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Pentagon: US forces capture third sanctioned oil-tanker in Indian Ocean

The Pentagon announced?on Tuesday that U.S. forces had intercepted a sanctioned tanker in the Indian Ocean, after tracing it from Caribbean waters. This was the third interception in this region.

Washington has stepped up its blockade of vessels going to or from Venezuela, a South American member of OPEC, after capturing 'Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro during a military savage last month.

The U.S. Department of Defense announced in a post to X that its forces had boarded Bertha over night. The crude oil tanker was accused of trying to defy Iran sanctions.

According to the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Department of Treasury, The Bertha is a Cook Islands-flag ship that's linked to Shanghai Legendary Ship Management Company Limited. Sanctions were imposed on this vessel in January 2020.

It was not possible to reach the ship management company for a comment immediately.

A TANKER LEFT VENEZUELAN WAVES IN EARLY?JANUARY

MarineTraffic's data shows that the vessel last reported its position via AIS tracking on February 24. It was sailing in the Indian Ocean near the Maldives.

"Overnight U.S. Forces?conducted a maritime interdiction, right-of visit, and boarding of Bertha without incident within the INDOPACOM region of responsibility. The Pentagon reported that the vessel had violated President Trump's quarantine in the Caribbean, and was trying to evade it.

From the Caribbean to Indian Ocean, we tracked and stopped it.

The Pentagon said that "three boats fled and all three were captured." It did not provide any other details.

The Bertha left Venezuelan waters in early January as part of a fleet that was almost entirely seized by the U.S. According to reports by Venezuelan state-owned company PDVSA, the ship was carrying 1.9 million barrels Merey heavy oil bound for China.

In a statement made earlier this month by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, he said that the U.S. Military forces boarded Suezmax tanker Aquila II on the Indian Ocean. The Veronica III was seized in the same area on February 15th.

The U.S. president Donald Trump ordered that the Defense Department renamed itself as the Department of War. This change will require the approval of Congress.

The vessels that were taken in the past were either under U.S. sanction or part of "shadow fleets" of ships which disguised their origins for moving oil from major sanctions producers such as Iran, Russia or Venezuela.

Analysis shows that U.S. forces have intercepted ten tankers in the last few months, with the most recent seizure. At least two of these were returned to the Venezuelan government.

"International waters are no refuge for sanctioned agents." The Pentagon stated that our forces would find you, and bring justice to your case, whether it was by land, sea or air. (Reporting and editing by Alex Richardson, Jonathan Saul, Marianna Pararaga and Susan Heavey)

(source: Reuters)