WORLD / Middle East
Iran: Brit sailors may face charges
(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-26 19:11
British soliders patrol the waterways close to an oil terminal near the
Iraqi city of Basra in 2005. [AFP]
LONDON - Iran warned that 15 British sailors and marines could face
charges for allegedly entering Iranian waters and rejected British
requests to meet with the servicemen detained off the coast of Iraq.
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Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki threatened unspecified
consequences for the Royal Navy crew in comments to reporters in New York
on Sunday. He described the charge against them as "illegal entrance into
Iranian waters."
"In terms of legal issues, it's under investigation," Mottaki said.
The capture and detention of the British service personnel increased
tensions between Iran and the West that already were high over Tehran's
nuclear program and allegations that Iran is interfering with the US-led
war in Iraq.
The UN Security Council agreed Saturday to tougher sanctions against Iran
for its refusal to meet UN demands that it halt uranium enrichment. Many
in the West fear the country's civilian nuclear research is cover for a
weapons program, a claim Iran denies.
Britain and the United States have said the sailors and marines were
intercepted Friday just after they completed a search of a civilian
vessel in the Iraqi part of the Shatt al-Arab waterway, where the border
with Iran has historically been disputed.
Prime Minister Tony Blair on Sunday called the detentions "unjustified
and wrong," and insisted during a European Union meeting that Royal Navy
crew was in Iraqi waters.
"It is simply not true that they went into Iranian territorial waters,
and I hope the Iranian government understands how fundamental an issue
this is for us," he said.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice insisted during a trip to the Middle
East that the Britons be released, saying "we all fully trust the
British" account.
Mottaki gave no firm commitment on their release during a telephone
conversation with British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett late Sunday.
Beckett reiterated that the sailors and marines had been searching for
smugglers in Iraqi waters under an agreement with the Baghdad government
when they were seized by the naval forces of Iran's Revolutionary Guard,
the Foreign Office said.
"The Iranian authorities intercepted these sailors and marines in Iranian
waters and detained them in Iranian waters. This has happened in the
past, as well," Mottaki said.
The Iranian state news agency IRNA said that Ibrahim Rahimpour, the
foreign ministry official in charge of western Europe, had told British
Ambassador Geoffrey Adams that the British sailors and marines were "well
and sound" and that "legal proceedings" were under way.
On Saturday, Iran's top military official, Gen. Ali Reza Afshar, said the
seized Britons were taken to Tehran for questioning and had confessed to
what he called an "aggression into the Islamic Republic of Iran's waters."
British, Israeli and Saudi media reports on Sunday suggested that Iran
was hoping to trade them for Iranian officials it claims have been
abducted by the West in recent months.
Ali Askari, former head of an elite unit of the Revolutionary Guard,
disappeared in Turkey six weeks ago; several months earlier, six Iranian
officials were captured by US forces at an Iranian liaison office in
Irbil, the capital of the Kurdish self-ruled region of Iraq. One was
later released.
Iran said it was a government liaison office. The US military said those
detained were connected to an Iranian Revolutionary Guard unit that funds
and arms insurgents in Iraq.
Ahmad Bakhshaysh, a political analyst and professor in politics in
Tehran's Allameh University, said a prisoner swap was not what Iran
wanted.
"Iran is not after retaliation regarding abduction of its diplomats. ...
However, Iran will use this opportunity to show to the world public
opinion that Britons were (the) invader and Iran was victim of the
Westerners bullying policy," he said.
The capture of the British sailors and marines was not the first time
Iranians have taken Western forces by surprise in the border area.
In June 2004, six British marines and two sailors were captured, then
paraded blindfolded on Iranian television. They admitted they had entered
Iranian waters illegally but were released unharmed after three days.
US News and World Report, citing a US Army report out of Iraq, said
American troops working with Iraqi border guards within Iraq were
attacked by a much larger Iranian military unit in September. US News
said no Americans were hurt in the incident, but four Iraqi soldiers, an
interpreter, and an Iraqi border policeman remain missing.
The US military said the account was accurate, adding that the incident
with the American troops, who were training, advising and helping the
Iraqi border police, could have been a result of confusion in the vast
desert area along the border.
"There is a lot of open terrain," military spokesman Lt. Col. Mike
Donnelly said in an e-mail. "Visual sighting and happenstance encounters
from a distance occur routinely."
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