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United States: Iran Oil Route Must Not Close

Hormuz

ALI AKBAR DAREINI and TAREK EL-TABLAWY   12/28/11 06:50 PM ET   AP

TEHRAN, Iran — The U.S. strongly warned Iran on Wednesday against closing a vital Persian Gulf waterway that carries one-sixth of the world's oil supply, after Iran threatened to choke off traffic through the Strait of Hormuz if Washington imposes sanctions targeting the country's crude exports.

The increasingly heated exchange raises new tensions in a standoff that has the potential to spark military reprisals and spike oil prices to levels that could batter an already fragile global economy.

Iran's navy chief said Wednesday that it would be "very easy" for his country's forces to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the passage at the mouth of the Persian Gulf through which about 15 million barrels of oil pass daily. It was the second such warning by Iran in two days, reflecting Tehran's concern that the West is about to impose new sanctions that could hit the country's biggest source of revenue, oil.

"Iran has comprehensive control over the strategic waterway," Adm. Habibollah Sayyari told state-run Press TV, as the country was in the midst of a 10-day military drill near the strategic waterway.

The comments drew a quick response from the U.S.

"This is not just an important issue for security and stability in the region, but is an economic lifeline for countries in the Gulf, to include Iran," Pentagon press secretary George Little said. "Interference with the transit or passage of vessels through the Strait of Hormuz will not be tolerated."

Separately, Bahrain-based U.S. Navy 5th Fleet spokeswoman Lt. Rebecca Rebarich said the Navy is "always ready to counter malevolent actions to ensure freedom of navigation."

Rebarich declined to say whether the U.S. force had adjusted its presence or readiness in the Gulf in response to Iran's comments, but said the Navy "maintains a robust presence in the region to deter or counter destabilizing activities, while safeguarding the region's vital links to the international community."

Iran's threat to seal off the Gulf, surrounded by oil-rich Gulf states, reflect its concerns over the prospect that the Obama administration will impose sanctions over its nuclear program that would severely hit its biggest revenue source. Iran is the world's fourth-largest oil producer, pumping about 4 million barrels a day.

Gulf Arab nations appeared ready to at least ease market tensions. A senior Saudi Arabian oil official told The Associated Press that Gulf Arab nations are ready to step in to offset any potential loss of exports from Iran. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment on the issue.

Saudi Arabia, which has been producing about 10 million barrels per day, has an overall production capacity of over 12 million barrels per day and is widely seen as the only OPEC member with sufficient spare capacity to offset major shortages.

What remains unclear is what routes the Gulf nations could take to move the oil to markets if Iran goes through with its threat.

About 15 million barrels per day pass through the Hormuz Strait, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

There are some pipelines that could be tapped, but Gulf oil leaders, who met in Cairo on Dec. 24, declined to say whether they had discussed alternate routes or what they may be.

The Saudi official's comment, however, appeared to allay some concerns. The U.S. benchmark crude futures contract fell $1.98 by the close of trading Wednesday on the New York Mercantile Exchange, but still hovered just below $100 per barrel.

U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner played down the Iranian threats as "rhetoric," saying, "we've seen these kinds of comments before."

While the Obama administration has warned Iran that it would not tolerate attempts to disrupt traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, U.S. officials do not see any indication that the situation will come to that. Nor do they believe that Iran, which is already under increasing pressure from sanctions, would risk disrupting the Strait because doing so would further damage Iran's own economy.

Instead, the administration believes Iran is playing the only card it has left: issuing threats and attempting to shift focus away from its own behavior.

U.S. officials have not said whether there is a concrete response plan in place should Iran seek to block the Strait. But the administration has long said it is comfortable with the U.S. Naval presence in the region, indicating that the U.S. could respond rapidly if needed.

The White House has been largely silent on Iran's threat, underscoring the administration's belief that responding at the White House level would only encourage Iran.

While many analysts believe that Iran's warnings are little more than posturing, they still highlight both the delicate nature of the oil market, which moves as much on rhetoric as supply and demand fundamentals.

Iran relies on crude sales for about 80 percent of its public revenues, and sanctions or even a pre-emptive measure by Tehran to withhold its crude from the market would already batter its flailing economy.

IHS Global Insight analyst Richard Cochrane said in a report Wednesday that markets are "jittery over the possibility" of Iran's blockading the strait. But "such action would also damage Iran's economy, and risk retaliation from the U.S. and allies that could further escalate instability in the region."

"Accordingly, it is not likely to be a decision that the Iranian leadership will take lightly," he said.

Earlier sanctions targeting the oil and financial sector added new pressures to the country's already struggling economy. Government cuts in subsidies on key goods like food and energy have angered Iranians, stoking inflation while the country's currency steadily depreciates.

The impetus behind the subsidies cut plan, pushed through parliament by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was to reduce budget costs and would pass money directly to the poor. But critics have pointed to it as another in a series of bad policy moves by the hardline president.

So far, Western nations have been unable to agree on sanctions targeting oil exports, even as they argue that Iran is trying to develop a nuclear weapon. Tehran maintains its nuclear program – already the subject of several rounds of sanctions – is purely peaceful.

The U.S. Congress has passed a bill that penalizes foreign firms that do business with the Iran Central Bank, a move that would heavily hurt Iran's ability to export crude. European and Asian nations use the bank for transactions to import Iranian oil.

President Barack Obama has said he will sign the bill despite his misgivings. China and Russia have opposed such measures.

Sanctions specifically targeting Iran's oil exports would likely temporarily spike oil prices to levels that could weigh heavily on the world economy.

Closing the Strait of Hormuz would hit even harder. Energy consultant and trader The Schork Group estimated crude would jump to above $140 per barrel. Conservatives in Iran claim global oil prices will jump to $250 a barrel should the waterway be closed.

By closing the strait, Iran may aim to send the message that its pain from sanctions will also be felt by others. But it has equally compelling reasons not to try.

The move would put the country's hardline regime straight in the cross-hairs of the world, including nations that have so far been relative allies. Much of Iran's crude goes to Europe and to Asia.

"Shutting down the strait ... is the last bullet that Iran has and therefore we have to express some doubt that they would do this and at the same time lose their support from China and Russia," said analyst Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix in Switzerland.

Iran has adopted an aggressive military posture in recent months in response to increasing threats from the U.S. and Israel of possible military action to stop Iran's nuclear program.

The Iranian navy's exercises, which began on Saturday, involve submarines, missile drills, torpedoes and drones. A senior Iranian commander said Wednesday that the country's navy is also planning to test advanced missiles and "smart" torpedoes during the maneuvers.

The war games cover a 1,250-mile (2,000-kilometer) stretch off the Strait of Hormuz, northern parts of the Indian Ocean and into the Gulf of Aden near the entrance to the Red Sea and could bring Iranian ships into proximity with U.S. Navy vessels in the area.

The moderate news website, irdiplomacy.ir, says the show of strength is intended to send a message to the West that Iran is capable of sealing off the waterway.

"The war games ... are a warning to the West that should oil and central bank sanctions be stepped up, (Iran) is able to cut the lifeblood of the West and Arabs," it said, adding that the West "should regard the maneuvers as a direct message."

___

El-Tablawy reported from Cairo. Associated Press writers Adam Schreck in Dubai, Julie Pace in Honolulu, Hawaii, and Abdullah Shihri in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, contributed.

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TEHRAN, Iran — The U.S. strongly warned Iran on Wednesday against closing a vital Persian Gulf waterway that carries one-sixth of the world's oil supply, after Iran threatened to choke off traff...
TEHRAN, Iran — The U.S. strongly warned Iran on Wednesday against closing a vital Persian Gulf waterway that carries one-sixth of the world's oil supply, after Iran threatened to choke off traff...
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AlanBannacheck
President of the Deep Thoughts Association (DTA)
12:59 PM on 12/30/2011
We should stop sanctioning them and step away from such war mongering. Europe needs the oil, and they are our allies, we should really consider them too. We went to Iraq under false pretenses and look at ourselves now?
09:14 PM on 12/29/2011
kick there but...we need the jobs
09:12 PM on 12/29/2011
bla bla bla TRY IT AND WE WILL JUST KICK YOUR BUT
07:49 PM on 12/29/2011
All ships destined to or coming from Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar go through Iranian territorial waters. Just to the west of the mouth of the strait of Hormuz the waters on the UAE territory is too shallow for large tankers and there is no choice but to go through Iranian territorial waters.

Under 1958 laws of the seas, (which Iran is a party to, but not the 1982 laws of the seas)Iran has the right to block any ship belonging or providing services to a hostile country. Applicability and the precedence for this law has been set by the US decades ago. So, even right now, Iran has every right to block all ships going to or coming from any country that is following any sanctions regime (with possible exception of the UN approved sanctions) that includes ships going to or coming from Europe, US, Japan and South Korea minimally. Any attempt to prevent Iran from exercising this right is against international law. An attack on Iran because the refuse admission of ships into its territorial water will be against UN charter.

Iranians have said they will stop passage of ships if they are prevented from selling their oil. The only way to open the route is by invading Iranian territorial water which means essentially another war to satisfy Israel.
08:18 PM on 12/29/2011
Excellent and thorough comment. Thank you.
02:26 AM on 12/30/2011
Yes, but they never mention that, and I guess Iran didn't feel the need to explain all that, they know their words will be twisted anyway.
04:29 PM on 12/29/2011
Another alternative is to have the 5ft Fleet patrol that area. If any Iranian ships or planes show any threat, just blow them out of the water or the sky. We can do that VERY easily. I think that would change their attitude VERY quickly.
07:09 PM on 12/29/2011
Another arm chair general.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Captai
Get out while you still can!!
08:26 PM on 12/29/2011
More like an arm chair Admiral one thinks.
05:11 AM on 12/30/2011
Of course. what else would you like to know? My family and i have had/still in service, plenty of "ideas". "Better to think off your butt than to just sit there" ( my quote ) Seems like you guys can't contribute much at all.
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TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
10:53 AM on 12/30/2011
Honey, go back to your XBOX where you are a hero.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
04:08 PM on 12/29/2011
First, only the countries who are NOT willing to get off the oil teat are who complain, now.
Alternative energy is beginning to overwhelm reality here. With the availability of products that are renewable sources of energy (cannabis) and the design advances we have made using alternatives to steel for automobile bodies -- that are stronger, more durable, easier to replace, and biodegradable (cannabis) and a need to get more jobs to more people and spend less federal money ($23-$32 BILION a year to keep at the war on marijuana) and to create new products and manufacturing that will add to the tax income (if the politicians EVER stop giving away the country's resources and breaks to the rich and super corporations)...
You know.
The ONLY two things that could add to the popularity of marijuana would be that there are no directly attributable deaths from it since history was written (which IS the case) or that it cured cancer...WHICH it also does (Harvard, UCLA, Geffen School of Medicine, London, St. Mary School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Virginia, or ask Dr.Melamede at the University of Colorado) but of course, only in mice and rats. The feds won't continue the studies for curing cancer in humans...which sounds like the National Institute of Health and the Center of Disease Control only want us to have healthy rodents.)

What's that you say? Fifteen minutes?
Oh...
My fifteen minutes are up.
d=^))
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joe man
An agent of reason and sanity ...
04:04 PM on 12/29/2011
We have really dropped the ball on just about everything from throwing away trillions of dollars in the Middle East and nobody benefiting except for the companies that make money off war, like Halliburton, for example, and Iran itself, to the oil companies, who will now make a lot more off oil.

Iran has been strengthened since President Bush and Vice President Cheney played around in the Middle East. We have a weakened United States, and a real mess. Events have been mismanaged and directed in such a way that we really have no choice but to drill up our nation, despite the likelihood that we will leave areas of our ecology a lot like Nigeria and parts of South America. THAT is the legacy we leave to our children, their children, and etc., etc.

Its all for greed and money. In a nation that so often styles itself as a God-fearing nation the real love and fear is how to hoard money. The richest don't really care--they can get what they need, even if nobody else can. They don't have to care what happens to this planet--they figure they can just buy or take what they need, and to h*ll with everyone else.
05:03 PM on 12/29/2011
If enough Americans think like you the world could be a better place.
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TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
10:54 AM on 12/30/2011
Touche!!!
03:11 PM on 12/29/2011
iran does not have the ability to close the gulf
02:02 PM on 12/29/2011
If you do not think that this game has no effect on the United States you better go to your local gas station and watch the price of gas as it rises daily..............YOUR FRIENDS AT THE OIL COMPANIES ARE RAISING PRICESS BASED ON THE THREAT OF IRAN...
09:07 PM on 12/29/2011
On today's newscast: America is "exporting" large amounts of
gasoline and diesel fuel, for the first time since the Truman administration,
because demand in the U.S. is slowing.
01:55 PM on 12/29/2011
Forgrt all the BS politics and turn Iran into a parking lot. Washington hase been playing this game with Iran long enough at OUR EXPENSE. What kind of Nation have we become to let this country dictate to The United States of America. The people of this Country need to wake up and realize that it is not going to get any better until ALL the people wake up, it's you life and your money that Washingtom ponitics is playing with. Pull the pin and get er done!
09:16 PM on 12/29/2011
you go Eddie
,GEY ER DUN!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hvsmrspct
Rational faith and animosity towards oppression
01:14 AM on 12/30/2011
Yeah! What kind of nation have we become to actualy honor the sovereignty of other nations, to respect their borders, to actualy act as though international treaties' apply to us? What kind of nation have we become that we don't just kill and oppress everyone who differs with us or doesn't see us in the positive light we say we are in? What kind of nation have we become to where our own people expect us to respect the lives and cultures of other people? What kind of nation are we that we actually use prpaganda pieces like this article to spur hearts and minds to fear and hate to illicit a war - why not just start it and ignore the consequences like a crumbling economy and social structure, loss of liberty and a new police state? Why can we just be the good ol' country with the motto "get'er done"?
01:51 PM on 12/29/2011
How many times has the US warned Iran.the US is be coming a BIG JOKE
01:42 PM on 12/29/2011
Please think about our men and women on the Stennis, my son being one of them
01:35 PM on 12/29/2011
OOOOH, I'm sure the Iranians are shaking in their shoes over a threat from vote "present" Obama.
01:29 PM on 12/29/2011
UNITED STATES: Mexico alien tunnels must close after 2012 elections
01:27 PM on 12/29/2011
Recently, petroleum enterprises have found oil reserves in the U.S.
which are larger than "all" the oil reserves of all OPEC nations put
together. Vast quantities of oil are being extracted from N.Dakota
and Colorado already. In a few short years America will be a net oil
exporter, rather than importer. Iran and other OPEC nations will be
of little importance.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hvsmrspct
Rational faith and animosity towards oppression
01:25 AM on 12/30/2011
Three key points. First, there are different grades of the oil that comes from the ground based on density...each being easier or harder to refine or better used for this or that product. Secondly, the oil in the u.s. Is not nationalized but owned by corporations, it takes time for them to get the laws passed, set up the drilling, piping and refining facilities...it is not a few short years process, especially when so many are against drilling. Third, much our our oil is already exported.