Iran tankers zigzag amid US blockade
A quartet of Iran-linked tankers changed course in waters just outside the Strait of Hormuz, evidence that a reimposed US blockade on the Islamic Republic’s
A quartet of Iran-linked tankers changed course in waters just outside the Strait of Hormuz, evidence that a reimposed US blockade on the Islamic Republic’s shipping is once again squeezing Tehran.Three US-sanctioned fuel tankers U-turned, diverted or zig-zagged in the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea on Thursday, ship tracking shows. A fourth vessel, an oil supertanker, turned back when it was sailing toward the waterway from the Arabian Sea. At the same time, one non-Iranian oil carrier may have attempted in-bound transit through the strait.Also Read | US airstrikes on Iran appear to have damaged Chabahar portThe US restored a blockade against Iranian shipping on Tuesday, a step all but halted Tehran’s crude exports when it was imposed previously. At the same time, Iran has increasingly been targeting oil supertankers as they pass through a stretch of Hormuz through where US forces have been coordinating transits. Combined, the moves are adding to the risks of getting oil out of the Persian Gulf, or empty ships in to collect new cargoes.Since imposing the latest blockade, US forces have redirected three merchant ships, boarded a vessel for verification purposes, and disabled a tanker that failed to comply with instructions, US Central Command said in a social-media post late on Thursday.Also Read | Iran war and monsoons key risk for Indian economy, says RBI Governor Sanjay MalhotraThe amount of observable movements — in which ships keep their digital location beacons turned on — has collapsed as ships do everything possible to stay safe.
One oil supertanker appeared to be moving north toward Hormuz late on Thursday and has since turned off its signal, suggesting it may have attempted overnight transit.The locations of the disabled tanker, which was hit by US missiles deep in the Persian Gulf near Iran’s oil export terminal of Kharg Island, and the ship that was boarded, in the Gulf of Oman, point to a wider area of operations for the new blockade compared with the previous one. The very large crude carrier Vivian, also known as Titan, turned back on Wednesday when it had been sailing toward the Persian Gulf, and continued sailing away on Friday. The ship is under US sanctions for its role in helping Iran.The liquefied petroleum gas carrier Glendale was sailing in the Gulf of Oman at a steady pace into the Arabian Sea late Thursday when it abruptly made a U-turn, and came to a stop off the coast of Oman on Friday, according to ship-tracking data. Danuta I was sailing toward Sri Lanka, but had barely made it into the Arabian Sea on Thursday when it began moving in an unusual zig-zag fashion.