Iran launches new exercises
Iran has begun ground military exercises and
defiantly warned that it could cut off oil exports to "hostile"
European nations as tensions rise over suggestions that military strikes are an
increasing possibility if sanctions fail to rein in the Islamic Republic's
nuclear program. Tehran has stepped up its rhetoric as international pressure mounts over
allegations that it is seeking to develop atomic weapons, a charge it denies. Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei has issued stern warnings against any possible US or Israeli attacks
against Tehran's nuclear facilities. Western forces also have boosted their naval
presence in the Gulf led by the American aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln.
The new military manoeuvres came weeks after Iran rolled out its troops and arsenals
in an unprecedented display of military readiness, with 10 days of naval
manoeuvres that included the first threats to block Gulf oil tankers in early
January. Ground forces also were sent on winter war games - against what a Tehran military spokesman called a
"hypothetical enemy" - with US forces just over the border in Afghanistan. Plans for new Iranian naval games
in the Persian
Gulf off
the country's southern coast have been in the works for weeks. Iranian state
media reported the ground manoeuvres of the elite Revolutionary Guard started
Saturday near Jiroft, 745 miles (1200 kms) south of the capital Tehran. No more details were available,
but it appeared that they were small-scale exercises and not linked to the
planned major naval manoeuvres near the Strait of Hormuz, the route for one-fifth of the
world's crude oil. Iranian officials and lawmakers repeatedly have threatened
to close the strait, which funnels down to a waterway no wider than 30 miles (50
kms) at the mouth of the Gulf, in retaliation for sanctions that affect Iran's oil exports. But they have as yet
made no attempts to disrupt shipping through the waterway, and the US and other Western powers have
warned they would respond swiftly to any attempts at a blockade. Washington and
its allies fear Iran could use its uranium enrichment
labs - which make nuclear fuel - to eventually produce weapons-grade material. Tehran insists it only seeks reactors for
energy and medical research. So far, the West is relying primarily on the
threat of economic sanctions to pressure Iran over its nuclear program. Tehran has claimed that the most recent
move - EU sanctions approved on January 23, which include an oil embargo and
the freezing of central bank assets - will be ineffective, while members of Iran's parliament say they have drafted
a bill which would cut off the flow to Europe early, before it can find alternative
suppliers. Iran's Oil Minister Rostam Qassemi also
said on Saturday (local time) the Islamic Republic would "definitely"
cut off oil to "hostile" European countries, without specifying which
ones they were. However, he said Iran is moving toward reducing reliance
on oil revenues, a hint that Tehran is preparing for the worst. Oil
sales account for about 80 per cent of Iran's foreign revenues. Qassemi, the
oil minister, reiterated Iran's argument that the EU oil embargo
will not cripple Iran's economy, claiming that the
country already has identified new customers to replace the loss in European
sales that accounted for about 18 per cent of Iran's exports. "We've made the
necessary planning to deal with that. We have friends in the world and will
assist each other," he said. "We won't back down a single step under
political pressures and won't give up our right position even if we can't sell
a single barrel of oil." In contrast, he said, the ban would rebound on
oil consumers. "If Iran's oil is totally deleted from the
market, then a terrible tension will be created. The costs will be intolerable.
The option of imposing a total ban on Iran's crude exports is
unenforceable," he said. Qassemi also reinforced Iran's warning to Saudi Arabia and other fellow OPEC members
against boosting production to offset any potential drop in Tehran's crude exports, saying the cartel
should not be used as a political weapon against a member state.
Israel, for its part, has so far publicly backed the
efforts by the US and European Union for tougher
sanctions that target Iran's oil exports. But Israeli leaders
have urged even harsher measures and warn that military action remains a clear
option despite Western appeals to allow time for the economic pressures and
isolation to bear down on Iran. Khamenei, in a nationally
broadcast speech on Friday, staked out a hard line after suggestions by Israel that military strikes are an
increasing possibility if sanctions fail to rein in Iran's nuclear program. He pledged to
aid any nation or group that challenges Israel and said any military strikes would
damage US interests in the Middle East "10 times" more than they
would hurt Iran. The comments also may signal that Tehran's proxy forces - led by Lebanon's Islamic militant group Hezbollah
- could be given the green light to revive attacks on Israel as the showdown between the rivals
intensifies.
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