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US may have to consider firing on Iranian boats after latest attack

The latest attack by the Iranian-backed rebels on the Saudis may give the US Navy pause in the future.

Footage supposedly shows the moment a Saudi naval vessel was rocked by a Houthi suicide boat attack.
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According to Lawrence Brennan, a Fordham University maritime law professor and former US Navy commander, "This attack is likely to impact US naval operations and rules of engagement in nearby waters."

2016 saw a significant spike in the number of incidents at sea between the US Navy and fast-attack craft of the Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, at least one of which required the US Navy to open fire with warning shots.

Meanwhile, Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen had a blockbuster 2016, using an anti-ship missile to hit an Emirati naval vessel and then firing a salvo of missiles at US Navy ships in October.

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The US Navy successfully fended off the Houthi missile attack and retaliated by destroying three radar sites in Houthi-controlled Yemen.

At the time, US officials and experts contacted by Business Insider concluded that Iran likely supplied the missiles to the Houthis.

But the latest attack on the Saudis may give the US Navy pause in the future.

In a questionable video of the attack, people near the camera can be heard shouting "Death to America," "Death to Israel," and "Death to Jews."

One Pentagon official told the Washington Examiner that the Houthis may have mistaken the Saudi ship they attacked for a US Navy ship, though another official denied it.

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In any case, the US Navy frequently deals with Iranian fast-attack craft swarming its vessels and approaching closely. In one case last year, Iranian fast-attack craft got within 300 yards of a US Navy vessel.

The US Navy responded by attempting to contact the Iranians, maneuvering evasively, blowing the horn, then firing warning shots.

But according to Brennan, the US may not allow hostile, unresponsive ships to get so close to Navy vessels after a force associated with Iran used suicide boats to kill two Saudi sailors.

"The overarching duty of self-defense mandates revision of the ROE to provide a sufficient 'bubble' to prevent the risk of a suicide attack, particularly from swarming boats," Brennan said in an email to Business Insider.

US President Donald Trump has signaled his intention to respond more forcefully.

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"With Iran," Trump said while campaigning in Florida in September, "when they circle our beautiful destroyers with their little boats, and they make gestures at our people that they shouldn't be allowed to make, they will be shot out of the water."

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