
Paul Joseph Watson
The Iranian Army has refused to comment after a member of the country’s
National Security Committee said today that Iran was to practice closing
the Strait of Hormuz, the most important choke point for oil shipments
in the world.
“The legislator, Parviz Sarvari, told the student news
agency ISNA: “Soon we will hold a military manoeuvre on how to close the
Strait of Hormuz. If the world wants to make the region insecure, we
will make the world insecure,” reports Reuters.
The Straight of Hormuz, just 34 miles wide at its
narrowest point, is a key transport passage for petroleum exporting
countries from the Persian Gulf, with the 15.5 million barrels of oil
that pass through it each day representing 33% of the world’s total oil
shipments.
The Iranian military refused to comment on the report,
but Iran has repeatedly threatened to close the shipping channel in the
event of a US or Israeli-led attack, a potential action the United
States has characterized as an act of war.
Following speculation that sanctions would be placed on Iranian oil exports, Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast warned last week that oil prices would soar above $250 dollars barrel.
In response , US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta stated,
“Any disruption of the free flow of commerce through the Persian Gulf
is a very grave threat to all of us and a red line for the US.”
Experts have forecast
that a 30 day closure of the Strait of Hormuz would send oil prices
skyrocketing to between $300-$500 dollars a barrel, a level that would
trigger global economic instability and cost the U.S. nearly $75 billion
in GDP.
As we reported last week,
the United States has deployed a total of three warships to the Middle
East, along with several other attack boats, as tensions in the region
escalate.
With the USS John C. Stennis already stationed just
outside Iranian territorial waters, the the USS Abraham Lincoln and the
USS Carl Vinson are on their way to join her.
The United States now has a total of five major aircraft
carriers deployed around the world, the same number of warships that
were in action shortly before the invasion of Iraq in early 2003.