...and on the other side of the Gulf:  Supply plane for peacekeepers
shot down in Somalia
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/africa/03/23/somalia.ap/index.html?eref=rss_world

(Not DynCorp, Transaviaexport, based in Minsk, Belarus... I wonder if
they were also used to move AQ and KLA mercs around Kosovo or make
those 1/4 million AK-47s vanish in Iraq?)


Britain demands Iran free seized sailors

By JIM KRANE, Associated Press Writer 54 minutes ago
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070323/ap_on_re_mi_ea/british_seized_iran_20

Naval forces of Iran's hardline Revolutionary Guards captured 15
British sailors and marines at gunpoint Friday in the Persian Gulf —
an audacious move coming during heightened tensions between the West
and Iran.

U.S. and British officials said a boarding party from the frigate HMS
Cornwall was seized about 10:30 a.m. during a routine inspection of a
merchant ship inside Iraqi territorial waters near the disputed Shatt
al-Arab waterway.

Iran's Foreign Ministry insisted the Britons were operating in Iranian
waters and would be held "for further investigation," Iranian state
television said.

A U.S. Navy official in Bahrain, Cmdr. Kevin Aandahl, said Iran's
Revolutionary Guard naval forces were responsible and had broadcast a
brief radio message saying the British party was not harmed.

In London, the British government summoned the Iranian ambassador to
the Foreign Office, and Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said he
"was left in no doubt that we want them back."

Iranian TV quoted an Iranian Foreign Ministry official as saying the
top British diplomat in Tehran had been called in to receive Tehran's
protest of the "illegal entry" into Iranian waters.

"This is not the first time that British military personnel during the
occupation of Iraq have entered illegally into Iran's territorial
waters," the unidentified official was quoted as saying.

Britain's Defense Ministry said the Royal Navy personnel were "engaged
in routine boarding operations of merchant shipping in Iraqi
territorial waters" and had completed a ship inspection when they were
accosted by Iranian vessels.

The eight Royal Navy sailors and seven Royal Marines were part of a
task force that protects Iraqi oil terminals and maintains security in
Iraqi waters under authority of the U.N. Security Council.

The Cornwall's commander, Commodore Nick Lambert, said the frigate
lost communication with the boarding party, but a helicopter crew saw
Iranian naval vessels approach.

"I've got 15 sailors and marines who have been arrested by the
Iranians and my immediate concern is their safety," he told British
Broadcasting Corp. television.

Lambert said he hoped it was a "simple mistake" stemming from the long
dispute between Iraq and Iran over demarcating their territorial
waters just off the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab, a waterway that
divides the two countries.

White House press secretary Tony Snow said the Bush administration was
monitoring events. "The British government is demanding the immediate
safe return of the people and equipment and we are keeping watch on
the situation," Snow said.

The incident occurred as the U.N. Security Council debates expanding
sanctions against Iran seeking to force Tehran to suspend uranium
enrichment. The U.S. and other nations suspect Iran is trying to
produce nuclear weapons. Iran denies that and insists it won't halt
the program.

Iran's leaders also have denied allegations by the U.S., Britain and
others that Iranians are arming Shiite Muslim militias in Iraq.

Hours before the seizure of the Royal Navy team, British Lt. Col.
Justin Maciejewski told BBC Radio 4's "Today" program from the Iraqi
city of Basra that Iranians provided weapons and money to militants
who are attacking British troops in southern Iraq.

The U.S. military has leveled similar charges, saying Iranians send
arms to Iraqi extremists, including sophisticated roadside bombs.

This week, two commanders of an Iraqi Shiite militia told The
Associated Press in Baghdad that hundreds of Iraqi Shiites had crossed
into Iran for training by the elite Quds force, a branch of Iran's
Revolutionary Guard thought to have trained Hezbollah guerrillas in
Lebanon.

With tensions running high, the United States has bolstered its naval
forces in the Persian Gulf in a show of strength directed at Iran. A
strike group led by the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis recently
joined a similar force led by the carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower.

U.S. officials have expressed concern that with so much military
hardware in the Gulf, a small incident like Friday's could escalate
into a dangerous confrontation.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, warned this week that
if Western countries "treat us with threats and enforcement of
coercion and violence, undoubtedly they must know that the Iranian
nation and authorities will use all their capacities to strike enemies
that attack."

The seizure of two Royal Navy inflatable boats took place just outside
the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab waterway, a 125-mile channel dividing
Iraq from Iran. Its name means Arab Coastline in Arabic, and Iranians
call it Arvandrud — Persian for Arvand River.

A 1975 treaty recognized the middle of the waterway as the border.
Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein canceled the treaty five years later and
invaded Iran, triggering an eight-year war.

"It's been in dispute for some time," said Aandahl, the U.S. Navy
official in Bahrain. "We've been operating there for a couple of years
and we know the lines very well. This was a compliant boarding, this
happens routinely. What's out of the ordinary is the Iranian
response."

In June 2004, six British marines and two sailors were seized by Iran
in the Shatt al-Arab. They were presented blindfolded on Iranian
television and admitted entering Iranian waters illegally, then
released unharmed after three days.

Vali Nasr, a senior fellow for Middle East Studies at the Council on
Foreign Relations, suggested Friday's detention could be connected to
the arrest of five Iranians in a U.S.-led raid in northern Iraq in
January. The U.S. said the five included a Revolutionary Guard
general.

"I think Iran sees this as retaliation for the arrest of their own
personnel. They have repeatedly said that they want their personnel
released," Nasr said. "So they are either signaling that they can do
the same thing or they are trying to bring attention to it."

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