logistics
carrier and two helicopters... will not go to the Atlantic Ocean and
will return home within days," Sayyari was quoted as saying. The
United States and its allies regularly stage naval exercises in the
Gulf, saying they want to ensure freedom of navigation in the waterway
through which 40 percent of the world's seaborne oil exports passes. Iran,
whose entire 1,800 km (1,120 miles) southern border runs along the Gulf
and the adjacent Gulf of Oman, has often said it could block the Strait
of Hormuz, which connects the two waters, if Tehran came under military
attack over its disputed nuclear program.
Iran scraps plan to send warships to Atlantic: Fars
Reuters
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