Posted on 12/24/2023 9:42:07 PM PST by SeekAndFind
A senior Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps general has threatened to close the Straits of Gibraltar to traffic if the US continues to support Israel's crusade to root out the terrorists in Gaza.
“They shall soon await the closure of the Mediterranean Sea, [the Strait of] Gibraltar and other waterways,” Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Naqdi, a senior member of the country’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said today.
The general did not explain how Iran, which does not border the Mediterranean, intended to make good on its threat.
This threat should not come as a shock to anyone after the flaccid US and EU response to the Houthis in Yemen, an Iranian proxy, effectively closing the Red Sea and, by extension, the Suez Canal to commercial traffic. With two carrier strike groups in the area of operations, the US has stood idly by while drones and missiles attacked neutral shipping, and two ships were hijacked. Since then, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin announced the formation of an allegedly international coalition to guarantee freedom of navigation in the Red Sea; see Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin Expected to Announce International Coalition to Protect Red Sea Shipping. When that coalition was announced, it became apparent that it was not a serious effort; see The New Red Sea Naval Coalition Is Pure Biden: Weak, Ineffectual, and Designed to Encourage our Enemies. Since then, the coalition has disintegrated (Biden's Plan to Safeguard Red Sea Trade From Houthis May Match Afghanistan in Incompetence) until it consists of two US Navy destroyers and two allied frigates (Red Sea Security Coalition Melts Down As Member Nations Refuse to Accept US Leadership. The primary reason for the failure of the coalition to materialize is that allied nations have made it clear that they will not place their ships under US command.
As I've noted several times (for instance, Major Shipping Lines Avoid Red Sea; Is It Just the Houthis or Should We Be Looking Deeper?), we need to look at the closure of the Red Sea as something bigger than the Houthis acting out in response to Israel kicking terrorist ass in Gaza. This is a test run of closing maritime chokepoints.
Even though the Houthis claim they are targeting ships owned by Israeli interests or sailing for Israeli ports, that claim doesn't appear to match reality. The real objective appears to be a test run on shutting down two of the world's most critical maritime chokepoints. Without access to both ends of the Red Sea, a large portion of the world's shipping will be routed around South Africa, resulting in price increases and disrupted supply chains.
Credit: Port Economics, Management and Policy
Iran and its Houthi proxy have effectively shut down one entrance of the Mediterranean. It appears that Iran has launched at least one strike against a merchant ship in the Arabian Sea on the sea lane used to enter the Red Sea.
UKMTO WARNING 018/DEC/2023
ATTACK – INCIDENT 018 UPDATE 01
UKMTO have received a report of an attack by Uncrewed Aerial System (UAS) on a vessel causing an explosion and fire. https://t.co/qFzIsjDvnj#MaritimeSecurity #marsec pic.twitter.com/gBARms8K9T— United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) (@UK_MTO) December 23, 2023
DRONE ATTACK ON MV CHEM PLUTO-Indian Coast Guard Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre,Mumbai received information regarding fire onboard MV Chem Pluto. The Merchant ship with 20 Indian &01 Vietnamese Crew was reportedly attacked by a suspected drone strike on aerial platform.(1/6) pic.twitter.com/CpioW9MfT9— Indian Coast Guard (@IndiaCoastGuard) December 23, 2023
So, how would Iran shut down trans-Mediterranean commerce? The obvious answer is they would operate out of Libya and use drones or possibly mobile anti-ship missiles. The Libyan government has been touting improved relations with Iran, and the IRGC has the skills to operate independently. Attacks could be launched from clandestine Iranian bases aboard ships at sea. One such ship, the MV Beshad, is working in the Red Sea. It is believed to have had a role in the hijacking of the Galaxy Leader; see BREAKING: Iranian Proxies Hijack Israeli-Owned Ship in International Waters. In 1987, Iranian ships mining the Persian Gulf led to escorting ships (Operation Earnest Will) and our brief naval war with Iran (Operation Praying Mantis). The Straits of Gibraltar are very vulnerable to a clandestine mining operation. (Thanks to "Louise1" in the comments for jogging my memory about mines.)
The car carrier Galaxy Leader was seized by Yemen’s Houthi rebels after it steamed past an Iranian “spy ship” with its AIS switched off, according to tanker tracking groups.
The Behshad is registered as a cargo vessel but is believed to be gathering intelligence for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps of Iran near the strategically important Bab el-Mandeb strait that controls access to the Red Sea and Suez Canal, according to Dryad Global.
The uppermost red dot on this map indicates its location.
We need to wake up to the fact that the weakness of Biden's national security team, particularly the clowns on the National Security Council, has created a very hazardous situation for the free world. A trade route carrying over ten percent of the world's maritime traffic has been shut down. The cost of diverting around the Cape of Good Hope will add about $1 million and about 12 days per round trip. The weakness and vacillation demonstrated here will encourage similar activities elsewhere. This will last until the US can sort itself out again and step back from sucking up to the Iranians for reasons that are, at best, opaque or until another maritime power steps in to protect shipping.
I have an idea. What if the Mediterranean nations face up to Iran’s behavior?
blah blah...just like Turkey was gonna attack Israel...just like Hezbollah was gonna attack...Iran isnt doing squat. Mean while, IDF is pounding Gaza into dust....
I could see them blocking the Eastern Mediterranean from Libya, but Gibraltar looks like a stretch.
That is one hell of a lot of naval firepower, not to mention 2600 marines, in theater! All that and we can’t even keep the Bab el-Mandeb open. The Strait of Hormuz can be shut down just as easily and apparently we’d be just as stymied.
I think shutting down access to the Mediterannean by blocking the Straits of Gibraltar is beyond Iran’s capability.
Via the Suez Canal would be possible for them. Sinking fully ballasted ships across the canal’s channel would do it. It wasn’t but a few years ago tha single ship drove itself into one of the canal’s banks and stopped all traffic for a few weeks.
It was only for a week back in 2021. But it tied up traffic all the while until it was resolved.
Just about every automobile assembly plant in Europe was shut because of lack of parts.
Just in time looks cheap until there is a supply chain disruption.
Has our navy devolved so badly we need a large amount of US Coast Guard cutters in the entrance to the Persian Gulf? The USCG has had to dock several cutters because of lack of manpower as it is.
The Iranian dictators have a death wish. Interfere with the world’s essential commercial trade lines and you get yourselves sent straight to the hellfire of Jahannam (Muslim Hell)
The way to shut down ocean trade, any ocean trade, is to drop a few mines in the water. Once a ship has been hit Western insurance firms will withdraw coverage. No ship can sail anywhere without coverage. A nation who wants the cargo must offer indemnification to the ship to get the cargo or the ship’s owners won’t sail there. When I was program manager on a navy anti-mine program the unclassified intel report I saw said that Iran had 30,000 mines in warehouses. Mostly those were planned for delivery via fishing boats. It doesn’t take many mines to shut down a sea lane because of the insurance issue.
During the Iran/Iraq war the US reflagged all tankers as US and provided escort ships. But times have changed. Iran isn’t at war and has more latitude in terms of capability and technology. An effective mine can be built and deployed for a few thousand dollars. But finding and neutralizing a mine can cost upwards of $100,000 each. That’s not including the ship you launch from, the crew cost or fuel.
Mine sweeping, a process where a “sled” tries to convince a mine it is a ship and therefore a worthy target, no longer works the way it once did. Your cell phone has the smarts to determine whether the inputs from a couple of cheap sensors is really a ship or not. A slightly more sophisticated mine can determine the type of ship it really is. With a bit more effort a mine could be deployed that would determine the name of the ship it senses.
Good idea, Jeff. The commerce of Western Civilization re-routed/interupted/shut down by Islam.
More posturing. The world doesn’t really care about Gazan’s or HamAss or they would have stepped up with real action sooner. HamAss is canon fodder designed to make Israel and by extension the US waste more $ and weapons and act as a distraction.
Some have scoffed at this latest threat. But Iran has the capability to pull it off. It currently has a substantial Hezbollah presence in Algeria and it is fully under the sphere of influence of Iran. It could be used as a launch point for anti-shipping drones as the Straits of Gibraltar are within range of those systems from Algeria.
Not mentioned - because of the longer route, shipping containers will not turn around as quickly, thus raising the cost of shipping containers - now at $10,000 each.
That in turn will raise the cost of the goods shipped in them, So everyone is effected sooner or later, especially at the grocery stores as prices are forced to rise.
The ‘not-our-problem’ posters will pay higher prices along with the rest of us.
“The Strait of Hormuz can be shut down just as easily”
That might be the reason we haven’t attacked Iran yet. With the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf both shut down oil prices would soar to $150+ a barrel.
That’s seems t be the case. Every time there is an explosion in Gaza, all the buildings surrounding the area are shaking in dust.
All it will take is a ship to hit a mine, and Lloyd’s of London jacks the rates.
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