"Western
intelligence officials" privy to "top secret"
information? - This time round I agree, this could easily be
disinformation .
Iran
Threatens Oil Spill In Persian Gulf
Daniel
Graeber of OilPrice.com,
15
October, 2012
A
report from German news magazine Der Spiegel states that
Iran's latest effort to disrupt key shipping lanes through the Strait
of Hormuz may be to cause a massive oil spill. Code-named
Murky Water, the operation may serve to force a temporary respite
from sanctions targeting the country's energy sector. Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein tried a similar tactic during the first Gulf War to
deter invading U.S. forces. If the German report is true, the Iranian
operation could be a sign of Tehran's dwindling options.
Der
Spiegel, citing unnamed "Western intelligence officials"
privy to "top secret" information, reports that Iranian
Revolutionary Guards Gen. Mohammed
Ali Jafari could order an oil spill by possibly wrecking an oil
tanker in the key strait. Such
an act would force the temporary closure of the conduit for much of
the world's maritime oil shipments. When Iran threatened to choke off
the strait early this year, oil markets went into overdrive despite a
lack of physical disruptions. But apart from closing the strait, the
German report notes, any
international response to the spill would require lifting the embargo
on Iranian oil shipments and potentially result in kickbacks for
Iranian companies responding to the disaster.
Iraqi
forces in 1991 tried to avert an amphibious assault by the U.S.
Marines by dumping an estimated 5.7 million barrels of oil into the
Persian Gulf, making it the worst oil
spill of
its kind in world history.
While roughly half that spill evaporated,
much of the residual oil seeped into sensitive marshlands in the
region. In the sixth-worst spill in history, eleven people died in
1983 when, during the Iran-Iraq War, a 1.9-million-barrel slick from
an oil tanker collision caught fire in the Persian Gulf.
Related
Article: Is
a Larger Middle East War Inevitable?
Der
Spiegel reports the plans for Murky
Water may now be in the hands of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei,
who makes all final decisions in Iran.
The ruling cleric said Monday
that economic pressure on his country wasn't a destabilizing factor
when considering the resolve of the Iranian people.
"Dear Iran enjoys an exemplary political stability and tranquility due to the nation's really admirable vigilance, awareness and insight backed up by people's presence on the scene," he said. "The Iranian nation has managed to show its capabilities to the world despite threats, sanctions and the enemies' hostilities relying on this stability and tranquility."
His
resolve, however, ignores recent political trends. A top adviser to
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was taken into custody in late
September for publishing material deemed offensive to Khamenei. Weeks
later, lawmakers passed a measure calling on the president to answer
questions about his economic policies after the Iranian currency
collapsed.
Ahmadinejad,blamed currency
speculators for causing the devaluation, saying any
criticism against his domestic policies was part of a "psychological
war." The
historic Grand Bazaar, meanwhile, was closed in response to economic
protests.
The
European Union announced Monday
it was taking
further action against the Central Bank of Iran because of Tehran's
"flagrant violation" of its international nuclear
obligations.
Sanctions imposed on Iran are meant to starve the country of revenue
needed to fund its controversial nuclear program. The U.S. government
has offered waivers for some sanctions on Iran, meaning crude oil
continues to flow from the Islamic republic. If the Der Spiegel
report is true, however, economic pressure is finally forcing the
country into a corner.
Der
Spiegel's story, widely circulated by the Israeli media during the
weekend, wasn't verified by outside reports.

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