Shortly after the crews of the two tankers attacked this week in the Gulf of Oman evacuated their stricken vessels, the ships that rescued them were surrounded by Iranian military boats and told to transfer the mariners into their custody, according to declassified U.S. intelligence reports obtained on Friday by CBS News.
U.S. intel says Iran tried to pick up crews from tankers attacked in Gulf of Oman
One of the civilian rescue ships eventually complied with the Iranian military’s request. The other did not. The new details help to paint a picture of what happened Thursday in the Gulf, near the vital shipping channel of the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a third of the world’s oil supply passes.The U.S. has accused Iran of carrying out the attacks on the tankers — the second similar incident blamed on Iran in a month. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called it “the latest in a series of attacks started by Iran and its surrogates against American and allied interests” aimed at “escalating tension.”
He said the U.S. would defend its forces and interests in the region but gave no specifics about any plans for retaliation, and he took no questions.A U.S. defense official quickly dismissed an Iranian claim on Thursday, soon after the attacks, that Iran sent search teams that rescued 44 sailors from the two vessels. The official told CBS News that claim was “patently false,” and that it was an American destroyer, the USS Bainbridge, that picked up 21 crew members from one of the vessels.The intelligence reports obtained by CBS News on Friday include a readout from the crew of the Hyundai Dubai, an oil tanker that came to the rescue when the stricken Front Altair issued a distress call after an explosion on Thursday. The crew of the Norwegian-owned Altair came aboard the Hyundai Dubai, according to the detailed readout from the rescuing vessel’s crew.About 10 minutes later, the Hyundai Dubai “was surrounded by Iranian military vessels who demanded the Ship’s Master turn over the M/V FRONT ALTAIR mariners,” according to the readout.The captain of the vessel contacted his company’s management, which told him to refuse the Iranian request, but the readout says he “stated he felt like he had no choice but to comply with Iranian demands” and he did hand the Front Altair’s crew over to the Iranian vessels. The sailors, most of them Russian and Filipino, were taken to Iran and remained in Iranian custody, the Front Altair’s owner Frontline told Reuters on Friday. The other tanker that came under attack on Thursday was the Japanese-owned Kokuka Courageous, which issued a distress call after sustaining an explosion that caused a fire in its engine room.The readout from the crew of the Kokuka said a Dutch vessel responded and positioned itself to inspect the damage to the tanker.