Date: 16 October 2019 , 19:48
News ID: 6678

Arab Media: Attack on Iranian Tanker Indicates Failure of US Sanctions Policy

The recent attack on an Iranian oil tanker in the Red Sea indicated that the US is disappointed at the efficiency of its maximum pressure and oil sanction policy against Tehran, a leading Arab news outlet said Wednesday.
Arab Media: Attack on Iranian Tanker Indicates Failure of US Sanctions Policy

The Arabic-language al-Mayadeen news channel wrote on its website that the US-led front feels hopeless and desperate vis a vis Iran's crude export power despite all the pressures and harsh US sanctions against the nation.

"Continued voyage of the Iranian oil tankers in international waterways shows the US failure," it added.

Al-Mayadeen noted as US President Donald Trump will start the last year of his presidency later this month, he feels increasingly under pressure to show the results of his pressures against Iran, therefore, Washington resorts to every means to prevent Tehran's exports of its oil to foreign states.

Iran's oil tanker, SABITI, belonging to the National Iranian Tanker Company (NITC) sustained damage to the body when it was hit by two explosions 60 miles from the Saudi port city of Jeddah.

The NITC said on Friday that SABITI Oil Tanker was sailing towards the Persian Gulf.

The explosions have reportedly hit the vessel’s hull, causing heavy damages to the vessel’s two main tanks, which has resulted in an oil spill in the Red Sea. The spill has currently stopped, according to officials.

It said the crew members are currently safe and none of them has been harmed in the explosions. The tanker is currently in a stable condition, the statement added.

The NITC later dismissed the reports that the vessel has caught fire, according to the Iranian oil ministry.

The explosions came a few months after Iranian oil tanker Happiness-1 faced “engine failure” and lost its control with 26 on board off the Red Sea port of Jeddah, and was later transferred to the port city for maintenance.

According to Iranian officials, the incident had occurred on April 30 while Happiness I was on its way to the Suez Canal, and that water had leaked into the tanker’s engine room.

The Saudis refused to let the vessel leave and demanded that Iran pay $200,000 a day for maintaining the vessel in the port, some $10 million in total. It was finally released on July 20 and returned home.

Also in June, two large tankers were hit by explosions in the Sea of Oman. The Marshal Islands-flagged Front Altair and the Panama-flagged Japanese-owned Kokuka Courageous were hit in suspected attacks in the Gulf of Oman.

At that time, Iranian rescue workers rushed to the assistance of two tankers hit by the unspecified accidents in the Sea of Oman, transferring all of their 44 crew members to its southern shores.

The Marshall Islands-flagged tanker was, according to reports, heading from Qatar to Taiwan when a fire broke out on the tanker approximately 25 miles from Iran’s Jask port city.

The Panama-flagged ship was also en route from a port in Saudi Arabia towards Singapore when a fire broke out approximately 28 miles from Jask.

source: Fars News