TEHRAN, Iran: Iran on Sunday began an annual air force drill in the central part of country, state media reported, as the US sends more fighter planes to the region to deter the Islamic Republic from seizing commercial vessels in the Arabian Gulf area.
The official IRNA news agency said 11 Iranian air force bases
participated in the drill, dubbed Fadaeian Velyat-11, or Devotees of the
Supreme Leader-11. It said an air base at the southern port of Bandar
Abbas at the mouth of the strategic Strait of Hormuz is active in the
drill.
The Strait of Hormuz is the narrow mouth of the Arabian Gulf through which 20 percent of all crude oil passes.
The report said more than 90 fighter planes, bombers and drones would participate in the drill.
Air Force Chief Gen. Hamid Vahedi said the drill’s message is one of
friendship, peace and security in the region. “Sustainable security,
improving and fostering regional ties, peaceful coexistence and
defending air borders are on the agenda,” he said.
From time to time Iran holds such drills and says they are designed to
assess force’s combat readiness and demonstrate the nation’s military
capabilities.
The US said last week it is sending additional fighter jets and a
warship to the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf of Oman to increase security in
the wake of Iranian attempts to seize commercial ships there. The
Pentagon said the USS Thomas Hudner, a destroyer, and a number of F-35
fighter jets will be heading to the area. The Hudner had been in the Red
Sea.
The US move comes after Iran earlier in July tried to seize two oil
tankers, the Marshall Islands-flagged TRF Moss and the Bahamian-flagged
Richmond Voyager, near the strait last week, opening fire on one of
them. The US Navy said in both instances the Iranian naval vessels
backed off when the USS McFaul, a guided-missile destroyer, arrived on
the scene.
The US Navy says Iran has seized at least five commercial vessels in the
last two years and has harassed more than a dozen others. Many of the
confrontations have happened in and around the Strait of Hormuz.
The West accuses Iran of using seized commercial vessels as bargaining
chips. Iran denies the charge saying it seized the vessels after they
collided with local vessels and polluted the waterway.
Tensions have steadily risen since the administration of former US
President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from Iran’s 2015 nuclear
agreement with world powers and restored crippling sanctions. Iran has
responded by ramping up its nuclear activities — which it says are
purely peaceful — and also provided drones to Russia for its war against
Ukraine.
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