MESOPOTAMIA NEWS CONTENT : How Will Iran Prevent The Export Of Oil From The Persian Gulf To World Markets? – By: A. Savyon and E. Kharrazi* – MEMRI REPORT  7 May 2019

Introduction

On April 22, 2019, the U.S. administration announced that from May 3, 2019, the U.S. would not renew sanctions waivers for nations importing Iranian oil, with the aim of cutting Iranian oil exports to zero. It should be clarified that in accordance with the U.S. policy on Iran, the U.S. has no intention of implementing this aim by military means but instead to economically pressure other countries not to import Iranian oil.

Iran’s strategy in response to the U.S. move will focus, apparently, on Iran’s rivals in the Gulf by impacting their export of their oil, by means of terror attacks on their facilities and on oil tankers as they sail in the Red Sea, Persian Gulf, or Indian Ocean.

It should be noted that in response to what he termed a “number of troubling and escalatory indications and warnings” from Iran, National Security Advisor John Bolton announced on May 5 that the U.S. was deploying the USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group and a bomber task force to the U.S. Central Command in the region. This was, he said, “to send a clear and unmistakable message to the Iranian regime that any attack on United States interests or on those of our allies will be met with unrelenting force. The United States is not seeking war with the Iranian regime, but we are fully prepared to respond to any attack, whether by proxy, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, or regular Iranian forces.”

 

Fearing the U.S.’s intentions, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif announced, in a May 6 interview with the Qatari Al-Jazeera TV, that Iran was willing to reach a non-aggression agreement with every Gulf country. However, he did not mention possible activity by the Iran-backed Shi’ite militias.

This report will examine Iran’s threats to block its neighbors’ export of oil, and its ability to carry out these threats, and will also include an Al-Alam TV interview with the commander of the navy of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), Alireza Tangsiri, in which he discussed the bolstering of Iran’s military might in the Gulf, expressing the Iranian regime’s view that it is Iranian territory.

 

Will Iran Close The Strait Of Hormuz?

If in the past Iranian officials regularly threatened that Iran would physically block the Strait of Hormuz, today they are wary of explicitly announcing that such a threat would be carried out – even if they declare that Iran is capable of doing so – for two main reasons:

 

The Strait of Hormuz is an international sea lane, and any country’s blocking of it – even a geographically proximate country such as Iran – will be a casus belli for the international community. For this reason, Western ships, including U.S. aircraft carriers, patrol the Gulf, in order to assure the free passage of traffic through this strategic strait.

The blocking of the strait will also harm Iran’s oil exports – not only those of its neighbors – and will damage Iran’s own economy.

Indeed, Iranian officials’ more recent threats have focused on stating that if Iran cannot export its oil, the other Gulf countries won’t be able to either.

 

How Will Iran Carry Out Its Threats?

According to statements by Iranian officials, Iran’s reaction will focus not on its initiation of a blockade on sea traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, but on its neighbors and rivals that are exporting oil, and it will do this by carrying out terror operations against their oil facilities or against their oil tankers as they sail in the Red Sea or Persian Gulf in order to prevent them from bringing their oil to international markets. It is also possible that there will be cyberattacks on Gulf oil infrastructure, as happened in August 2012 when tens of thousands of computers of the Saudi oil conglomerate Aramco were hacked and damaged, in an operation attributed to Iran.

 

It appears that Iran would prefer to operate – as it has in the past – by means of the Shi’ite militias that it backs, such as the Houthis in Yemen, who, in July 2018, on Iranian orders, fired missiles at Saudi oil tankers, causing a temporary stoppage in the export of Saudi oil.

 

It will be recalled that in August 2018, IRGC Gen. Naser Sha’bani boasted that Iran had told the pro-Iran militia in Yemen, Ansar Allah (i.e. the Houthis), to attack two Saudi oil tankers, and added that it had done as ordered. He went on to clarify that both the Shi’ite Hizbullah in Lebanon and Ansar Allah in Yemen were Iran’s homeland depth, and warned that they would continue to be used for Iran’s purposes against its rivals in the region, particularly Saudi Arabia (see MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 7612, Statements By Top IRGC Official Gen. Sha’bani Published By Fars News Agency: ‘We Told The Yemenis To Attack The Two Saudi Tankers, And They Attacked’).

An example of such a future operation can be seen in the April 22, 2019 announcement by Houthi leader Abdul Malik Al-Houthi, who said that his organization’s missiles “can reach Riyadh and beyond it, they can reach Abu Dhabi and Dubai, and they can reach sensitive targets.”

Furthermore, on April 13, 2019, the Iranian regime mouthpiece Kayhan called for targeting U.S. economic interests in the region and for blocking the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea to Saudi oil exports. On May 3, Iranian Council of Experts and Tehran Friday preacher Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami told worshipers, “America’s satanic acts will not go unanswered.”

 

Iranian Officials Threaten: “If Our Oil Does Not Pass Through The Strait Of Hormuz, Neither Will Other [Countries’] Oil”

In response to the U.S.’s April 22 announcement that beginning May 3 it would not renew sanctions waivers for nations importing Iranian oil, senior Iranian political, military, and IRGC officials announced that the Iranian regime would not allow the marketing of oil from neighboring countries when Iran’s oil is not being marketed. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said at an April 24 meeting with workers, in advance of Iran’s Labor and Workers Week: “The [U.S.] effort in the matter of oil will go nowhere. We can export our oil as much as we need to and in any quantity we need to. They are imagining now that they will block the [oil shipping] lanes… They are acting with hostility against us and they must know that their hostility will not go unanswered. They will receive an appropriate response to this hostility. The Iranian nation is not one that sits and observes quietly while others plot and act against it.”

 

Iranian President Hassan Rohani was more explicit, threatening Saudi Arabia and the UAE at an April 24 government meeting: “You, who exist in Iran’s shadow, how can you tell [President] Trump that if he cuts Iranian oil exports to zero you will compensate for this? Don’t you know that Trump’s term will end, and we will remain, and that neighbors live next to each other for many long years? Better you should think about permanent friendship in the region. You are alive by virtue of Iran. This is not a lie or a slogan. We prevented your states from being destroyed. How can you today cooperate with our enemies?”

 

Former Iranian foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki tweeted on April 26: “The sheikhs from the emirates should know that their entering Trump’s dangerous game against Iran will bring their oil exports to zero.”

Maj.-Gen. Mohammad Bagheri, chief of the General Staff of Iran’s Armed Forces, said on the margins of the 23rd conference of police commanders and administrators, held April 28: “The Iranian leadership has said on many occasions that securing the Strait of Hormuz is the responsibility of Iran’s Armed Forces, and we want it [the strait] to be secure and open. Our oil and products must pass through it, just as the oil and products of other countries do. The Iranian leadership has also said that if anyone threatens the security of the Strait of Hormuz, we will certainly take care of them.

 

“If our oil does not pass through the Strait of Hormuz, neither will other [countries’] oil. This does not mean [that we intend to] close the strait. We do not mean to close the Strait of Hormuz unless the enemies’ hostility reaches a level that leaves us no choice – and we are capable of implementing this, and the enemies know it.”

Hossein Sheikholislam, former Iranian ambassador to Syria and currently a Foreign Ministry advisor, threatened on April 29: “America knows very well that if it does anything [against Iran], all its bases in the region will be targets of a hail of precision missiles. The Gulf countries’ oil will leave for other parts of the world only if Iranian oil is sold [as well].”

IRGC Navy Commander Alireza Tangsiri told Al-Alam TV on April 22: “According to international law, the Strait of Hormuz is a sea lane, and if we are prevented from using it, we will close it. If we are threatened in any way, we will not hesitate to defend Iran’s territorial waters. We will defend our pride, and wherever the discourse focuses on defending Iran’s rights, we will [also] take retaliatory action. The foreigners do not care about the security of this region, and do not care if their moves bring about its destruction. The foreigners who are present in the region are enemies of its nations and are considered a threat to the region.”

IRGC Navy Commander Alireza Tangsiri In Interview: “This Gulf Is The Persian Gulf, And Is Associated With The Persians And With The State of Iran”

In an earlier Al-Alam interview, on February 25, 2019, Tangsiri explained the Iranian perception that the Persian Gulf historically belongs to Iran and that Iran therefore controls it and monitors every vessel that enters it. He also clarified that Iran sees the foreign forces in the Persian Gulf as a threat and is therefore reinforcing its navy there. The following are the main points of his interview:

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