Defense Minister Benny Gantz on Friday said that Israeli security officials are unaware of any evidence that the oil spill off of Israel’s coast was an act of “environmental terrorism,” as claimed by Environmental Protection Minister Gila Gamliel (Likud) last week.
“I can’t completely rule out that it was deliberate, but at this stage, we can’t determine that it was done on purpose,” Gantz said at a party meeting.
Other senior Israeli security officials said that they could not confirm the truth of Gamliel’s claim and that neither the IDF nor the Mossad had been involved in Gamliel’s investigation.
Israel’s environmental protection minister on Thursday stood by her allegation that a crude oil spill in the eastern Mediterranean last month was an intentional attack by Iran but provided no evidence for her claim.
Asked in an interview on Army Radio on Thursday whether she could prove the spill was an intentional attack, Gamliel doubled down. “To say that this isn’t terrorism, that it was an accident, is an inappropriate approach to the incident,” she said.
The investigation determined the ship was smuggling oil from Iran to Syria when the spill occurred in early February.
“The fact that no one knew about the ship that smuggled crude oil from Iran to Syria, that dumped oil and turned off its radar is a failure that needs to be investigated,” she said. She said that Israel’s Defense Ministry “had to give explanations.”
Environmental Protection Ministry Director-General David Yahalomi said on Thursday afternoon that the oil spill was an act of terrorism even if it wasn’t deliberate.
“It doesn’t matter if it was deliberate or not,” Yahalomi told Kan News. “An enemy state that transfers 45 million oil barrels illegally and improperly through Israel’s economic waters is harmful.”
Iranian officials have not publicly acknowledged the allegation or responded to requests for comment.
More than 1,000 tons of tar are estimated to have washed onto Israel’s Mediterranean coastline last month, causing extensive environmental damage and forcing the closure of beaches to the public. Israel’s Nature and Parks Authority has called the incident one of Israel’s worst environmental disasters. The clean-up is expected to take months.
On Wednesday, the Environmental Protection Ministry identified the ship it believed was responsible for the Feb. 1 oil spill as the the Panama-flagged, formerly Libyan-owned tanker named Emerald.
Ministry officials investigating the incident said it was unclear whether the spill was deliberate or accidental, but said they received no warning about the incident until tar started washing up on shore weeks later.
Ami Daniel, CEO of Windward, a maritime shipping intelligence company that was involved in the investigation, told The Associated Press that several aspects about the Emerald’s behavior — from shutting off its transmitters, to irregular traffic and ownership irregularities — breached U.S. and British standards and pointed to the vessel’s involvement in smuggling oil from Iran in violation of international sanctions.
“All risk indicators are consistent with the deceptive shipping practices at a very high likelihood that this is an Iranian operation to provide crude oil into Syria,” he said but declined to comment on whether the spill may have been an intentional attack.
Gamliel’s office declined requests for clarification. But in an English language statement, she said “Iran is operating terrorism by damaging the environment.”
Israel accuses archenemy Iran of developing nuclear weapons, a charge Iran denies. Israel also cites Iran’s support for hostile militant groups across the region — such as the Palestinian Hamas and the Lebanese Hezbollah — and its military presence in neighboring Syria. Israel has acknowledged carrying out hundreds of airstrikes on targets connected to Iran and its proxies in Syria.
(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem & AP)