Strait of Hormuz Incident, ‘unduly provocative’ 5th Fleet Commander

January 9, 2008

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LibNOT.com believes that the Iranian “speedboat boys” didn’t think they were at the Hamptons and late for a “cafe latte” party. These guys were looking for a fight!

The question remains, “why now?”

Was the Iranian Revolutionary Guard hoping that a confrontation would end in the destruction of the speedboats and the death of it’s occupants? Is it because President Bush is in route to the Middle East and anything that could embarrass the USA would be a good thing? Could a confrontation with the 5th Fleet that resulted in gunfire help take some of the pressure off Ahmadinejad and his failed economic and domestic policies? Is the recently reported disagreement(s) between Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the apparent marginalizing of Ahmadinejad causing dangerous, far reaching decisions to be made?

Or….can it be that the Americans were on the eve of an important presidential election primary?

There’s probably a “yes” to some degree to all of the above, but now….what are these loose cannons going to do next?

Admiral Details Iranian Challenge to U.S. Ships

By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Jan. 7, 2008 – The commander of the U.S. 5th Fleet in the Middle East today called the behavior of Iranian Revolutionary Guard boats that buzzed three U.S. Navy vessels in the Strait of Hormuz yesterday “unduly provocative.”

Navy Vice Adm. Kevin J. Cosgriff, who also commands U.S. Naval Forces Central Command, briefed Pentagon reporters via video teleconference from his headquarters in Manama, Bahrain.

He said the USS Port Royal, USS Hopper, USS Ingraham were inbound to the Persian Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz yesterday morning. The ships were in the midst of a routine transit in the early daylight hours, the admiral said. Five Iranian Revolutionary Guard high-speed craft came from the north and approached the U.S. ships.

“The five boats approached the U.S. formation on its starboard bow in international waters slightly inside the Gulf from the apex of the strait,” Cosgriff said.

The Iranian boats broke into two groups and went on both sides of the U.S. formation. “The groups maneuvered aggressively in the direction of the U.S. ships,” Cosgriff said.

U.S. captains called on the radio and sounded the ships’ horns to warn the Iranians off, he said. “The (U.S.) ships received a radio call that was threatening to our ships to the effect that they were closing our ships and that the U.S. ships would explode,” Cosgriff said.

Subsequently, U.S. sailors observed two of the Iranian boats dropping objects in the water generally in the path of the USS Ingraham. “These objects were white box-like objects that floated,” the admiral said. “Obviously the Ingraham passed by safely.”

The boats maneuvered close astern, and after 30 minutes they returned in the direction from which they came, back toward Iranian territorial waters. The Iranian boats approached within 500 yards of the U.S. ships, the admiral said.

“It was transit passage in international waters incidental to a routing inbound transit of the Strait of Hormuz,” Cosgriff said. “The U.S. ships were clearly marked. It was daylight, (with) decent visibility.

“The behavior of the Iranian ships was unnecessary,” he continued, “without due regard to safety of navigation and unduly provocative in the aggregate of their maneuvers, the radio call and the dropping of objects in the water.”

The admiral praised the U.S. ships’ crews, saying they stepped through procedures carefully, with good discipline and with due regard for all the factors. “I was very proud of their performance and the training they received,” Cosgriff said.

Biographies:
Vice Adm. Kevin J. Cosgriff, USN

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