By Terri Moon Cronk
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, May 7, 2015 – While the Strait of Hormuz appears
calm in the aftermath of two reported Iranian acts of aggression toward
commercial ships, U.S. military resources can respond quickly, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey said in a press briefing with
Defense Secretary Ash Carter here today.
U.S. Navy ships began accompanying U.S.- and British-flagged
commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz after four Iranian navy patrol boats
approached a U.S.-flagged merchant ship, April 24, and a Marshall
Islands-flagged cargo ship, April 29. Both incidents were reported as acts of
aggression, officials said.
“The government of Iran stated [it acted] to resolve a
long-standing financial dispute,” Dempsey said in the briefing. “There was
reason to believe that was true.”
Strait Contains International Shipping Lanes
While the strait is part of Iranian territorial water, it
also contains internationally recognized commercial shipping lanes, DoD
officials said.
Because of the way in which Iranian navy patrol boats
approached the vessels, it was, “certainly in our view a violation of
international law, which is to say by force,” Dempsey told reporters.
The chairman said Carter approved the U.S. Navy
accompaniment mission May 1 while officials looked at whether the Iranian
incidents were episodic or could become persistent.
“It doesn't appear that it's persistent right now, but we've
certainly got the resources in place should we need to quickly turn it back
on,” Dempsey said.
The Iranian government must gain control of its [Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps] land forces and the IRGC navy, if Iran is “going to
act responsibly and engage the world” as it claims it wants to, Dempsey said.
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