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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Nine US warships enter Gulf in show of force
2007-05-23
Nine U.S. warships carrying 17,000 personnel entered the Gulf on Wednesday in a show of force off Iran's coast that navy officials said was the largest daytime assembly of ships since the 2003 Iraq war. U.S. Navy officials said Iran had not been notified of plans to sail the ships, which include two aircraft carriers, through the Straits of Hormuz, a narrow channel in international waters off Iran's coast and a major artery for global oil shipments.

Rear Admiral Kevin Quinn, who is leading the group, said the ships would conduct exercises as part of a long-planned effort to reassure regional allies of U.S. commitment to Gulf security. "There's always the threat of any state or non state actor that might decide to close one of the international straits, and the biggest one is the Straits of Hormuz," he told reporters on board the USS John C. Stennis aircraft carrier. "What is special about this is that you have two strike groups. Everybody will see us because it is in daylight."

Most U.S. ships pass through the straits at night so as not to attract attention, and rarely move in such large numbers.

Navy officials said the decision to send a second aircraft carrier was made at the last minute, without giving a reason. The group of ships, carrying about 140 aircraft scheduled to participate in the exercises that will take place over the next few weeks, crossed at roughly 0355 GMT.

Highlighting the dangers of accidental escalation, a Navy official said the USS Stennis had received nine enquiries from nearby countries, two from Oman and seven from Iran, including one from an Iranian vessel that sailed close by.

On the way to the straits, a public announcement called on crew to witness "some of the most powerful ships in the world", whose tight formation against a backdrop of the setting sun created a dramatic image of American naval might. Last month, the U.S. Fifth Fleet base in Bahrain conducted its biggest crisis response drill and in March, the U.S. navy conducted its biggest war drills in the Gulf since 2003.
Posted by:Anonymoose

#4  Snerb, not standing up for Fox, but that article is from the Associated Press. No Fox contributors to it. 'Course, Fox should have read and edited it before posting.

Got a neighbor whose young Marine son on the Bonhomme Richard. They had 3 days in Singapore. Marines were told, buddy system, and one Marine gets into trouble, you all come aboard! He and a bud were renting a hotel room for $320! But, were excited about it.

Great pic --

The USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74), USS Nimitz (CVN 68), and USS Bonhomme Richard (LHD 6) strike groups steam through the Gulf of Oman.


Posted by: Sherry   2007-05-23 10:27  

#3  Looked at Fox News on this at the link

Fox has idiots working for them.

The last line of the article is:

"U.S. warships have frequently collided with merchant ships in the busy shipping lanes of the Gulf."

Whaaaaaat?

Someone needs to tell them to keep lies like that out of the news articles.

Posted by: Ulailing the Tiny7379   2007-05-23 09:59  

#2  Looked at Fox News on this at the link

Fox has idiots working for them.

The last line of the article is:

"U.S. warships have frequently collided with merchant ships in the busy shipping lanes of the Gulf."

Whaaaaaat?

Someone needs to tell them to keep lies like that out of the news articles.

Posted by: Snerb K. Layes5779   2007-05-23 09:58  

#1  I've always wondered why some smart person doesn't run a big honkin' crude oil pipeline from Basra to Kuwait City and down the coast, then across the Emirates and the flat part of Qatar to a loading terminal on the Arabian Sea. There's a bay that looks like a good natural harbor in the middle of Qatar's east coast, about 300 miles from the nearest Iranian territory; the "big" town there is called Khaluf. It would be expensive, to be sure, but probably an easier engineering problem than the Alaska pipeline. Load all the tankers on the coast of Qatar, and the Straits of Hormuz are no longer a choke point--and the mad mullahs lose their leverage.
Posted by: Mike   2007-05-23 08:44  

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