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Video Shows Iran Removing A Mine From An Oil Tanker, US Says

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Shelby Talcott Senior White House Correspondent
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  • The U.S. military released footage that allegedly show Iran removing a mine from an oil tanker that was attacked on Thursday, and they blame Iran for the attack.
  • Iran has denied allegations and blamed the attack on someone trying to ruin their relations with other countries.
  • Other sources say that evidence suggesting the object removed from the tanker was a mine is circumstantial.

The U.S. military released video footage they say shows Iranian special forces removing an unexploded mine from an oil tanker after an attack Thursday.

President Donald Trump blamed Iran after two oil tankers were attacked in the Gulf of Oman Thursday. The U.S. says footage proves Iran was the perpetrator behind the attacks, but Iran said Friday that these accusations were “alarming,” and denied the allegations, according to the Washington Post.

The attack resulted in about a 4% increase in oil prices. Video footage shows Iran removing a mine from one of the oil tankers according to U.S. Centcom, but others have disagreed that the object is a mine. (RELATED: Here’s How Iran Would Carry Out A Plan To Disrupt Global Oil Trade)

An “IRGC [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps] Gashti Class patrol boat approached the M/T [motor tanker] Kokuka Courageous and was observed and recorded removing the unexploded limpet mine from the M/T Kokuka Courageous,” according to a Thursday statement from U.S. Centcom. The video shows people in a boat removing an object from the side of a tanker.

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Yutaka Katada, the president of the attacked ship’s operator, Kokuka Sangyo, appeared to dispute the idea that the object was a mine.

“Our crew said that the ship was attacked by a flying object,” Katada said in an interview. “I do not think there was a time bomb or an object attached to the side of the ship.”

The boat in the video is similar to the one that Iran’s IRGC uses, according to analysis by Frank Gardner, BBC’S security correspondent. Multiple images appear to indicate that the vessel in the video is one of the vessels that the IRGC usually uses, shown in a Bellingcat Twitter thread.

Whether the removed object was in fact a mine remains unclear. Evidence was “circumstantial” according to Bellingcat. They also stated that Iran may have removed the object to investigate it, and that this doesn’t mean that they were definitely responsible.

Iran has placed the blame of the attack on someone looking to ruin Iran’s relations with other countries, BBC reported. Iran was also blamed in the attack by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

“It is the assessment of the United States government that the Islamic Republic of Iran is responsible for the attacks in the Gulf of Oman,” Pompeo told reporters according to The Daily Beast. “These unprovoked attacks present a clear threat to international peace and security, a blatant assault on the freedom of navigation, and an unacceptable campaign of escalating tension by Iran.”

Tensions between the U.S. and Iran have escalated in recent years after Trump abandoned a nuclear deal that developed under former President Barack Obama. The Trump administration has since placed sanctions on the Iranian government.

“Well, Iran did do it, and you know they did do it because you saw the boat,” Trump said on Fox & Friends Friday. “They didn’t want the evidence left behind. … It was them that did it.”

The M/T Kokuka Courageous crew abandoned their ship after they discovered a “probable unexploded limpet mine on their hull” after the explosion, the U.S. Centcom statement noted.

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