US Does Not Seek War with Iran- Mike Pompeo
US Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo has said the United States does not seek a war with Iran,
amid growing tensions between the two countries.
Speaking in
Russia, Mr Pompeo vowed to keep pressuring Iran to behave like a "normal
country".
Tensions
have escalated after four tankers were damaged off the United Arab Emirates on
Sunday.
US
investigators believe Iran or groups it supports were involved but no evidence
of Iran's role has emerged.
Mr Pompeo,
who held talks with Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in the Russian city
of Sochi, said the US "fundamentally" did not seek a conflict with
Iran.
"We
have also made clear to the Iranians that if American interests are attacked,
we will most certainly respond in an appropriate fashion."
Mr Pompeo
said he had urged Russia to end its support for President Nicolás Maduro in
Venezuela but Mr Lavrov rejected this, saying the US threats against Mr Maduro
were undemocratic
He also said
he had warned Russia against interference in the next US presidential election,
in 2020
Describing
the talks as "frank and useful", Mr Lavrov said he hoped that tumult
over allegations of Russian influence in US elections would die down
Few details
have been released about the incident, which is said to have taken place early
on Sunday within UAE territorial waters in the Gulf of Oman, east of the
emirate of Fujairah.
Four
commercial ships had been targeted in a "sabotage attack" near
Fujairah port, just outside the Strait of Hormuz, the UAE foreign ministry
said.
There were
no casualties but Saudi Arabia said two of its ships had suffered
"significant damage". Another tanker was Norwegian-registered while
the fourth was reportedly UAE-flagged.
US military
investigators discovered large holes in all of the ships and believe they
were caused by explosive charges, the Associated Press reported quoting an
unnamed official. They did not explain how the damage was linked to Iran.
Compared
with previous attacks on shipping in the Middle East - the USS Cole in 2000,
the Limburg tanker in 2002 and more recent attacks off Yemen - the damage done
to four tankers off the UAE coast on Sunday is minimal.
There has
been no oil spillage, no flames and no casualties. But the timing is both
suspicious and dangerous.
Whoever
carried out this attack could hardly have been unaware of the rising tensions
in the Gulf, with the US dispatching additional forces to the region. It would
appear that the anonymous culprit was deliberately trying to ratchet up that
tension, possibly provoking a conflict.
While Saudi
Arabia and the UAE have stopped short of blaming their adversary, Iran, US
officials have reportedly said that is where their suspicions lie. But Iran has
condemned the attack as "dreadful" and a parliamentary spokesman said
Iranian suspicions fell on Israel.
Iran, which
denies any involvement in the incident in the Gulf, has called for a full
investigation, describing the incident as "worrisome".
"God
willing we will pass this difficult period with glory and our heads held high,
and defeat the enemy," Iranian President Hassan Rouhani told a meeting
with clerics on Monday, saying the country was "too great to be
intimidated by anyone".
On Tuesday,
US President Donald Trump dismissed a New York Times report suggesting the
military had plans to send up to 120,000 troops to the Middle East should
Iran attack US forces there or accelerate work on nuclear weapons.
"We
have not planned for that. Hopefully we're not going to have to plan for that.
And if we did that, we'd send a hell of a lot more troops than that," Mr
Trump said a day after warning Iran that it would "suffer greatly" if
it did anything.
The US has
previously warned that "Iran or its proxies" could be targeting
maritime traffic in the region and, in recent days, deployed warships to
counter "clear indications" of threats from the country.
Iran
dismissed the allegation as nonsense.
Earlier,
Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen said they had carried out drone attacks
on a major Saudi oil pipeline. Saudi Arabia's energy minister described the
incident as an act of terrorism.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-
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