Tiny SeaFox submersibles for destroying mines
As Russia and NATO continued to boost their military strength in the eastern Mediterranean, debkafile's military sources report substantial US reinforcements, led by the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft
carrier, are being rushed to the Persian Gulf opposite Iran, with
dozens of unmanned underwater craft for destroying mines.
The USS John C. Stennis arrives in August, raising the number of American aircraft carriers in waters off Iran to four including the USS Enterprise and the USS Abraham Lincoln, with the French Charles de Gaulle due soon to make up a fifth.
The Eisenhower, which reached its new position in the first
week of July, operates under the joint commands of the US Sixth
(Mediterranean) and Fifth (Gulf) Fleets.
Thursday, July 12, American military officials announced that the US is
also dispatching to the Persian Gulf dozens of tiny, unmanned SeaFox
submersibles that can detect and destroy mines if strewn by Iran to
block the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint for transporting
one-fifth of the world’s oil.
About 4 feet long, they each carry an underwater television camera, homing sonar and an explosive charge.
There are now additionally eight American minesweepers in the Persian Gulf as well as the USS Ponce,
a platform for the special forces, helicopters and warships there to
fight off Iranian marine units attempting to plant mines in the vital
waterway.
debkafile's
military sources say that Washington decided to expand its military
deployment in the area after concluding, in consultation with French and
British naval experts, that Iran is short of the military strength and
sophisticated measure for completely sealing off the Strait of Hormuz to
all sea traffic, especially oil tankers.
All the Iranians can do is plant enough underwater mines to impede traffic and slow it down.
The new, bolstered US deployment in the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea and
the Mediterranean is on the ready for immediate action against any
Iranian military threat. "If Iran starts spreading underwater mines in
international waterways, i.e., the Strait of Hormuz, it will find
American forces ready to dismantle them on the spot," said a Western
military source.
In any case, said the source, a slowdown of oil traffic through Hormuz
won’t have an immediate impact on the world oil market or prices. "The
world has enough reserve oil in storage to supply its needs for six full
months,” said the source.
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