U.S. ship fires at fishing boat
A U.S. Navy fuel-resupply ship that had just
passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf opened fire at a
50-foot fishing boat moving toward it, killing one person and wounding
three others, all Indian citizens, U.S. officials said.
A
security team aboard the Rappahannock, which refuels warships, fired a
.50-caliber machine gun Monday after the smaller boat "disregarded
warnings and rapidly approached" about 10 miles off Jebel Ali port in
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, according to the Navy's 5th Fleet, based in
nearby Bahrain.
U.S. officials said the incident was under
investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service and Dubai
police. But as details emerged, it appeared the fishing boat had been
heading into port and had strayed too close to a Navy ship on high
alert, rather than attempting an attack. U.S. officials said the
fishermen ignored warnings by radio, loudspeakers and flashing lights
before the Navy security team opened fire.
The
incident highlighted the rising tensions between the U.S. and Iran over
the narrow strait, a choke point for much of the world's oil shipments
from the Middle East. Navy vessels are on special alert for small craft,
which Iran has used to shadow and sometimes harass ships in the Gulf,
and have permission to use lethal force to halt boats that draw too
close.
In October 2000, Al-Qaida suicide
bombers set off a rubber boat packed with explosives beside the Cole, a
guided-missile destroyer, killing 17 sailors, while it was refueling in
the Yemen port of Aden. Sailors aboard the Cole did not have permission
to open fire in port unless fired upon first, a rule the Navy changed
after the attack.
U.S. officials said the
Rappahannock was heading into Jebel Ali when crew members saw the
smaller boat heading toward it from about 1,200 yards away. A civilian
crew sails the Rappahannock, but a Navy security team is aboard to
protect the ship.
"The U.S. crew repeatedly
attempted to warn the vessel's operators to turn away from their
deliberate approach," a Navy statement said.
U.S.
officials said the fishermen ignored warnings by radio, loudspeakers
and flashing lights before the Navy security team opened fire. In
addition to the four casualties, who were Indian citizens, two people
aboard the boat from the United Arab Emirates were not injured.
The
Pentagon also announced Monday it was sending the aircraft carrier John
C. Stennis to the Middle East four months early, which will keep two
U.S. carriers and their escort ships in the Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf
into next year.
By sailing early, the Stennis will be able to replace the departing Enterprise later this year, a naval official said.
A
second aircraft carrier, the Eisenhower, recently went through the Suez
Canal and is being replaced in the Arabian Sea by the Abraham Lincoln.
The
U.S. has built up air, sea and land forces in and near the Persian Gulf
since last year to deter any Iranian attempts to close the strategic
strait, and to be in position if conflict breaks out over Iran's nuclear
development program.
Adm. Jonathan Greenert,
chief of naval operations, said last month that Iran's navy recently has
avoided confrontations with American ships in the Gulf, calling their
behavior "professional and courteous." But other U.S. officials warned
of danger from the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, Iran's
paramilitary force, which operates missile-launching speedboats.
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