Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pointed the finger at Iran for Thursday's explosion on board an Israeli-owned cargo ship in the Gulf of Oman.
"This was indeed an operation by Iran. That is clear", he told Kan Radio on Monday.
When asked whether Israel would retaliate for the incident, Netanyahu repeated previous statements about his drive to keep Iran from developing nuclear weapons.
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Israeli owned MV HELIOS RAY suffers explosion within the Gulf of #Oman. Vessel inbound Singapore from Dammam Saudi Arabia when incident occurred 44nm NW Muscat. Owner tells Reuters damage = 2 holes, diameter approx 1.5m. pic.twitter.com/L4rk1U6pb4
He spoke a day after Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz asserted that Iran could be responsible for the explosion, which caused several holes in the port and starboard sides of the Bahamian-flagged ship. The latter was subsequently identified as the MV Helios Ray. The blast did not disable the vessel or cause casualties, but prodded the vessel to anchor in Dubai for repairs on Saturday.
"We need to continue investigating. The Iranians are looking to harm Israelis and Israeli infrastructure. The proximity to Iran leads to the assessment that there is a likelihood that this is an Iranian initiative. We are committed to continuing to check", Gantz pointed out.
#Oman:-An Israeli-owned ship, the MV HELIOS RAY, was hit by an explosion in the Gulf of Oman overnight Thursday and a US defence official said the blast left holes in both sides of the vessel's hull. The cause was not immediately clear. pic.twitter.com/MlLMoHYmPt
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This was preceded by the maritime risk-management firm Dryad Global tweeting on Friday that the blast could possibly stem from “asymmetric activity by the Iranian military”. Tehran has not commented on the matter yet.
Dryad Global also claimed that the explosion took place as the vessel with 28 crew members on board was about 44 nautical miles (50 miles) from Oman's capital Muscat.
Iran-Israel Tensions
The developments come amid ongoing tensions between Tehran and Israel’s ally, the US. Relations between the two have been strained since then-President Donald Trump announced Washington’s unilateral exit from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), in May 2018, and the reinstatement of strict economic sanctions against the Islamic Republic.
Exactly a year later, Tehran announced that it had started scaling down some of its JCPOA obligations, including those related to uranium enrichment.
Israel, in turn, accuses Iran of trying to obtain a nuclear weapon and seeking to boost its military presence in Syria. Tehran insists that there are only Iranian military advisers in the Arab country to help Damascus tackle terrorist groups.