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Iran Ship Said to Be Red Sea Troop Base Off Yemen attacked

Associated Press

   DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - An Iranian ship believed to be a base for
   the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard and anchored for years in the Red
   Sea off Yemen has been attacked, Tehran acknowledged Wednesday.
   Iran's Foreign Ministry confirmed the attack on the MV Saviz, suspected
   to have been carried out by Israel -- though Tehran did not immediately
   blamed its regional archenemy. The assault came as Iran and world
   powers sat down in Vienna for the first talks about the U.S.
   potentially rejoining the tattered deal aimed at curbing Iran's nuclear
   program, showing events outside the negotiations could derail those
   efforts.
   The ship's long presence in the region, repeatedly criticized by Saudi
   Arabia, has come as the West and United Nations experts say Iran has
   provided arms and support to Yemen's Houthi rebels in that country's
   yearslong war. Iran denies arming the Houthis, though components found
   in the rebels' weaponry link back to Tehran.
   Iran previously described the Saviz as aiding in "anti-piracy" efforts
   in the Red Sea and the Bab el-Mandeb strait, a crucial chokepoint in
   international shipping. A statement attributed to Foreign Ministry
   spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh described the ship as a commercial vessel.
   "Fortunately, no casualties were reported ... and technical
   investigations are underway," Khatibzadeh said. "Our country will take
   all necessary measures through international authorities."
   In an earlier state TV statement, an anchor cited a New York Times
   story, which quoted an anonymous U.S. official telling the newspaper
   that Israel informed America it carried out an attack Tuesday morning
   on the vessel. Israeli officials declined to comment about the assault
   when reached by The Associated Press, as did the Saviz's owner.
   Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz, while refusing to say if his
   country launched the attack, described Iran and its regional allies as
   a major threat.
   "Israel must continue to defend itself," Gantz told journalists. "Any
   place we find an operational challenge and necessity, we will continue
   to act."
   Iran's semiofficial Tasnim news agency, believed to be close to the
   Guard, reported that a limpet mine planted on Saviz's hull caused the
   blast. A limpet mine is a type of naval mine that is attached to the
   side of a ship, usually by a diver. It later explodes, and can
   significantly damage a vessel.
   Iran did not blame anyone for the attack and said Iranian officials
   likely would offer more information in the coming days.
   In a statement, the U.S. military's Central Command only said it was
   aware of media reports of an incident involving the Saviz and that U.S.
   forces were not involved.
   On Wednesday, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani called the Vienna talks
   a "success" while speaking to his Cabinet.
   "Today, one united statement is being heard that all sides of the
   nuclear deal have concluded that there is no better solution than the
   deal," he said.
   A European diplomat with knowledge of the talks, speaking on condition
   of anonymity to frankly discuss the closed-door meeting in Vienna,
   acknowledged outside events could affect the negotiations.
   "We hope that every action, whether it comes from (nuclear deal)
   parties or external parties, won't undermine the dynamic," he said.
   Talks between working groups discussing proposals on American sanctions
   and Iranian violations of the deal started Tuesday night and continued
   Wednesday, even after Iran acknowledged the attack. Participants said
   the Saviz attack had no immediate effect on the meetings.

   The Saviz, owned by the state-linked Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping
   Lines, came to the Red Sea in late 2016, according to ship-tracking
   data. In the years since, it has drifted off the Dahlak archipelago, a
   chain of islands off the coast of the African nation of Eritrea. It
   likely received supply replenishments and switched crew via passing
   Iranian vessels using the waterway.
   Briefing materials from the Saudi military earlier obtained by the AP
   showed men on the vessel dressed in military-style fatigues, as well as
   small boats capable of ferrying cargo to the Yemeni coast. Those
   materials also included pictures showing a variety of antennas on the
   vessel that the Saudi government described as unusual for a commercial
   cargo ship, suggesting it conducted electronic surveillance. Other
   images showed the ship had mounts for .50-caliber machine guns.
   The Washington Institute for Near-East Policy has called the Saviz an
   "Iranian mothership" in the region, similarly describing it as an
   intelligence-gathering base and an armory for the Guard. Policy papers
   from the institute don't explain how they came to that conclusion,
   though its analysts routinely have access to Gulf and Israeli military
   sources.
   The Saviz had been under international sanctions until Iran's 2015
   nuclear deal with world powers, which saw Tehran receive relief from
   sanctions in exchange for limiting its enrichment of uranium. The Trump
   administration later renewed American sanctions on the Saviz as part of
   its decision to unilaterally withdraw from the accord.
   In June 2019, Saudi Arabia flew a critically ill Iranian off the Saviz
   after Tehran made a request through the United Nations for assistance.
   Amid the wider tensions between the U.S. and Iran, a series of
   mysterious blasts have targeted ships in the region, including some the
   U.S. Navy blamed on Iran. Among the ships damaged recently was an
   Israeli-owned car carrier in an attack Netanyahu blamed on Iran.
   Another was an Iranian cargo ship in the Mediterranean Sea.
   Iran also has blamed Israel for a recent series of attacks, including a
   mysterious explosion in July that destroyed an advanced centrifuge
   assembly plant at its Natanz nuclear facility. Another is the November
   killing of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, a top Iranian scientist who founded the
   Islamic Republic's military nuclear program two decades ago.