U.S. Destroyer Collides with Tanker at Entrance to Arab Gulf

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
  • W460
  • W460
  • W460

A U.S. guided-missile destroyer collided on Sunday with a Japanese-owned bulk oil tanker near the entrance to the Arab Gulf, but no one was hurt and the ship is able to operate, the U.S. Fifth Fleet said.

"No one was hurt Sunday morning when a U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer and a large Japanese-owned merchant vessel collided near the Strait of Hormuz," the Bahrain-based fleet said in a statement on its website.

"The collision between USS Porter (DDG 78) and the Panamanian-flagged bulk oil tanker M/V Otowasan occurred at approximately 1:00 am," (2200 GMT Saturday) it said.

The collision "was not combat related," it added.

Overall damage to the destroyer is being evaluated, while the ship is "able to operate under its own power," and "no personnel on either vessel were injured," it said.

The destroyer is on a scheduled deployment to the Fifth Fleet, it added.

Around one fifth of the world's traded oil passes through the narrow Strait of Hormuz, which connects the oil-rich Arab Gulf to the Indian Ocean.

Tension spiked in the area earlier this year as Iran threatened to block the waterway in retaliation for a Western boycott of its oil exports.

Comments 1
Default-user-icon admiral white cane (Guest) 12 August 2012, 16:16

Obviously the US need to equip it's destroyers with guided-destroyer missiles.