CAIRO, Feb 16 (Reuters) - A Panamanian-flagged tanker carrying crude oil bound for India was struck with a missile in the Red Sea, the U.S. State Department said on Friday.
The missile launched from Yemen hit the M/T Pollux on its port side, according to the State Department.
Earlier on Friday, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) agency and British maritime security firm Ambrey said a Panama-flagged tanker had reportedly been hit 72 nautical miles (133 km) northwest of the port of Mokha, off Yemen.
"The vessel ... reportedly sustained minor damage. The crew was reported safe and unharmed," Ambrey said.
"This is yet another example of the lawless attacks on international shipping, which continue after numerous joint and international statements calling the Houthis to cease," a State Department spokesperson said.
M/T Pollux embarked from Russia's Black Sea port city of Novorossiysk on Jan. 24 and was due to discharge in Paradip, India, on Feb 28, according to LSEG data. Indian Oil Company has a 300,000 barrels per day (bpd) oil refinery at Paradip, in eastern Odisha state.
The ship is owned by Oceanfront Maritime Co SA and managed by Sea Trade Marine SA, according to LSEG data. Representatives from those firms did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Another vessel three nautical miles to the northeast of the M/T Pollux was observed altering course to port, away from the tanker, Ambrey said.
Yemen's Iran-backed Houthis have said they will press on with attacks on Red Sea shipping in solidarity with the Palestinians, as long as Israel continues to commit "crimes" against them.
"Our operations have a big impact on the enemy which constitute a great success and a real triumph," Houthi leader Abdulmalik al-Houthi said in a televised speech on Thursday.
The attacks on ships have disrupted global commerce, stoked fears of inflation and deepened concern the Israel-Hamas war could spread.
Reporting by Jana Choukeir in Dubai, Ahmed Tolba in Cairo and Daphne Psaledakis in Washington, and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; writing by Adam Makary and Hatem Maher; editing by Jason Neely, Alex Richardson, Jonathan Oatis and Barbara Lewis
Today they hit one and the crew had to abandon ship.
There should not even be any oil tankers plying the seas. We should have already moved past the use of fossil-fuel-burning internal combustion engines and external combustion power plants. Just saying.
True. But then I doubt they even knew what was aboard the ship, when they launched the missile.
@Fernapple IDK...I can tell a tanker from a break-bulk freighter, car carrier, or container ship from quite a distance.
@Flyingsaucesir That is probably true. But not if it is only a blip on a radar screen.
@Fernapple If they sink an oil tanker they create an environmental disaster in their own back yard. News footage i have seen shows only damage to superstructures. Just speculating, but I think they are close enough to aim high.
@Flyingsaucesir That could be true, I don't know what sort of missile they are using. Though the ones the US and UK struck at, were launchers hidden miles back from the coast.
@Fernapple They're using Iranian drones and ballistic missiles. On 60 Minutes tonight a US Navy officer said they think the Huthies are using the drones for gathering targeting data for the missiles, which can go more than 300 miles. So they're not close up, except when they are...
Seems to me like the whole world will have to suffer for the war that the zionists are engaging in.
It's been this way all my life. But let's acknowledge that it's not just the Zionists. The whole world (minus some Arab Palestinians) collaborated in the creation of Israel through the issuance of a United Nations charter.
For a “holy place”, the Middle East is so full of hate.