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Vietnam Confirms Iran Seized Its Oil Tanker As US Denies IRGC Claims

Iran International Newsroom
Nov 4, 2021, 09:49 GMT+0Updated: 17:28 GMT+1
Photo released by Iran's military showing the capture of a Vietnamese oil tanker. November 4, 2021
Photo released by Iran's military showing the capture of a Vietnamese oil tanker. November 4, 2021

Vietnam has been in talks with Iran over the seizure of a Vietnamese oil tanker off the Iranian coast, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Thursday.

"The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has held talks with the Iranian embassy in Hanoi, and the Vietnamese embassy in Iran has held talks with the Iranian authorities to verify information and settle the incident to ensure safety and humane treatment for Vietnamese citizens," foreign ministry spokeswoman Pham Thu Hang said at a regular press briefing.

The Iranian military claimed on Wednesday that "recently" the US Navy tried to seize Iranian oil from a tanker in the Sea of Oman by pumping the cargo into another tanker and carrying it away. The military further claimed that its Revolutionary Guard navy used helicopters to land forces on the second tanker and directed it to Iranian waters, despite attempts by the US Navy to intervene.

The military also published videos showing Iranian helicopters and navy speed boats taking over an oil tanker and guiding it to Iranian waters.

The Pentagon on Wednesday rejected the claims and the elaborate scenario described by the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) and Iran’s state-controlled media.

"I've seen the Iranian claims, they are absolutely totally false and untrue ... it's a bogus claim," Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters.

"The only seizing that was done was by Iran," Kirby said.

American officials said that in reality Iranian forces had seized a Vietnamese-flagged oil tanker last month, and US naval forces were just monitoring the situation.

While Iranian media identified the seized tanker as "SOTHYS" -- the name tanker tracking websites give for a Vietnam-flagged vessel -- state TV aired footage showing a red tanker surrounded by about 10 speedboats. It also included a recording of what TV said was the encounter between Iranian and US forces. The voices heard were an Iranian officer telling a US warship not to get close and an American voice replying that we are conducting normal operations in international waters. This sort of encounters happens routinely in the Persian Gulf region.

No incident of the US Navy trying to seize oil form a tanker in October and a confrontation between Iranian and American warships was reported earlier by the two sides or other regional countries.

Separately, American officials told Reuters that several drones, believed to be Iranian, had come close to the US Navy amphibious assault ship Essex in the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours.

The Iranian claims and the drone activity coincided with the November 4 anniversary of the seizure of the US embassy and diplomats in Tehran in 1979, which lasted 444 days. Iran celebrates the anniversary as a symbol of opposition to the United States. Iranian state-controlled media all carried the IRGC’s triumphant claims of humiliating the US Navy.

With reporting by Reuters

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Khamenei Office In London Receives £109,000 From UK Government

Nov 4, 2021, 08:24 GMT+0

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s office in London received more than £100,000 in coronavirus aid from the British government, The Times reported on Wednesday.

Official figures filed last month show that the Islamic Center of England received £109,476 from the coronavirus job retention scheme, a government program to protect jobs amid pandemic disruptions.

The Islamic Republic, controlled by Khamenei, does not allow the presence of many international institutions or non-governmental organizations in Iran, but it directly and indirectly has a network of associations and offices in the world, including Western countries.

The issue with Britain is starker, as Iran is detaining Iranian-British dual citizens on charges of sedition and espionage without due process of law.

Although Khamenei’s representative offices abroad are presented as his religious envoys, they in fact carry political weight and try to project influence both within Iranian and the wider Shiite Muslim communities in host countries.

Legally, the Islamic Center of England might have been eligible for the special government aid, but politically the episode can have repercussion in the United Kingdom, which democratically allows residents to form associations and establish foundations.

Moscow, Tehran Deny Claim Of Deal To Block Iran Extracting Caspian Gas

Nov 4, 2021, 07:25 GMT+0

Russia’s Tehran embassy denied Wednesday there was any agreement between Iran and Russia to block Iranian gas extraction in the Caspian Sea as long as Iran’s demand for gas remains lower than its output.

A tweet from the embassy said that the claim, made by Adeshir Dadras, chairman of Iran’s Compressed Natural Gas syndicate, was untrue and that the embassy was authorized to declare it “a deliberate provocation aimed at undermining friendly Russian-Iranian relations.”

Dadras’ assertion, made in an interview with the Iranian Labour News Agency (ILNA) Monday, was also rejected Tuesday by Kazem Jalali, Iran’s ambassador in Moscow, who referred to rumors being spread by those trying to undermine Tehran’s relations with Moscow. It was refuted too by the main developer of the Chalos natural gas structure in the Caspian, Iran’s Khazar Exploration and Production Company (Kepco).

In June when announcing that development of Chaloushad been approved, Emad Hosseini, Kepco chairman, said the field held 30 percent of developable natural gas reserves of all Caspian Sea littoral countries and could, following $19 billion in investment and the lifting of United States sanctions, meet at least 20 percent of Europe's natural gas needs.

The claim gave rise to much criticism of relations with Russia from Iranian social media users who accused the government of political and economic concessions to Russia.

In August, an article by Simon Watkins for OilPrice.com, an energy news website, claimed that the size, price, and destination of this gas would be coordinated with Russia to boost "the energy power that Moscow has over Europe."

Watkins claimed Iran had agreed to “de facto control over where and at what price the vast majority of Iran’s gas is sold" as part of discussions over a 20-year cooperation agreement with Russia, similar to the 25-year pact signed with China in March.

The agreement, Watkins suggested, would enable Russia to head off any potential challenge to its own place in the European market – and presumably keep up gas prices to both Russia’s and Iran’s benefit – posed by a new supply of Iranian gas once US sanctions ended.

"Controlling this potential threat to its own dominance over gas supplies into Europe – and the considerable geopolitical power over the continent that comes with this – has been a major concern of Moscow’s for many years," Watkins wrote.

With 17.9 percent, Iran has the second-largest global gas reserves after Russia, which holds 18.1 percent. According to OilPrice, the wider Caspian basin area, including onshore and offshore fields, is conservatively estimated to have in proven and probable reserves around 48 billion barrels of oil, around 3 percent of world reserves, and 292 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, around 4 percent of the global total.

IMF Data Show Iran's Currency Reserves Rise As Oil Exports Continue

Nov 3, 2021, 17:35 GMT+0
•
Mardo Soghom

The IMF in a recent report showed that Iran’s foreign currency reserves increased from a low of $12.4 billion in 2020 to a projected $31.4 billion for 2021.

The October 2021 Regional Economic Outlook: Middle East and Central Asia report of the International Monetary Fund contains a table of countries with their foreign reserves listed since 2000. Iran’s foreign reserves in 2018 was $122.5 billion and in 2020 had dropped to $12.4 billion.

When the United States withdrew from the 2015 nuclear agreement known as the JCPOA in May 2018 and began restricting Iran’s oil exports and international banking relations, the Islamic Republic dipped into its foreign reserves to make up for the loss of oil revenues.

In its more than 40-year history, the Islamic government has remained heavily dependent on oil exports to finance at least half of its known government budget, plus its secret military, intelligence and regional alliances.

The ‘maximum pressure’ campaign launched by the Trump administration gradually reduced Iran’s oil exports and kept them at a historically low level of around an average of 200,000 barrels a day from May 2019 to late 2020. Before the sanctions, Iran exported were more than 2 million barrels a day.

In September 2020, candidate Joe Biden announced that he opposed Trump’s decision to leave the JCPOA and wanted to return to the deal if elected. This meant that he had to lift at least some of the sanctions. Reports came a while later that Iran’s oil shipments had increased to 500,000 bpd or more.

It is difficult to say with certainty that the additional oil sales have boosted Iran’s currency reserves from 12 to 31 billion dollars in one year, but they must have helped.

In April as negotiations to restore the JCPOA started in Vienna, Reuters reported that Iran was selling around 500,000 bpd, much less than before the sanctions but enough to generate at least $9 billion annually. We can never be certain of exactly how much oil Iran is exporting clandestinely and how much money it is making. Perhaps it is more than $9 billion, as some estimated that exports had reached 900,000 bpd in some months. China is the main importer, although officially its customs data show no oil imports from Iran.

Critics say that the Biden administration is not rigorously enforcing US sanctions and has allowed China to buy Iranian oil, disguised as shipments from other countries, pretending not to know the real origin of cargoes it receives.

Iranian tanker departing with fuel for the Hezbollah in Lebanon. August 2021
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Iranian tanker departing with fuel for the Hezbollah in Lebanon. August 2021

Gabriel Noronha, former Special Advisor for the Secretary's Iran Action Group at the State Department during Trump told Iran International that “For months, the Biden Administration has seen and ignored Iranian oil sales to China, which has now provided Iran around $10 billion in additional revenue. The most it has done is threaten sanctions against China, but shown no willingness to actually do so. They mistakenly believe that China's cooperation is needed to get back into the JCPOA, when it is really a question for Iran to answer. It is very disappointing that this administration has taken such a naive approach to China's relationship with Iran.”

Iranian experts have argued that China is paying little cash for the oil it buys from Tehran due to US banking sanctions, and instead it sends goods via middlemen, who make huge profits. But the mystery of the IMF estimate remains in place. Without oil revenues, Tehran could not have boosted its reserves.

Fars news agency affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard insisted in October that China is buying oil from Iran,

Noronha blames the Biden Administration for not fully enforcing US sanctions. Iran has left the JCPOA multilateral talks in Vienna since June and has not committed to a date for resuming negotiations. Meanwhile, it is enriching uranium to up to 60 percent purity that has no civilian use.

“Instead of getting a better deal or depriving the regime of funds for its nuclear program and terrorism, the Biden Administration has obtained zero concessions from the regime in its 10 months of appeasement,” Noronha says.

Ultraconservative Iran Lawmaker Lashes Raisi For Nepotism, Blunders

Nov 3, 2021, 13:55 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

An influential conservative lawmaker in Iran criticized Tuesday what he alleged was excessive influence of the son-in-law of President Ebrahim Raisi (Raeesi).

In a speech on the floor of parliament, Mahmoud Ahmadi-Bighash, who served as the governor of Khorasan Province in former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's administration, suggested that "all happenings and appointments" in the government needed approval from by Meghdad Nili, the president’s "beloved and precious" son-in-law.

Ahmadi-Bighash, who is a member of the Iranian parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, charged that top governments appointments were based on the “costly occurrence” of "excessive reliance on a closed circle of Imam Sadegh University alumni,” including executive appointments that “wiped out the influence of minister or ministers.”

Nili is an alumnus of Imam Sadegh as well as the founder of Raja News website, which is headed by his brother Meysam Nili. The website is close to the Paydari Front, a conservative group calling itself ‘revolutionary’, led by Sadegh Mahsouli, an interior minister during the presidency of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (2005-13).

The harsh criticism of Raisi is unprecedented in a parliament dominated by conservatives and hardliners who are from the same political persuasion as the president and backed his candidacy during the June campaign.

After backing Raisi in June’s presidential elections, the Paydari Front was disappointed when Raisi nominated as interior minister Esmail Khatib rather than a member of the front.

Ahmadi-Bighash, who was governor of Khorasan province when Ahmadinejad was president, also slammed Raisi’s provincial visits to various parts of the country, which he said lacked planning and goals.

"Your direct engagement with people to find out about problems is the worst calamity,” he said. “Doesn't the government know where the problems lie and where it is standing itself so that it has to ask people what their problems are?” It was obvious to all, Ahmadi-Bighash opined, that such problems arose from "poisonous management, executive and supervisory bodies."

The parliamentarian also attacked the president for gaffes and errors in public speeches and interviews. "Is there such a scarcity of academics and politicians in the country that there aren't any prominent university professors in the president's office to write a few words for you to read at official occasions?” he asked. “To prevent you from making so much feeble, controversial, unscientific and unfounded statements?"

Reformist media has recently made Raisi the butt of jokes, as it once did Ahmadinejad, for supposedly lacking refinement or education. Etemad newspaper in a commentary recently claimed blunders would destroy Raisi’s self-confidence.

Ahmadi-Bighash applied the term "deldadegan" (‘smitten by love’) to Raisi's administration, evoking a rhyme with “delvapasan” (‘the concerned’), a word reformists widely used during Hassan Rouhani's presidency to describe those opposing Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

Iran Claims US Navy Tried To Seize Its Oil But IRGC Navy Intervened

Nov 3, 2021, 11:37 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

Iran claimed Wednesday that “recently” the United States tried to seize Iranian oil in the Sea of Oman, but the IRGC Navy intervened and repossessed the oil.

The vague report first by state media, was followed by a Revolutionary Guard statement repeating the media report with little details added, such as which vessels were involved.

The report said that the US Navy stopped a tanker carrying Iranian oil and transferred the cargo to another vessel. However, The Revolutionary Guard using helicopter landing seized that tanker and brought it back to Iranian territorial waters.

"With the timely and authoritative action of the Guards naval forces, the US terrorist Navy's operation to steal Iranian oil in the Sea of Oman failed," Iran's Guards said.

The IRGC said the incident took place on October 25.

Reuters reported that US officials speaking on condition of anonymity said that the Iranian report was not true and there had been no US attempt to seize a tanker.

The American officials said that in reality Iranian forces had seized a Vietnamese-flagged oil tanker last month and US naval forces were just monitoring the situation.

The report further claimed that the US Navy tried to intervene and stop the movement of the vessel by using helicopters and warships but “with the decisive intervention of IRGC” forces were unable to block the tanker’s route.

The United States or regional countries have not reported any incident recently.

The latest maritime incident dates to August 3, when Reuters quoted three “maritime security forces” as saying “Iranian-backed forces” had seized a tanker off the coast of UAE. The vessel was identified as the Panama-registered Asphalt Princess. One day later, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO), the Royal Navy information service for shipping, reported that a potential hijack incident off the coast of the United Arab Emirates was “complete,” suggesting boarders had left the tanker.

The Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh, at the time said Iran was “ready to deliver help and to provide a close investigation of the matter.” He implied that recent incidents with shipping in the Gulf of Oman and the Persian Gulf were “very suspicious.” Iran's senior armed forces spokesman, Abolfazl Shekarchi on the same day the incident was reported criticized "a kind of psychological warfare…setting the stage for new bouts of adventurism.”

The IRGC said video evidence of the alleged incident will be issued as the nature of the incident remains shrouded in mystery.

Iran has been shipping oil to Asian destinations despite US sanctions. China has increased its crude imports from Iran, although the cargoes are not officially registered as having originated in Iran.

The Trump administration seized a large shipment of Iranian fuel to Venezuela in August 2020, saying that the cargo belonged to the IRGC, a designated terrorist organization. The fuel was later sold on the open market.

Tensions are high in the region as nuclear negotiations with Iran are at an impasse, with Tehran having so far not returned to multilateral talks in Vienna suspended since June.

The US flew a B-1B bomber over the Middle East on Saturday, which was the first flyover since the Trump administration sent B-52 bombers several times into the region.

Allied fighter planes, including from Israel, escorted the B-1B bomber. Biden sending a B1-B bomber into the region allows him to send "a clear message of reassurance" to regional allies, the US Air Force's Central Command said in a Twitter post.

Updated at 19:09 GMT