Iran deploys warships in Mediterranean
Iranian warships entered the Mediterranean after crossing the Suez Canal on Saturday to show Tehran’s “might” to regional states, the Navy commander said at a time of simmering tensions with Israel.
In Jerusalem, the foreign ministry said Israel will be watching the ship’s movements closely to ensure they do not approach its coast. “The strategic Navy of the Islamic Republic of Iran has passed through the Suez Canal for the second time since the (1979) Islamic Revolution,” Admiral Habibollah Sayari said in remarks quoted by the official IRNA news agency.
He did not say how many vessels had crossed the canal, or what missions they were planning to carry out in the Mediterranean, but said the flotilla had previously docked in the Saudi port city of Jeddah.
Two Iranian ships, the destroyer Shahid Qandi and supply vessel Kharg, had docked in the Red Sea port on February 4, according to Iranian media.
Adm. Sayari said the naval deployment to the Mediterranean would show “the might” of the Islamic republic to regional countries, and also convey Tehran’s “message of peace and friendship”.
The first Iranian presence in the Mediterranean in February 2011 provoked strong reactions from Israel and the US, with the Jewish state putting its Navy on alert. During the 2011 deployment, two Iranian vessels, a destroyer and a supply ship, sailed past the coast of Israel and docked at the port of Latakia in allied Syria before returning to Iran via the Red Sea.
The latest announcement comes amid heightened tensions between Iran and Israel fuelled by a longstanding dispute over Tehran’s nuclear programme.
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