Earlier
this year Iran threatened to shut down shipping in the enormously important
Strait of Hormuz. Now the U.S. and other nations are worried about something
else: that Iran could mine the body of water with improvised devices.
Any ship
can be a minesweeper—once. So goes the gallows humor referring to the threat
that naval mines pose to ships.
But that
sardonic phrase underlies a more pressing reality: In recent months, the United
States and other countries have grown increasingly concerned about Iran’s
ability to mine the Strait of Hormuz, essentially cutting off a critical
international waterway. Iran’s leadership has already threatened to shut down
the international shipping route, while also crowing about its growing fleet of
mini submarines that are difficult to detect and can be used to lay mines.
The
problem with mines at sea, as with roadside bombs on land, is that they can be
fairly easy to build but difficult to detect and clear. "You take an
existing bomb and fit it with target detection, and voila! your bomb is now a
mine," says Scott Truver, a naval consultant who has written extensively
on mine warfare.
Like
their land-based counterparts, even crude mines can be costly and deadly. Mine
warfare experts like to cite the case of the USS Samuel B. Roberts, a frigate
that struck an Iranian-laid mine in 1988. The warship didn’t sink, but the
mine, based on a Russian model from 1908, caused nearly $100 million in damage.
In fact,
some naval officials are already talking about mines as the next improvised
explosive device threat. "We’ve been there before, we just called it an
IED," Rear Adm. Frank Morneau, deputy director for Expeditionary Warfare
Division, told an audience at a naval conference earlier this year.
The Navy
maintains a "triad" of capabilities to battle mines, which includes
ships, aircraft, and divers. It also employs dolphins, whose echolation—the
biological equivalent of sonar—is still one the most effective ways for finding
and clearing certain mines. Like bomb dogs on land, the dolphins are actually
sent to locate the mines (the marine mammals can also place a charge on the
mines to destroy it). The push now, though, is to develop unmanned
systems—drones in the sea—that can hunt down and neutralize the mines while
keeping humans away from the threat.
The Navy
recently unveiled a model of Knifefish, an unmanned submarine that would be
used to hunt mines, but it won’t be ready for use until at least 2015. The Navy
has reportedly purchased dozens of SeaFox drones to target Iran’s underwater
mines. In another effort, AAI, a business unit of Textron, is hoping to sell
the U.S. Navy its own unmanned surface ship that uses a command and control
system based on the Shadow unmanned aerial vehicle, which has been used
extensively by the U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan. The company says it’s
already demonstrated mine detection capabilities and is hoping to win U.S. navy
business.
But for
any immediate threat, the Navy will have to rely on its existing technology to
clear mines, and that’s probably why it’s hoping that politics—rather than
technology—will ultimately stave off the mine threat. Truver says that Iran
mining the Strait of Hormuz would be regarded as act of war and would likely
cause immediate retaliation. "They would not put many weapons in the
water," he says—maybe a handful before the United States and other
countries would likely intervene.
Perhaps
to emphasize that point the U.S. Navy last month took part in a military
exercise in the Persian Gulf that involved over 30 other nations’ naval forces.
Though officially the mine clearing exercise was not aimed at Iran, it was
intended to send a strong signal to the country’s leadership.
Retired
Navy Capt. Robert O’Donnell, who was involved for many years in mine warfare,
says that the exercise clearly sent a signal to Iran that the international
community was ready to act together but added that he still hopes the next
exercise will focus more on the actual clearing of mines. "The emphasis
[this time] was not on hunting or clearing mines," says O’Donnell, who
attended the exercise. "The emphasis was on resolve and
communication."
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