What's new

Israel Navy Captures Arms Ship

Metallic

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jan 22, 2009
Messages
1,645
Reaction score
0
Israel Navy Captures Arms Ship
ISRAEL - 4 NOVEMBER 2009

JERUSALEM -- Israeli naval commandos seized an arms ship Wednesday near Cyprus that was carrying missiles and anti-tank weapons from Iran to Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon, defense officials said.

The pre-dawn seizure highlighted Israel's accusations that Iran is arming its enemies. Israel offered no evidence to back up its claim that the weapons were meant for Hezbollah.

The arms cache, including anti-tank missiles and Katyusha rockets, was stashed aboard a commercial vessel operating under the guise of an aid boat, captained by a Pole and flying an Antiguan flag, Israeli defense officials said.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because the military had not yet officially released the information.

A naval unit patrolling the area spotted the vessel and on the basis of intelligence reports, intercepted and boarded it, defense officials said.

The takeover of the boat occurred without incident, said military spokeswoman Lt. Col. Avital Leibovich.

She gave no details about the weapons and munitions. Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai said the crew was not involved in any arms-smuggling effort.

The boat was towed to the southern Israeli port of Ashdod, where the weapons were being unloaded.

A senior Lebanese army official refused to comment on the report, saying it happened outside Lebanon's borders and outside the country's national waters. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with military regulations.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak called the interception ''another success against the relentless attempts to smuggle weapons to bolster terrorist elements threatening Israel's security.''

The boat was the second major arms ship Israel has seized in its campaign to quash the smuggling of weapons to Palestinian and Lebanese militants.

In January 2002, Israeli forces stormed the Karine A freighter on the Red Sea, and confiscated what the military said was 50 tons of missiles, mortars, rifles and ammunition headed for Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip.

The Lebanon-Israel border has been largely quiet since Israel and Hezbollah fought a fierce war in the summer of 2006. But Israel has long warned that Hezbollah fighters have been rearming and now possess some 40,000 rockets.

Gaza militants also have dramatically reduced their rocket attacks on southern Israel since a bruising winter war. But militants continue to smuggle in rockets and components through underground tunnels with Egypt, the Israeli military says.

On Tuesday, the head of military intelligence said Gaza's militant Hamas rulers recently test-fired a missile capable of striking Israel's largest urban center, metropolitan Tel Aviv.

Hamas and Hezbollah are both proxies of Iran, whose nuclear program, long-range missiles and patronage of militants on Israel's southern and northern flanks make it the Jewish state's most formidable foe.

Israel shares the West's fears that Tehran is developing nuclear weapons, despite its assertions to the contrary. Neutralizing the Iranian nuclear threat remains Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's top priority and Israel has not ruled out a military strike against Tehran's nuclear facilities.


Source: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 
was it in international waters.. how can isreal board and capture a third country's ship in a fourth countries waters ?
 
was it in international waters.. how can isreal board and capture a third country's ship in a fourth countries waters ?
Here you go...

Crimes Under Flags of Convenience | YaleGlobal Online Magazine
In June, 2002, French commandos boarded the Cambodian-registered freighter Winner in international waters in the Atlantic amid an exchange of gunfire that injured one of the 12 crew members. The troops seized more than one tonne of Colombian cocaine worth well over $100 million in a cargo that was registered as scrap iron destined for Bilbao in Spain. Officials said that the raid was the result of 15-months of surveillance involving U.S., French, Spanish and Greek authorities.
Being in international waters and under a flag does not render one immune from boarding by hostile parties.
 

Back
Top Bottom