U.S. Working to Build International Consensus on Gulf of Oman Incident, Shanahan Says

Acting Defense Secretary Patrick M. Shanahan said the United States is working to build international consensus on the way forward to deal with the Gulf of Oman where Iran attacked two oiler tankers.

Shanahan spoke prior to meeting with Portuguese Defense Minister Joao Titternigton Gomes Cravinho at the Pentagon. He said DOD is supporting efforts by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and John Bolton, national security advisor, to forge such a consensus

“One of our roles is to set the conditions for diplomacy,” Shanahan said. Part of that is the push to get information out about the incidents in the Gulf, he said.

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Marine Corps Gen. Joe Dunford is in close contact with Marine Corps Gen. Frank McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command, to ensure the command “has the resources and the support they need to conduct their mission,” the acting secretary said.

The incidents in the Gulf of Oman involve Norwegian and Japanese ships, and Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Around 15% of the world’s oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz. By definition, this is an international concern.

“We obviously need to make contingency plans should the situation deteriorate,” Shanahan said. “We also need to broaden support for this international security incident.”

The meeting is part of the semiannual review of the Portugal-United States relationship. Defense cooperation is one of the issues discussed in this review, as is bilateral and multilateral cooperation. The two men will also discuss the defeat-ISIS coalition

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It takes time to build a consensus. The event is still new.

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Welcome to the forum. Yes, it will take time. It took old man Bush months. The UK and Saudis are already on board.

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I missed this post. Thanks.