US letter sent to Tehran on Strait of Hormuz



TEHRAN - The United States has sent a letter to Iran regarding its threatened closure of the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the foreign ministry spokesman said on Sunday, without revealing the letter’s contents.
“The US ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice, sent a letter to Mohammad Khazaie, Iran’s UN representative, which was conveyed by the Swiss ambassador, and finally Iraqi President Jalal Talabani delivered its contents to officials” in Iran, the official IRNA news agency quoted Ramin Mehmanparast as saying. “We are in the process of studying the letter and if necessary we will respond.”
The United States has had no diplomatic relations with Iran since shortly after the 1979 Islamic revolution, and Swiss diplomats handle US interests there.
On Friday, the New York Times, citing unnamed US officials, reported that Washington had used a secret channel to warn Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that closing the narrow strategic waterway would cross a “red line” and provoke a response.
The US officials did not provide details about the covert communication channel, except to say that it was separate from the Swiss government.
Tehran threatened to close the strait - a chokepoint for one fifth of the world’s traded oil - late last month, in the event of a military strike or severe tightening of international sanctions over its controversial nuclear programme.
Washington is beefing up its naval presence in waters just outside the Gulf in response to the threats.
Masoud Jazayeri, deputy chief of Iran’s armed forces, claimed that any US aggression would fail.
“Despite their propaganda, the United States knows that it does not have the ability to halt the Islamic Republic’s activities in certain areas, notably in closing the Strait of Hormuz,” Jazayeri was quoted by the Fars news agency as saying on Sunday.
“The policy of Iran is to resolve the tensions and... to guarantee the security of all the traffic in the Persian Gulf.
“But if the interests of Iran and the Islamic world are in danger, our armed forces have the ability to confront those wishing to create trouble in the region,” he added.
The head of Iran’s navy, Admiral Habibollah Sayari, reiterated in comments published on Sunday in the Tehran Emrouz daily that closing the strait would be as easy as “drinking water.”
Washington and its allies have stepped up increasingly harsh sanctions on Iran over its nuclear enrichment programme, which they charge is part of a secret drive to develop nuclear weapons.
Iran insists its atomic ambitions are entirely peaceful and has vowed to retaliate against any strike on its facilities.
Tensions again flared following Wednesday’s killing of an Iranian nuclear scientist in a bombing Tehran blamed on US and Israeli intelligence services. US officials have denied any involvement.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have announced new naval manoeuvres in the Strait of Hormuz within the next few weeks, underlining Tehran’s threat to close the channel linking the Gulf and the Arabian Sea.

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