Trump tells Navy to destroy Iranian gunboats if they 'harass' American ships
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Iranian navy vessels seen conducting unsafe actions against USS Paul Hamilton in international waters of the north Gulf on April 15, 2020.
PHOTO: AFP
WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - President Donald Trump said on Wednesday (April 22) he had instructed the US Navy to fire on any Iranian ships that harass it at sea, a week after 11 vessels from Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGCN) came dangerously close to American ships in the Gulf.
US Navy ships will shoot Iranian gunboats that get too close "out of the water," President Donald Trump said on Wednesday, after 11 vessels from Iran's elite fighting force came dangerously close to American ships in the Gulf.
"We're not going to stand for it. If they do that that's putting our ships in danger and our great crews and sailors in danger - I'm not going to let that happen. And we will - they'll shoot them out of the water."
"That's a threat. When they get that close to our boat, and they have guns, they have very substantial weapons on those boats, but we'll shoot them out of the water."
Close interactions with Iranian military vessels were not uncommon in 2016 and 2017. On several occasions, US Navy ships fired warning shots at Iranian vessels when they got too close.
"I have instructed the United States Navy to shoot down and destroy any and all Iranian gunboats if they harass our ships at sea," Trump wrote in a tweet, hours after Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps said it had launched the country's first military satellite into orbit.
The United States should focus on saving its military from the coronavirus, an Iranian armed forces spokesman said after Trump's comments.
While the Navy has the authority to act in self-defence, Trump's comments appeared to go further and are likely to stoke tensions between Iran and the United States.
Senior Pentagon officials said that Trump's comments on Iran were meant as a warning to Teheran, but suggested that the US military would continue to abide by their existing right to self-defence instead of any changes to their rules.
"The president issued an important warning to the Iranians, what he was emphasising is all of our ships retain the right of self-defence," Deputy Secretary of Defence David Norquist told reporters at the Pentagon.
Earlier this month, the US military said 11 vessels from the IRGCN came close to US Navy and Coast Guard ships in the Gulf, calling the moves "dangerous and provocative." At one point, the Iranian vessels came within 9m of the US Coast Guard cutter Maui.
While such interactions at sea had occurred occasionally a few years ago, they had stopped recently.
Tensions between Iran and the United States increased earlier this year after the United States killed Qassem Soleimani, the head of Iran's elite Quds Force, in a drone strike in Iraq.
Iran retaliated on Jan. 8 with a rocket attack on Iraq's Ain al-Asad base where US forces were stationed. No US troops were killed or faced immediate bodily injury, but more than 100 were later diagnosed with traumatic brain injury.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps said on Wednesday it had successfully launched the country's first military satellite into orbit.


