UAE willing to join international force to reopen Straits of Hormuz, FT reports
Photo: Reuters
The United Arab Emirates has told the US and other Western allies that it would participate in a multinational maritime task force to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the Financial Times reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter.
The UAE is trying to push dozens of countries to create a “Hormuz Security Force” to defend the strait from Iranian attacks and escort shipping, the report added.
The UAE has faced more Iranian attacks than any other country in the region, including Israel.
Several US allies have said they have no immediate plans to send ships to unblock the Strait of Hormuz, rebuffing a Trump request for military support to keep the vital waterway open.
France said on Thursday it had held talks with around 35 countries seeking partners and proposals for a mission to reopen the strait, but only once the US-Israeli war on Iran ends.
Read: Trump says he will 'pause' destruction of energy plants in Iran by 10 days
Iran has effectively blocked the Strait of Hormuz, which carries about 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas, spiking energy prices and fuelling fears of global inflation.
The UAE is also working on a UN Security Council resolution with Bahrain to provide any future task force with a mandate, but Russia and China could oppose the move, the report added.
UN Security Council members have begun negotiating resolutions to protect commercial shipping in and around the Strait of Hormuz, including a Bahraini draft that would authorise the use of "all necessary means", Reuters reported earlier this week.
Last week, a senior Emirati official said the UAE may join a US-led effort to protect shipping in the Strait of Hormuz after Iran all but shut the waterway to ships.
The waterway is vital to the economy of the UAE, a major oil exporter and trade hub. Iran has repeatedly attacked an Emirati port located outside the Gulf that is used to load oil exports.
Reuters could not immediately verify the report.
Additionally, Kuwait's Shuwaikh port was hit by drones, causing material damage with no injuries reported, the Kuwait ports authority said on Friday, according to Reuters.
According to Al Arabiya, the Saudi Press Agency, quoting the spokesperson of the Ministry of Defense Major General Turki Al-Maliki, said that two drones have been intercepted and destroyed in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province
Naftali Benett criticises Netanyahu
Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said Thursday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “does not know how to win in any arena,” criticising the government’s handling of military operations in Gaza, Lebanon and Iran, according to Israeli media, Anadolu Agency reported.
“The current government’s political leadership is obstructing the army’s ability to achieve victory across multiple fronts,” Bennett said in an interview with Channel 12, accusing leaders of prioritising political considerations over security needs.
He said the military is facing a shortage of about 20,000 troops, arguing that drafting ultra-Orthodox Jews could help fill the gap but that "the government is avoiding the move for political reasons."
"The current leadership in Israel does not know how to win in any arena," Bennett added.
Qatar lowers heightened security alert
Qatar has lowered its heightened security alert after the ministry of interior sent a message to residents saying the “threat has been eliminated and the situation has returned to normal”, according to Al Jazeera.
Qatar’s emergency services issued a heightened security alert, sending screeching messages on phones across the country — the first in a week.
The alert asked people to stay indoors and away from windows, and suggested an incoming missile or drone.
UN Security Council to meet today
According to the Russian state news agency TASS, the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) will hold closed-door talks on strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure at Moscow's request.
“The Russian Federation has requested closed-door consultations with the UN Security Council due to the ongoing strikes on civilian infrastructure in Iran, including educational and healthcare facilities,” said Evgeny Uspensky, spokesman for Russia’s envoy to the United Nations.
Israeli military displaces, wounds civilians
According to Drop Site News, the BBC reports that at least seven civilians have been killed in a US-Israeli strike on residential units in the city of Urmia in northwest Iran.
Breaking: Early Friday, after a residential area in Urmia was hit by an airstrike, aid workers arrived at the scene and are carrying out search and rescue operations. https://t.co/LAWk0uvO0U pic.twitter.com/R5NNMLCfpI
Al Jazeera reports that the Israeli military has said residents of Sajd village in southern Lebanon should leave immediately as Israeli forces will “act against it forcefully.”
Residents need to evacuate the village, believed to be in the Jezzine district of Nabatieh Governorate, and “move north of the Zahrani River”, the military said.
Anadolu Ajansi states that, according to the Palestinian Red Crescent, 2 Palestinian youths were shot and wounded by Israeli forces during a raid on Qalandiya camp north of Jerusalem.
Five Palestinians were injured on Thursday evening in Israeli army fire and attacks by occupiers across the occupied West Bank, according to Palestinian sources.