Pompeo rallies foreign leaders against Iran over alleged oil attacks

US secretary of state appeals to Asian countries dependent on Gulf shipping for fuel, says new US deployment to Middle East is possible

By ELLEN KNICKMEYER  Today, 9:24 pm  

 

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrives to speak at the State Department, June 13, 2019, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrives to speak at the State Department, June 13, 2019, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

WASHINGTON (AP) — US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has reached out to wary foreign leaders to frame alleged Iranian attacks in a Middle East oil shipping route as a problem for the world at large, especially for Asian countries vitally dependent on that oil.

Pompeo, in a series of Sunday television interviews, emphasized the US international outreach in the wake of what the US said were Iranian attacks Thursday on two oil tankers near the Strait of Hormuz.

“I made a bunch of phone calls yesterday. I’ll make a whole bunch more calls today. The world needs to unite,” Pompeo said. He did not say what kind of action the Trump administration envisioned.

“We are going to work to build out a set of countries that have deep vested interest in keeping that strait open to help us do that,” Pompeo said.

That echoed comments from acting US Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan this past week when he said the US goal was to “build international consensus to this international problem.”

Iran has denied being involved in the attacks and accused America of promoting an “Iranophobic” campaign against it.

Pressed on whether any new US military deployment to the region was possible, Pompeo said that “of course” remained among the options that US President Donald Trump may consider to keep shipping safe through the narrow strait, a strategic choke point for oil shipments from the Middle East.

Trump last year withdrew the US from an international agreement, signed in 2015 by US president Barack Obama, to limit Iran’s nuclear program. Trump has reinstated economic sanctions and recently ended waivers that allowed some countries to continue buying Iranian oil. That has deprived Iran of oil income and has coincided with what US officials said was a surge in intelligence pointing to Iranian preparations for attacks against US forces and interests in the Gulf region.

The US has accelerated the deployment of the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier battle group to the region, sent four nuclear-capable B-52 bombers to Qatar and bolstered its defenses in the region by deploying more Patriot air defense systems.

A Sea Hawk helicopter takes off from the guided-missile destroyer USS Bainbridge in the Arabian Sea, May 27, 2019. (US Navy/Jason Waite)

Some European allies have called for a careful investigation of responsibility, worried that Trump was escalating tensions with a country he has long called a top US enemy.

Pompeo stressed that the US gets relatively little of its energy supplies through the strait, which lies between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. The US Energy Information Administration says 16 percent of US petroleum imports came from the Persian Gulf countries in 2018.

By contrast, about 80% of oil through the shipping passage supplies energy-hungry countries in Asia, including China, Japan, India and South Korea. Those countries have skin in the game, he said.

“I’m confident that when they see the risk — the risk of their own economies and their own people and outrageous behavior of the Islamic Republic of Iran, they will join us in this,” Pompeo said.

Pompeo said intelligence officials had “lots of data, lots of evidence” that Iran was responsible. Pressed for specifics, Pompeo pointed to grainy black-and-white footage already released by the US.

An oil tanker is on fire in the sea of Oman, June 13, 2019. (AP Photo/ISNA)

American officials say the footage shows Iranian Revolutionary Guard troops removing an unexploded mine from a Japanese tanker. The tanker’s crew gave an apparently different account, saying “flying objects” targeted the vessel.

Pompeo said the administration had shared the video and other unspecified evidence with Germany and other nations.

Asked if the US had a credibility problem with allies worried Trump could be seeking a pretext to move against Iran, the secretary of state said, “We’re not selling anything. These are simple facts.”

Pompeo spoke on “Fox News Sunday” and CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

Content retrieved from: https://www.timesofisrael.com/pompeo-rallies-foreign-leaders-against-iran-over-alleged-oil-attacks/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter.

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