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    Gulf Arabs have plans against Hormuz closure: official

    ABU DHABI (Reuters) - Coastguards and naval forces of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) group of Arab countries have contingency plans for a possible attempt by Iran to shut the Strait of Hormuz, a Kuwaiti maritime official said on Monday.

    Five of the six GCC members - Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar and Kuwait - rely on the world's most important energy shipping lane being open to export most of their oil or gas.

    Tehran has threatened to close the narrow shipping lane between Oman, the only GCC member which does not depend on Hormuz, and Iran if Western sanctions aimed at starving Iran's disputed nuclear program of funds stop it from selling oil.

    The GCC members, which also rely on the four-mile-wide (6.4 kilometer) channel being open to import food for their growing populations, has now drawn up a contingency plan in case Iran acts on its threats.

    "Exporting oil or importing goods and cargo through Hormuz is a main concern for the GCC," Commander Mubarak Ali Al-Sabah chief of maritime operations at Kuwait's Coast Guard told Reuters in an interview.

    "The GCC has a plan as a body - not just Kuwait separately or Bahrain or Saudi Arabia - we have a plan we just hope that everything stays safe," Al-Sabah said, without giving details of the plans.

    "Awareness and understanding of the consequences of it has increased," he said.

    "We have plans how to deal with this but didn't do field exercises on it."

    Al-Sabah said the planning included coordinating both between coastguards and navies of GCC countries and with Western naval forces patrolling the area -- including U.S., Australian and French navies.

    Kuwaiti and Iranian coastguards hold regular meetings on how to manage their shared maritime border, with the next one scheduled for next month.

    "We don't go into politics or speak about other issues just what concerns the coastguards and how we can work it out," he said.

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    Iran oil exports: http://link.reuters.com/pyw35s

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    Oil tanker flows through the Strait of Hormuz are estimated at around 16 million barrels per day (bpd), or just under a fifth of global oil supplies.

    A new pipeline from the UAE's oilfields to the Gulf of Oman could carry most of the Gulf OPEC oil producer's exports if Hormuz were to be blocked.

    But even a brief disruption to shipping could stop most of the oil exported from Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait and Iraq from leaving the Gulf, along with liquefied natural gas (LNG) from leading supplier Qatar.

    In December, the U.S. Fifth Fleet said it would not tolerate any disruption of traffic in Hormuz but analysts say Iran might be able to hinder traffic transiting the Strait by scattering mines in it.

    "In any navy plan that exists there would be plans for swift coordination to de-mine areas that might have been mined... Or act in coordination preemptively or reactively to prevent Iranian small vessels disrupting shipping," Christian Le Miere, research fellow for naval forces and maritime security at the International Institute for Strategic Studies said.

    Earlier this month, Iran's foreign minister warned Arab neighbors not to side with the United States in the escalating dispute over Tehran's nuclear activities which the West says includes weapons development and Tehran insists are limited to electricity production.

    (Reporting by Maha Dahan, writing by Amena Bakr; Editing by Daniel Fineren)

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    61 comments

    • Richard Dimarzo  •  23 days ago
      It is about time somebody else got off their lazy #$%$ and did something. How about France and Germany, and the rest of Europe? they are the ones who benefit from the oil. The US needs to stop being Europe's military. By providing a military for Europe, we allow them to perpetuate their socialistic practices. They need to fund their own defense.
    • PlayfulAtHeart  •  Snellville, United States  •  22 days ago
      I certainly hope someone is tracking the vessels travelling through that area, and what has truly been loaded onto them. One of the main risks identified back in late 70's, early 80's was not of mines, or naval blockade, but of a well coordinated effort to sink several salvaged/retired freighters in the chokepoint. Each direction in that chokepoint has a 2 mile wide, 100 foot deep navigation channel, and it was proven that 2-3 sunken freighters in each channel would all be effectively close the channels until those freighters flattened/dismantled/moved.
    • moonboy1948  •  Sparta, United States  •  23 days ago
      A warning to those who want to close Hormuz. Do you think Big Oil is going to allow that? I wouldn't mess with them.
    • cheezewhiz  •  21 days ago
      Try to run a hospital or grocery store w/o plastic, a large farm w/o oil, transport w/o fuel?
      Petroleum is now vital to the security of our American way of life yet we squander it as tho we had walked away and left the tap running. America uses (once only) enough water bottles every year to reach around the globe 190 times, next year? Your car uses 99% of the energy just to move itself, 1% moves you. That hippie in the hybrid is in your way. Even "organic food" is grown with the use of fuel. Lots of people die about that oil that you would die without. We have passed the peak of oil yield and it will only be harder to get.
      As the supply tapers down the price will soar, as will profits. The predictable decline of supply will lead to exponential grief, conflict and profit. Your submarine mortgage will seem
      like the most luxurious of maladays while our struggle to get more oil will make some "bad" guys very wealthy indeed.
      How do you like you now? Do you think it would be a good idea for you to breed? Our children will have used up the last of the oil and begun to fight the final conflict about water.
      I dont see you in the future or the pasture. Join the party, Wave the flag.
    • billcrawford  •  Austin, United States  •  22 days ago
      “The GCC has a plan as a body - not just Kuwait separately or Bahrain or Saudi Arabia - we have a plan we just hope that everything stays safe," Al-Sabah said, without giving details of the plans."

      The secret plan is to once again have the United States bail out there sorry asses while they continue to hike oil prices that the United States and it's stupid politicians keep fallling for while throwing Billions at Green nothingness businesses and their corrupt cronies and this means Obama and his minions or crooks, It is time you all wake up as I have had enough of this garbage and ignorance especially with those that are stuck on stupid and vote for these idiots, bar none, enough is enough!

      Strong letter to follow!
    • Downriver  •  Detroit, United States  •  23 days ago
      And yet Obama turns down a new source of oil from a friendly ,stable country . It boarders on Treason that this National interest isn't being secured in the fastest possible way..
    • Big Ed Grissill  •  22 days ago
      The more I think about this, let them shut off oil for say six months, think of how many of those insane Al Queada supporters would lose it. No food, no money, maybe it would be a good thing. Sure the rich ones would jet off to Londonstan, but they would learn a good lesson. THEY NEED US MORE THAN WE NEED THEM! If we had an American president and a government run my Americans not the real life Dr Evil, George Soros, we would drill for our own oil.
    • navyvietvet  •  22 days ago
      I think the canadians should pipe their oil to their east coast, load it on tankers and send it to europe instead of china.. make china dependent on the iranian oil, nobody else....meanwhile, get rid of Obie1 in November and likewise get on with the production of the Baaken fields in N.D.
    • voice of reason  •  Montreal, Quebec  •  23 days ago
      I guess I am going to have to get a job closer to home. Looks like the price of oil is not going to drop anytime soon and it is getting to costly to go to work.
    • E.D.  •  23 days ago
      Their plan is that they will demand that America do something about it.
    • Wouldnt  •  Belmar, United States  •  23 days ago
      Yeah, I know what their "plan" is, to call the U.S. NAVY!
    • Elaine  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  22 days ago
      Start building more pipelines and bypass the strait. Oil goes west build a pipeline across Saudi Arabia to the top of the Red Sea. Oil goes east Oman is the place. This might also solve the Somali pirate problem.
    • Jameson  •  23 days ago
      bet long on oil futures. put the option. hedge hard and still make millions.
    • Nathan  •  San Diego, United States  •  23 days ago
      This would be a great time to move 5th Flt out of Bahrain and move to Perth Australia so they can focus on the Piracy in the IO and Straits of Malaka. America should withdraw all troops from the Persian Gulf for a while and just inter into a period of deconfliction with the Sunni and Shia and allow them to make peace with out our interference by covert and economic sanctions which are back dooring us into a War with out A declaration of War from Congress.

      The best way to defend America from it's Enemies, is for America not to have any Enemies.
    • TATTOOJAKE  •  London, Ontario  •  23 days ago
      Threats upon threats and more speculation. Will someone please just take Mahmoud Ahmadinejad fishing please!
    • Billy  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  22 days ago
      It's surprising how few people know that Ahmadinejad has little or no actual power in Iran. He is part of the public election charade played by the lead Ayatollah, who actually jerks Mahmoud's strings and dictates policy. His main claim to fame , as I recall, is that he is one of the 50 or so radical students who took over the US Embassy and held those within hostage for a year. Kinda luckily for them President Carter was a pacifist, who believed in negotiation. They knew this, so when Reagan was elected, the little game ended. Today, Mr. A and his pals might have had a close look at how Seal Team six plays with their toys. Of course, the Seal's capacity to play has been given a boost by new tech, and honed by ten years of real time practice. It is unlikely Iran will close the strait for long, the hardship wreaked upon their own people, and the fractures w/in the Revolutionary Guard, might bring the Arab Spring to Iran itself. The fall of Iran's Ayatollah, and a subsequent move to real elections, could be a real region stabilizer. The subsequent drop in the price of oil would cost OPEC a lot of revenue, so if there is real change sparked in Iran, it will be interesting to see how all our " allies " in the region try to play both sides. There has been a whole lot of intrigue, mistrust, manipulation, and baksheesh in this region for centuries. It's not likely to change much as long as so much power/money is held in the hands of so few.
    • rick j  •  23 days ago
      A floatila or an armada!! Sooner or later they will ask for help from the major powers....
    • Anon  •  23 days ago
      Iran knows they can't close the strait, hence why it is not closed right now and inspectors are in Iran right now inspecting Iran's capabilites. It's not the USA they would be fighting alone it's the entire world that relies on that strait to get their goods through. Lets not forget to mention that if you mess with "Big Oil" your going to get hurt.
    • ben  •  Mississauga, Ontario  •  23 days ago
      These imbeciles GCC think they can open the straight, they are dreaming. Iran needs to close it a few days only & then work at destroying the fields of all GCC by sabotage or bombing, also any tanker sunk will cause ship insurance to rise significantly and a lot of days to clear in a war situation. The cost of oil & insurance will have a significant effect on the duration of the war. All I hope is the zionist entity who wants this will disappear when all is said & done, in fact it should be the first target for iran.
    • Dobie  •  Oklahoma City, United States  •  23 days ago
      Thought the Saudi's had built a pipeline across the desert to the Red Sea?
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