TEHRAN, Iran - Iran claimed Saturday that 15
British sailors and marines had confessed to entering its waters in an act of
"blatant aggression".
The British Foreign Office summoned Iran's ambassador for the second time in
two days, saying an under-secretary had spent more than an hour in "frank and
civil" talks demanding the safe return of the sailors and Royal Marines, and
seeking assurances about their welfare and access to British consular officials.
Commodore Nick Lambert, commander of the Royal Navy frigate
HMS Cornwall, speaks aboard his ship Friday March 23, 2007 in this image
made from television. [AP] |
Iran's top military official, Gen. Ali Reza Afshar, said the sailors and
marines were moved to Tehran and under interrogation "confessed to illegal
entry" and an "aggression into the Islamic Republic of Iran's waters." Afshar
did not say what would happen to the sailors.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini accused the British
of "violating the sovereign boundaries" of Iran, calling the entry a "blatant
aggression."
He accused Britain of trying to cover up the incursion, saying it should
"refrain from putting the blame on others."
The UN Security Council, meanwhile, unanimously voted to impose new sanctions
against Iran for its refusal to stop enriching uranium -- a move intended
to show Tehran that defiance over its nuclear program will leave it increasingly
isolated.
British opposition lawmakers called on the government not to allow Iran to
use the capture of the military personnel as a tool in the nuclear dispute.
"The United Kingdom will not be blackmailed. Iran has a choice: to act
responsibly; or face greater isolation," said Menzies Campbell, leader of the
opposition Liberal Democrats.
But the British government appeared to be avoiding harsh language in its
public statements as it continued to gather information about exactly what had
happened and why.
The British sailors had searched a merchant ship Friday morning when they and
their two inflatable boats were intercepted by Iranian vessels near the disputed
Shatt al-Arab waterway, US and British officials said. The Iranians surrounded
them and escorted them away at gunpoint.
Britain immediately demanded the return of the eight Royal Navy sailors and
seven Royal Marines -- at least one of who was a woman -- and denied
they had strayed into Iranian waters while searching for smugglers off Iraq's
coast.
Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett and the Ministry of Defense said the
troops were in Iraqi waters when they were seized.
Iraq's military commander of the country's territorial waters, Brig. Gen.
Hakim Jassim, told AP Television News that Iraqi fishermen had reported that the
British boats were "in an area that is out of Iraqi control."
In June 2004, six British marines and two sailors were captured, then paraded
blindfolded on Iranian television. They admitted they had entered Iranian waters
illegally but were released unharmed after three days.
Iranian hard-liners have already called for the 15 Britons to be held until
Iran wins concessions from the West.
Several conservative student groups urged the Iranian government not to
release the sailors until five Iranians detained by US forces in Iraq earlier
this year are freed and UN's new sanctions against Iran are canceled. Some 500
Iranian students gathered on the shore near where the soldiers were captured,
shouting "Death to Britain" and "Death to America," the semiofficial Fars news
agency reported.
With tensions already running high, the United States has bolstered its naval
forces in the Persian Gulf in a show of strength directed at Iran. There is
concern that with so much military hardware in the Gulf, a small incident could
escalate dangerously.
Afshar, the Iranian officer, warned the United States would not be able to
control the consequences if it attacks Iran.
"The United States and its allies know that if they make any mistake in their
calculations ... they will not be able to control the dimensions and limit the
duration of a war," Afshar said.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, warned this week that Western
countries "must know that the Iranian nation and authorities will use all their
capacities to strike enemies that attack."
The Britons were seized in an area where the boundaries of Iraqi and Iranian
waters have long been disputed. A 1975 treaty set the center of the Shatt
al-Arab -- the 125-mile-long channel known in Iran as the Arvand
River -- as the border.
But Saddam Hussein canceled that treaty five years later and invaded Iran,
triggering an eight-year war. Virtually all of Iraq's oil is exported through an
oil terminal near the mouth of the channel.
Iran and the new Iraqi government have not signed a new treaty on their
sovereignty over the waterway.
The seized sailors, from the British frigate HMS Cornwall, are part of a task
force that maintains security in Iraqi waters under authority of the UN Security
Council. Cornwall's commander, Commodore Nick Lambert, said he hoped the
detention was a "simple mistake" stemming from the unclear border.