US Sends More Troops to Middle East Amid Tanker Tension with Iran
The US
military will send an additional 1,000 troops to the Middle East as tensions
build with Iran.
Acting
Defence Secretary Patrick Shanahan said the deployment was in response to
"hostile behaviour" by Iranian forces.
The US Navy
also shared new images it says link Iran to attacks last week on two oil
tankers in the Gulf of Oman.
Washington
has accused Iran of blowing holes in the vessels with mines. Iran has denied
the allegations.
Tensions
were further fuelled on Monday when Iran said its stockpile of
low-enriched uranium would next week exceed levels set under the 2015 nuclear
agreement.
It recently
stepped up production in response to the US tightening sanctions. The 2015
deal, from which the US has withdrawn, curbed Iran's nuclear programme in
exchange for the lifting of sanctions.
Iran's
President Hassan Rouhani said his country did not seek to wage war with any
nation and had remained "loyal" to its international obligations.
Overnight
three rockets hit a military base housing US troops north of Baghdad, the Iraqi
military said. The US said it was "indirect fire" and did
not cause injuries.
No group
said it had carried out the attack, though it followed US warnings of an
increased threat to US interests in Iraq by Iranian-backed militias.
Announcing
the deployment, Mr Shanahan said the US did "not seek conflict with
Iran" but the action had been taken to "ensure the safety and welfare
of our military personnel working throughout the region to protect our national
interests".
He said the
military would continue to monitor the situation and make adjustments to troop
levels accordingly.
The 1,000
additional troops being despatched to the Middle East is presented as a prudent
defensive measure by the Pentagon; the recent attacks on the two oil tankers
being taken as a clear sign of Iran's hostile intent.
They join
some 1,500 additional troops sent last month. Taken together, these deployments
inevitably raise tensions but they are clearly not in any sense an assault
force.
If direct
conflict does break out between Washington and Tehran, it will most likely be a
sporadic air and maritime battle, not a land campaign.
But what
worries Washington is attacks by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps or
Iran's proxies against US troops or facilities in the wider region - hence this
latest deployment.
The US
defence secretary is again insisting that Washington does not want conflict
with Tehran, but tensions remain high and any miscalculation could lead to a
serious escalation.
Shortly
before the announcement, the Pentagon released new images including some
purporting to show the remnants of an unexploded mine on the Japanese-owned oil
tanker damaged in the attacks.
The photos
appear to show it being removed by members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Corps. The Pentagon has already released grainy video said to show the same
episode.
Also seen in
the latest images is apparent damage - a hole - above the waterline on the hull
of the Kokuka Courageous.
Another
image is said to show the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps vessel shortly
after it was involved in removing the limpet mine.
The other
tanker damaged in the attacks was the Norwegian-owned Front Altair.
The US has
implicated Iran in the latest attacks and four others outside the Strait of
Hormuz in May, allegations denied by Iran.
China urged
the US to lower the pressure and for Iran to stick to the nuclear deal, warning
of a "Pandora's box" in the region.
Russia -
another party to the nuclear accord - also called for restraint, calling US
actions "truly provocative".
Saudi Arabia
also blames Iran for the attacks on the two oil tankers, while the UK said it
was "almost certain" Iran was behind the blasts.
But EU
foreign ministers meeting on Monday warned against jumping to conclusions and
backed UN calls for an independent investigation.
In 2015,
Iran agreed to a landmark deal with world powers to curb its nuclear
development.
It agreed to
limit the enrichment of uranium, which is used to make reactor fuel but also
nuclear weapons, and other measures in return for relief from sanctions.
Mr Trump
abandoned the nuclear accord last year and started to re-impose sanctions.
The move has
crippled Iran's economy, which relies on oil, and Iran has responded by scaling
back its nuclear commitments.
Speaking on
Iranian TV, President Rouhani said the international community could see that
it was the US, not Iran, that was acting badly.
"Iran
has been loyal to its signature," he said. "Iran has been loyal to
international agreements, and the one standing against us today [the US] is the
one that has trampled all pacts, agreements and international accords."
Iran's
Atomic Energy Organisation said earlier it was on course to exceed agreed
limits on its low-enriched uranium stockpiles by 27 June.
But Iran
said there was "still time" for European countries to act by
protecting Iran from reinstated US sanctions.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-
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