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Iran’s supreme leader orders probe into ‘mistaken’ naval strike

  • May 13, 2020

May 13, 2020

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has called on Iranian army commanders to probe a missile strike that “accidentally” killed 19 service members during naval drills in the country’s southeast last week. In his statement, Khamenei ordered the officials to “shed light” on the incident, identify the “possible culprits” and take necessary measures to avoid any future recurrence of such a tragedy, which he lamented as “bitter and painful.”

On May 12, fellow comrades bid farewell to the sailors during a state funeral near the port city of Chabahar. Based on the initial explanation from navy commanders, the missile was fired by mistake during one of the many routine exercises Iran holds in the Gulf of Oman, close to the strategic Strait of Hormuz, which is the maritime passageway for 20% of the world’s oil traffic.

Khamenei’s statement, which came out two days after the incident, struck an open similarity in wording and tone with another message he released in January after the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) admitted to have “mistakenly” shot down a Ukraine International Airlines flight outside the capital Tehran, killing all 176 passengers on board, most of them of Iranian origin.

Despite Khamenei’s call and pledges from Iranian authorities for justice, no individual has been put to trial in connection with the tragedy that placed Tehran under international spotlight for several weeks. Diplomatic pressure, particularly from Canada and Ukraine, has yet to convince the Islamic Republic to let loose of the two black boxes it recovered from the crash site.

Following the naval missile strike, Iranian media outlets and political commentators have been advising the authorities against adhering to the same pattern that characterized the fallout of the Ukrainian plane crash. It took the IRGC three days of denial and cover-up before publicly coming clean about the attack. The Reformist daily Mardomsalari has now urged transparency and a speedy investigation into the naval tragedy, which “was reminiscent of the Ukrainian jetliner.”

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