Jan 8, 2008 9:30 pm US/Eastern
Video: Iran Threatens To "Explode" Ships
WASHINGTON (CBS News) ―
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A map shows the Strait of Hormuz, which connects the Indian and Pacific Oceans.
CBS
Small Iranian fast boats swarmed around U.S. warships
in the Persian Gulf, and a man speaking heavily accented English
threatened, "I am coming to you. ... You will explode after ...
minutes," according to a video released Tuesday by the Pentagon.
The Iranian boats appeared to ignore repeated warnings from the U.S. ships, including horn blasts and radio transmissions.
In a four-minute, 20-second video, shot from the bridge of the
destroyer USS Hopper, the small boats - including a bright blue one -
can be seen racing near the wake the U.S. ships and crossing close to
each other.
From the Hopper's bridge, after spotting the approaching Iranian
boats, a Navy crew member says over the radio: "This is coalition
warship. I am engaged in transit passage in accordance with
international law. Intend no harm."
Often uneven and shaky, the video condenses what Navy officials
have said was a 20-minute or so clash. It ends with a blank screen, as
only the audio of the Navy's final warning can be heard, just after the
voice warns that they are coming.
"Inbound small craft: You are approaching a coalition warship
operating in international waters. Your identity in unknown; your
intentions are unclear," the unidentified crew member says. He then
cautions the Iranians that if they do no steer clear they will be
"subject to defensive measures."
"Request that you alter course immediately to remain clear," the crew member says.
The Americans couldn't believe what they heard next,
CBS News correspondent Kimberly Dozier reports.
After a pause, the man with the accent issues a final threat: "You will explode after (indecipherable) minutes."
Earlier Tuesday, Iran's Revolutionary Guards corps denied that its
boats sent threatening messages to the U.S. Navy convoy, and it
defended its right to ask American vessels to identify themselves.
The Guards have said their boats approached the convoy early Sunday
and asked the U.S. ships to identify themselves, then allowed them to
continue into the Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz, a prime Middle
East oil-shipping lane.
"No threatening messages were exchanged," state television quoted an identified Revolutionary Guards official as saying Tuesday.
American officials said the
Iranian boats harassed the U.S. vessels
and threatened to blow them up, calling the incident a dangerous
provocation as President George W. Bush prepared to leave Tuesday on
his first major trip to the Middle East.
The White House called the alleged incident "a reckless and provocative act," reports
CBS News correspondent Mark Knoller.
A top U.S. Navy commander in the region said Monday that the
Iranian boats radioed a message "to the effect that they were closing
(on) our ships and that the ships would explode - the U.S. ships would
explode," said Vice Adm. Kevin Cosgriff, the commander of U.S. 5th
Fleet, which patrols the Gulf and is based at nearby Bahrain.
The Pentagon said five small Iranian boats repeatedly "charged"
three U.S. warships - cruiser USS Port Royal, destroyer USS Hopper and
frigate USS Ingraham - on what the U.S. Navy called a routine passage
in international waters.
It also said the Iranian vessels dropped boxes in the water and
warned the U.S. ships that they would set off "explosions," a U.S.
Defense Department official said.
On Monday, Iran's Foreign Ministry called the incident a "normal"
encounter between the two countries' ships and said it had been
resolved.
U.S. Navy and Iranian officials have said in the past that vessels
from the two rival nations frequently come into contact in the waters
of the narrow, heavily trafficked Gulf. They often communicate by radio
to avoid incidents.
But the latest incident was the first time U.S. officials have spoken of such a direct threat from Iranian boats.
On Tuesday, senior Revolutionary Guards commander Ali Reza Tangsiri
was quoted as saying Iran had the right to ask any ships to identify
themselves upon entering or leaving the Persian Gulf.
"It is a basic responsibility of patrolling units of the
Revolutionary Guards to take necessary interception measures toward any
vessels entering into the waters of the Persian Gulf," Tangsiri said,
according to the Mehr news agency.
"We are entitled to use our definite right in the Strait of Hormuz
to take controlling measures in relation to the entry of any vessel
into the Persian Gulf," he was quoted as saying.
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