Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Iraq denies any connection to tanker seized by Iran

Iraqi oil ministry says the ship, which Iranian forces claim was smuggling diesel fuel, does not belong to it and that Iraq “does not export diesel to the international market.”

Illustrative image of an oil tanker. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Illustrative image of an oil tanker. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

Iraq on Sunday denied any connection with an oil tanker seized by Iran in the Gulf for smuggling fuel, Iraqi media reported.

“The ministry does not export diesel to the international market,” Iraq’s oil ministry said in a statement. The statement went on to say that Iraqi authorities were working to gather information about the vessel.

Iranian state media reported on Sunday that the country’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had seized the tanker, alleging it was smuggling fuel for unnamed Arab states.

Two Iraqi port officials told Reuters that said initial information obtained shows that the seized vessel, a “small ship,” is owned by a private shipping company which is owned by an Iraqi private trader.

“It is in line with the U.N.’s attitude and obsession with Israel,” said the president of the World Jewish Congress-Israel.
Israel’s Home Front Command has implemented an advanced preliminary alert system for Lebanese rocket threats.
The completion of two new pipelines will enable Leviathan to maximize its production capacity for both domestic needs and exports.
The war with Iran strained the Gulf state’s relationship with Hamas, but the evidence points less to a real break than to a Qatari balancing act.
Developing technologies that can make a truck vanish from radar. The race to find a solution to the new drone threat.
“Only one president was willing to lay it out on the line and ensure after 47 years that Iran is not capable of having a nuclear weapon,” said the U.S. secretary of defense.