[D66] China, Russia and Iran begin joint naval drills
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jugg at ziggo.nl
Fri Jan 3 11:28:36 CET 2020
China, Russia and Iran begin joint naval drills
By
aljazeera.com
2 min
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The Russian Navy Neustrashimyy-class frigate
The Russian Navy Neustrashimyy-class frigate 'Yaroslav Mudry' moored at
Chabahar on the Gulf of Oman during Iran-Russia-China joint naval drills
Iran has kicked off the first joint naval drill with Russia and China in
the northern part of the Indian Ocean, Iranian state TV has reported.
The four-day exercise comes at a time of heightened tensions since the
United States withdrew from a landmark 2015 nuclear deal with Iran in
May last year.
"The message of this exercise is peace, friendship and lasting security
through cooperation and unity ... and its effect will be to show that
Iran cannot be isolated," Rear Admiral Gholamreza Tahani said on state
television.
More:
Tahani added that the drills included rescuing ships on fire or vessels
under attack by pirates and shooting exercises, with both Iran's navy
and its Revolutionary Guards participating.
State television showed what it said was a Russian warship arriving at
Chabahar port in southern Iran and said the Chinese will join shortly,
calling the three countries "the new triangle of power in the sea".
"The aim of this drill is to bolster security of international maritime
commerce, combatting piracy and terrorism and sharing information ...
and experience," the flotilla commander said.
"Us hosting these powers shows that our relations have reached a
meaningful point and may have an international impact," he added.
Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman Wu Qian said on Thursday the drill
would "deepen exchange and cooperation between the navies of the three
countries." He said the Chinese navy's guided-missile destroyer "Xining"
was taking part in the exercise.
The US reimposed crippling sanctions on Iran after quitting the nuclear
deal last year, prompting Tehran to hit back with countermeasures by
dropping nuclear commitments.
Remaining parties to the badly weakened agreement include the UK, France
and Germany, as well as China and Russia.
In June, US President Donald Trump authorised an attack after Iran shot
down a US drone, only to call off the retaliation at the last moment.
Attack on Aramco plant
The crisis deepened with the September 14 attacks on Saudi energy giant
Aramco's vital Abqaiq processing plant and Khurais oilfield, which
temporarily halved the kingdom's crude output.
Yemen's Houthi rebels claimed responsibility for the attack but
Washington accused Tehran, a charge it has strongly denied.
It has also denied accusations from Washington and other Western
capitals that it was behind a string of mysterious attacks on oil
tankers in Gulf waters.
Washington has responded with a military build-up in the Gulf and
launched an operation with its allies to protect navigation in Gulf waters.
Japan said on Friday it would also send a military vessel and two patrol
planes to help protect waterways in the region, but will not join the
US-led coalition.
Tokyo will send a destroyer for intelligence activities along with two
patrol aircraft, chief cabinet secretary and government spokesman
Yoshihide Suga told reporters.
The move is "Japan's own measure aimed at peace and stability in the
Middle East as well as ensuring safety of Japan-related vessels," he
said, noting that 90 percent of the crude oil Tokyo imports came from
the region.
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