15-12-2025
WASHINGTON/ TEHRAN: United States forces raided a cargo ship travelling from China to Iran last month, according to the Wall Street Journal, in the latest reported instance of increasingly aggressive maritime tactics by the administration of US President Donald Trump.
Unnamed officials told the newspaper that US military personnel boarded the ship several hundred miles from Sri Lanka, according to the report on Friday. It was the first time in several years US forces had intercepted cargo travelling from China to Iran, according to the newspaper.
The operation took place in November, weeks before US forces seized an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela earlier this week, citing sanctions violations. It was another action Washington has not taken in years.
US Indo-Pacific Command did not immediately confirm the report. An official told the newspaper that they seized material “potentially useful for Iran’s conventional weapons”. However, the official noted the seized items were dual-use, and could have both military and civilian applications.
Officials said the ship was allowed to proceed following the interdiction, which involved special operation forces.
Iran remains under heavy US sanctions. Neither Iran nor China immediately responded to the report, although Beijing, a key trading partner with Tehran, has regularly called the US sanctions illegal.
Earlier in the day, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun condemned the seizure of the oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela, which was brought to a port in Texas on Friday.
The action came amid a wider military pressure campaign against Venezuela, which Caracas has charged is aimed at toppling the government of leader Nicolas Maduro.
Beijing “opposes unilateral illicit sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction that have no basis in international law or authorization of the UN Security Council, and the abuse of sanctions”, Guo said.
White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Thursday the Trump administration would not rule out future seizures of vessels near Venezuela.
In September, in the decades since the end of the Cold War, a powerful myth has taken hold in the West. It is the myth of the “smart” sanction, a foreign-policy tool that is supposed to be a clean, precise, and humane alternative to war. The belief is that by skillfully targeting a hostile regime’s key revenue sources and finances, one can bring it to heel without harming its citizens.
This is a dangerous delusion. As our recently published research on Iran reveals, the sanctions regime on Iran was far from being a surgical strike; instead, it was a sledgehammer that smashed the very group that represents the best hope for a more moderate and stable future, the middle class. In this sense, the devastation of the Iranian middle class constitutes a major strategic failure for the West.
The rise of Iran’s modern middle class was a century-long process. It began under the Pahlavi dynasty with the emergence of a secular, professional class of civil servants, professionals, and managers who built the country’s modern infrastructure, funded by oil rents. After the 1979 revolution, the Islamic Republic continued to expand the ranks of the middle class, lifting millions of previously marginalized families from poverty into a new world of education and opportunity.
This educated, empowered class became the political foundation for change. It was the power base for the reformist movement of President Mohammad Khatami in the late 1990s. It was the faces in the crowds of the 2009 Green Movement, and the driving force behind the “Woman, Life; Freedom” protests. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)
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