Tehran, Iran — Iran’s navy has seized a ship off Oman’s coast to retaliate for the “theft” of its oil from the same tanker last year by the United States, state media said Thursday.
The announcement came hours after a British-navy maritime security agency said armed men boarded the Greek-owned, Marshall Islands-flagged St Nikolas off Oman and changed course towards Bandar-e-Jask in Iran.
Four or five “unauthorized boarders are reported to be wearing military-style black uniforms with black masks”, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said.
Iran’s navy later confirmed it seized the ship named St Nicholas, which was previously called Suez Rajan.
“The Navy of the Islamic Republic of Iran seized an American oil tanker in the waters of the Gulf of Oman in accordance with a court order,” the official IRNA news agency said.
The seizure was in retaliation for “violation committed by the Suez Rajan ship… and the theft of Iranian oil by the United States,” IRNA said.
Iran has responded with tit-for-tat measures in the past after seizures of Iranian oil shipments. US sanctions target Iranian oil and petrochemical sales in a bid to reduce Iran’s energy exports.
The Islamic republic has been under crippling US sanctions reimposed following Washington’s 2018 withdrawal from a landmark nuclear deal.
Ambrey, a British maritime risk company, said the group which boarded the St Nikolas covered the ship’s cameras. A security officer “reported hearing unknown voices over the phone along with the master’s voice”, it added
Communications lost
Communications have been lost with the vessel, which was carrying 19 crew — 18 Filipinos and one Greek — the tanker’s Greece-based management company Empire Navigation told AFP in a statement.
The vessel had been loaded with 145,000 tons of crude oil in Basra, Iraq and was destined for Aliaga in Turkey via the Suez Canal, Empire added.
Ambrey said the recently renamed tanker was previously prosecuted and fined for carrying sanctioned Iranian oil, which was confiscated by US authorities.
IRNA, quoting the Iranian navy’s public relations office, said the ship was “being transferred to the ports of the Islamic republic for delivery to the judicial authorities”.
In September 2023, the United States said it had seized the Suez Rajan and its cargo of 980,000 barrels of crude oil months earlier.
The US Department of Justice said at the time that the oil on the Greek-managed tanker was allegedly being sold by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to China.
Shortly after that seizure, Iran seized two tankers — the Marshall Islands-flagged Advantage Sweet as it sailed toward the United States in the Gulf of Oman, and then the Greek-owned Niovi, as it travelled from Dubai to Fujairah.
The Gulf of Oman, a key route for the oil industry that separates Oman and Iran, has witnessed a series of hijackings and attacks over the years, often involving Iran.
Shipping in the resource-rich region is also on heightened alert following weeks of drone and missile attacks by Yemen’s Houthi rebels in the Red Sea.