Fayafi posted:I'm fairly convinced it was the eifher the Houthis or Iranians flexing. They really don't have much to lose - the U.S is at their doorstep and (as I think was also noted on RWN) they like to show that they will not give an inch - no spy drones, no "limited strikes", and the global oil supply is at our mercy, so don't think that once your attempts to force concessions fail that you can send the bombers in. If it were the Houthis that does explain why a Japanese and Norwegian ship were attacked - the attacks seem more indiscriminate than something the Iranians would risk. The false flag stuff is definitely not out of the question and still makes lots of sense though. The Qataris, who aren't exactly pleased with the anti-Iranian aggression seem to buy that it was a flex or Houthi attack, though they might just be going with the American flow as they are wont to do.
I could believe the first one was a flex by Iran to deter war, the second time around makes no sense and I think that was a false flag by Saudi/Israeli/Houthis who all have real interest in a war starting.
netanyahus wife plead guilty to corruption charges the same day as the second tanker attack which was also a week after he was forced to call new elections. Seems like something people would be talking about more, if something really dramatic wasn't in the news. convenient for that guy anyway!
Petrol posted:Just want to say that I have been learning more about the situation and am swayed by the argument Fayafi and others are putting forward.
It is believable that the first attack may have been the work of iran or its proxies. As someone here pointed out the targets were old, empty, low-value tankers and the damage was little enough for them to be towed away. The attacks occurred simultaneous to a houthi drone bombing of a trans-peninsula pipeline funneling gulf oil to 'safe' ports on the red sea. Together they gently but firmly indicate that the oil trade outside the strait of hormuz is vulnerable. Most importantly to me (and I haven't seen this emphasized anywhere), the western media had no prepared response, nor did the pentagon offer any immediate evidence for Iran's involvement. It was nearly 24 hours before the usual organs reported the incident, and then they were ambivalent about blame and downplayed the political repercussions. This doesn't discount a longer term strategy of tension, but it's understandable that Iran was behind it.
It's less likely that Iran was behind the second. The choice of targets makes no sense. A japanese vessel during talks with shinzo abe, and a norwegian ship belonging to the firm that made its fortune running oil for Iran during the tanker wars? The latter had its cargo of naphta set ablaze. Perhaps Iran believed japan an american lapdog, and struck its old commercial ally to say 'no exceptions?' But this time the pentagon delivered a downgraded faux-IR video of an Iranian patrol boat with eight superfluous passengers attempting the extremely dangerous task of removing an armed but unexploded limpet mine. They manage the hard part without a massacre yet leave behind a single magnetic attachment which may as well be the whole damn mine. The episode gets massive media coverage and before it leaves scope a very expensive drone incurs Iranian airspace and is rightfully shot down, yet spared its full to bursting(?) partner the p-8 poseidon. What went wrong here to cancel the limited strike?
As I see it, the MoA/magnier/war nerd thesis is that:
a. Iran finds trump's unilateral breach of the JCPOA and new sanctions intolerable legally and existentially, ie so economically devastating that they face crises up to and including starvation.
b. Therefore there can be no negotiation/deescalation without prerequisite removal of sanctions, since the passage of time only weakens Iran and the US has demonstrated its inability to honor any new agreement.
c. If trump is unwilling, then the EU/china/russia must defy the american sanctions to ensure Iran's economic future.
d. If the rest of the world will not honor its commitments under the JCPOA, then Iran has no choice but to exercise its ability to shut down the ME oil trade.
I don't agree with the flippant attitude these people assign Iran. Iran knows best of all how terrible a war would be, even if they believe it to be winnable. Moreover they have stated "if the Islamic Republic decides to stop oil flow from the Persian Gulf, it will do it publicly and there will be nothing covert about it" (pressTV).
I also don't agree with the idea that sociopathy guides bolton et al. Between Venezuela and Iran these events threaten to constrict the global supply of oil. This is a great boon to the american fracking corporations running in the red, and escalation (or maintenance) without warfare hurts american competitors more than it hurts america. However it does hurt american consumers, and if trump cares for nothing but reelection, what does he do? I won't play into the idea that trump has been cornered by his 'hawkish' posse (as MoA sometimes seems to do), but given his desire to be seen as 'winning' coupled with the above Iranian position, what does he do?
Edited by kinch ()
The second time around, the ships left two different ports. So assuming the theory of demolition charges is correct, they probably were not attacked in harbor, so how did the weapons actually get to the boats?
Driving a small boat up to the side of a moving tanker full of methanol at night on the open sea and reaching over the side with a magnet bomb and, according to the americans, for some reason a nail gun (?), multiple times, is quite honestly, possibly the worst method to attack a ship anyone has ever thought of. Someone could see the attack boat coming from 10 miles away. Or hear it coming alongside, or the noise of a bunch of super magnets slamming into the steel hull. There is an extreme risk of the boat getting tossed around by the ships's wake and slamming into the side and sinking.
The other method I can think of would be rigging a drone to carry the limpet mine on its nose. Fly up to boat, big-ass magnets do the thing, the rest of the drone falls off as debris and sinks. Safer, complies with the witness statement that a flying object was seen. You need to be able to track moving ships at sea and hit them 4 times in the same place though. Not easy!
But why would anyone do this technique specifically? Iran doesn't need to ghetto rig flying limpet mines. Iran already has a special class of boat-bombs with their own in-built aerial propulsion systems. They're called anti-ship cruise missiles, they havve been building them for decades and burying them underground in the mountains and desert, and we all have a pretty good idea that they work as advertised. And that was a first generation model they've been improving ever since. If Iran wants to "send a message" they could throw 290 of them at the next US destroyer transiting the strait, one for each death on the Iran Air flight the US shot down. Then ask on Twitter for the ship named after reagan to go next.
So why take the risk or blow the resources to attack moving ships at sea with a wholly inappropriate weapon, except to leave evidence which looks exactly like the #1 western chickenhawk media search on wikipedia and let the ambiguity point to Iran? They don't need to play games at all. If Iran says the strait is closed it's fucking closed. One anonymous Persian-looking guy walking into Lloyds of London and telling the receptionist it's closed and everyone stops outside and waits for the americans to go first.
I could see Saudi trying to think of a way to drag the US into their Yemeni Vietnam. Dunno if they've demonstrated the skill though. I could even see the Yemenis desperate for a way to get Iran into the fight to break the siege because their whole fucking country is starving to death and the small boat method screams desperation. But if they could track and strike moving ships like that the Saudis wouldn't have a navy anymore.
The US is extremely not ready for war with Iran. If we attack now then Iran will sanitize every existing US base on that meme map and leave maybe a few well hidden or lucky navy ships. The bombers we send may not even have runways to land on. Thousands of dead Troops and the worst military defeat in history occuring hours after the first attack is not going to get trump reelected and someone would probably mention that to him. So USA trying to goad Iran into it right now makes no sense except from the perspective of evangelical mythology of apocalyptic war involving Israel to bring the end times. And there are certainly people in high places that go for that shit but I dont think any have the juice to pull this off without going through someone at some level who knows things.
So who has good drone tech and the ability to track and strike ships at sea and the callous disregard for human life to start a war and the false confidence that the US could win and the misplaced faith in their own defensive systems necessary to maintain the foolhardy belief that they could weather such a war without suffering major harm and domestic political strife and weak leaders who might find some personal salvation in the jingoism attached to a good ol mideast war?
The UK, obviously.
But also, and more likely in this case, Israel.
MarxUltor posted:But why would anyone do this technique specifically? Iran doesn't need to ghetto rig flying limpet mines. Iran already has a special class of boat-bombs with their own in-built aerial propulsion systems. They're called anti-ship cruise missiles, they havve been building them for decades and burying them underground in the mountains and desert, and we all have a pretty good idea that they work as advertised. And that was a first generation model they've been improving ever since. If Iran wants to "send a message" they could throw 290 of them at the next US destroyer transiting the strait, one for each death on the Iran Air flight the US shot down. Then ask on Twitter for the ship named after reagan to go next.
it would make more sense to make it look like a terrorist attack for plausible deniability while menacing tho
"IRGC Cmdr Golam Reza Jalali said "The US sent a letter to Iran following the downing of the drone, asking to carry out a ltd attack. Iran responded: It will be considered an act of war".
— Elijah J. Magnier (@ejmalrai) July 7, 2019
أميركا بعثت برسالة لإيران بعد إسقاط الطائرة المسيرة https://t.co/Xme1P5CIKb @skynewsarabia pic.twitter.com/9wavvFpukZ
BREAKING: Iran's state TV says Revolutionary Guard forces have seized a foreign oil tanker with 12 crew accused of smuggling oil.
— The Associated Press (@AP) July 18, 2019
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jul/18/iran-says-it-has-seized-foreign-oil-tanker-in-gulf
littlegreenpills posted:iran has counterseized a random tanker. the best part is how an entire tanker went missing and nobody knew what had happened to it for a few days
the MT Riah isn't a tanker, and the whole thing looks like a routine anti-smuggling operation. the ship was probably carrying subsidized fuel for sale out of the country.
today though, Iran seized a swedish tanker and appears to have taken another, larger ship just over an hour ago.
https://www.moonofalabama.org/2019/07/britain-pirates-iranian-ship-grace-1-iran-responds-takes-british-tanker-hostage.html
A typical quote from one of their speeches: "It is such an honour to be in the presence of much more important dignitaries than me, such as Rudy Giuiliani, Joe Lieberman, and Maryam Rajavi, as well as members of the US military". What a pathetic ruling class we have.
Longer article with short history of MEK and Irish links
Edited by pescalune ()
Brent crude surged the most on record after a drone strike on a Saudi Arabian oil facility removed about 5% of global supplies.
The benchmark oil futures jumped as much as $11.73 a barrel to $71.95 as the market opened Monday in Asia, the biggest advance in dollar-terms since futures started trading in 1988. State energy producer Saudi Aramco lost about 5.7 million barrels per day of output on Saturday after 10 unmanned aerial vehicles struck the world’s biggest crude-processing facility in Abqaiq and the kingdom’s second-biggest oil field in Khurais.
For oil markets, it’s the single worst sudden disruption ever, surpassing the loss of Kuwaiti and Iraqi petroleum supply in August 1990, when Saddam Hussein invaded his neighbor. It also exceeds the loss of Iranian oil output in 1979 during the Islamic Revolution, according to data from the U.S. Department of Energy.
“No matter whether it takes Saudi Arabia five days or a lot longer to get oil back into production, there is but one rational takeaway from this weekend’s drone attacks on the Kingdom’s infrastructure -- that infrastructure is highly vulnerable to attack, and the market has been persistently mispricing oil,” Citigroup Inc.’s Ed Morse wrote in a research note.
Obviously gonna assume this is bullshit, Iran wouldn’t just directly attack Saudis, but I’m confused as to what is brewing in DC right now. They just fired Bolton and now the biggest escalation happens, with US officials basically claiming Iran directed a military attack against the Saudis not even a week later?
The "proxy" label serves as a justification for the failure of powers like US and Saudi Arabia to defeat non-state actors like Hizbullah and the Houthis, who are in fact their direct enemies. Blaming Iran for their foreign policy disasters reduces the magnitude of their defeats
— Amal Saad (@amalsaad_lb) September 16, 2019
dimashq posted:https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/u-s-tells-saudi-arabia-oil-attacks-were-launched-from-iran-11568644126Obviously gonna assume this is bullshit, Iran wouldn’t just directly attack Saudis, but I’m confused as to what is brewing in DC right now. They just fired Bolton and now the biggest escalation happens, with US officials basically claiming Iran directed a military attack against the Saudis not even a week later?
I think this one was probably brewed in Tel Aviv, again, just like the last 6.02e23 flimsy stories about "Iran did it!"
So far the apparent evidence against Iran, which is to the North and East of Saudi Arabia, in front of a vast US air defense network stretching from Baghdad to the UAE, is that all of the impacts were on the West side of the damaged structures, exactly like you would expect from drones launched from the southwest where Yemen is, and Yemen saying "We've done it before, we told you we would do it, we did it, here is the specific method and equipment we used to do it, we're proud that we did it, and we're going to do it again."
Saudi Arabia has taken to social media to highlight its potential as a tourist destination ahead of the official launch of its tourist visas later in September.
A video – which uses the hashtag #WhereInTheWorld – has been widely shared on Twitter.
The 30-second long video depicts a number of destinations across the kingdom, comparing them to other global tourist destinations such as the Maldives, the Caribbean, Vietnam, Petra and the Colorado Rockies.
اعلان تشويقي للفيز السياحية في الممكلة بعد 14 يوم#WhereInTheWorld pic.twitter.com/PljQ35yFDQ
— MBS🇸🇦 محمد بن عبدالعزيز (@506MBS) September 14, 2019
https://www.arabianbusiness.com/travel-hospitality/428012-ahead-of-first-tourist-visas-saudi-arabia-takes-to-social-media-to-promote-attractions