THE BATTALION Page 13 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1980 world Soviet mystery s the inpulp 'vel in an Magazine, Anchored minesweeper blocks trade channel United Press International STRAIT OF HORMUZ, Oman — I i;; I Since the start of the Tehran embas- sy siege the Soviet Union has ed the \1'B Tanchored a warship in the middle of talyzerthala Bthe Strait of Hormuz, the world’s ■most important shipping lane. No icccieBiti tone knows what the mystery vessel is lall amoE h(joing there. The Russians have had a ship there since early November,” said a senior Omani naval officer. “It has - varied from the most modern guided missile cruiser down to what they (I \ have now, which is a leaky old mines- ■ weeper with a wooden hull. A narrow gap of water between Oman’s Musandam peninsula and the west coast of Iran, the Strait con nects the Persian Gulf with the Ara bian Sea. 400 per a Two-thirds of the industrialized West’s crude oil imports — from IlSaudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, (atarand the United Arab Emirates transits the Strait daily on their ray to Western refineries, an oil tanker passing through every 19 mi nutes. At its narrowest, the strait is 24 dies across. Oman claims its 12- lile territorial limit from the east iag hip area r that the la other popt ; wind,” leu m’t have •al toxic d ire is i'adswortliif ivestigaM About hiii i is made; Indians.. \ side and Iran the same from the west. Nothing remains as interna tional water at the heart ot the strait. However, as it widens into the Arabian Sea, the strait is about 29 miles wide, leaving a five-mile band of international water between the territorial limits of Iran and Oman. There sits an anchored T-58 Russian minesweeper with about 30 men on board. “They aren’t doing anything we can detect,” said Capt. Malcom Fewtrell on his Omani patrol craft.” “They rarely even have their radar on. It would be natural to suspect the boat as an electronic surveillance “snooper” ship. But, noted Fewtrell, a British contract officer working for the Omani navy, it has no more antennae than any other Russian boat. “They are in a position to see vir tually everything that goes in and out of the strait,” he said. “They could just be doing a shipping count. “Then again, you could argue they just put it there to get everyone won dering and worrying what the hell it’s there for.” Most wondering is done by the Omanis who have sole responsibility for keeping the area trouble-free. The Iranian navy, once supreme in the gulf, has rarely been seen since the fall of the shah, and its ships are not believed to be in good condition. The Omanis have only limited facilities for protecting the crucial waterway. They are building a radar and naval base on Goat Island in the strait to monitor traffic, but until that is completed next year, the world’s most strategic shipping lane will con tinue to be guarded by one marine patrol craft with a 3-inch gun. Surprisingly, the Omanis feel lit tle more naval protection is really necessary. “All this talk about threats to the strait or some terrorists sinking a tanker there is very much over exaggerated,” said a senior Omani naval commander. “If terrorists blew up a tanker in the strait, all we would have to do is route the traffic around it. There’s plenty of room for that. Once it sank, we would sail right over it. The water here is up to 300 feet deep.” Saudi Arabian oil minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani once suggested that desperate terrorists might try to British cut staff in Tehran “We hamB id the lift: lemicals ii )6 cheinkatl United Press International the skslfi LONDON — Britain’s ambassa- Is were ill fj^ or to f ran > Sir John Graham, re- p turned for consultations Tuesday and | the Foreign Office said the embassy staff in Tehran is being cut drastic ally. Officials indicated both moves ere designed to support President arter’s campaign for release of the 50 hostages held for 171 days in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. ee But they said this did not amount to breaking off diplomatic relations with Iran. Graham flew back from Tehran Tuesday morning. Officials said he will report to Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington on conditions there. They said most of the approxi mately 30 other British Embassy staff members in Tehran also have y Miss Lillian tours Israel n s posmS® he conr. ' ** chairmaiiB D-Wiu House la!' uld have; ■’ vr'U.'nnmfea United Press International to Jh ' JERUSALEM — President Car- s it mizlit! id er smot h er ’ 'Miss Lillian,” is wind- govcrni: in 8 U P a four-day visit to Israel, dur- [inent to! 3j n g w fo c h s h e met with Prime Minis- er these: | er Menachem Begin. Asked if son Jimmy gave her any idvice for her meeting with Begin, he said, “Jimmy never tells me how to act anywhere. ” Mrs. Carter, 81, was asked if she intended to meet with any Palesti- H Jiians in Jerusalem or the occupied ,j o j ^West Bank during her stay. I J’ . ; “I don’t know a Palestinian from an ce " 3 Israelite,” she said. “I don’t know ilomatki /0ne ^ rom other. I think I have , i 1 ^net some people who were from r or e Palestine. They were just like the |Israelites to me.” She added, “Everyone is friendly to me.” ■o ki nisja ol null la borl if; ✓ lannJ ^ ^ WEDNESDAYS @ NIGHT SPECIAL ^ IS 1 D 0 B E B Enchilada Dinner *2.65 Just come by El Chico any Wednesday night after 5 pm! COf course there can be no substitutions. And take-out orders remain at our regular price of $3.95.) achi^ Not the some old Enchilada 3109 Texas Ave. at Manor East S.C., Bryan 1 Gil G9 umim LUMEN CHAPE Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $1.99 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. —4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.NI. re nolast [ like to cK .Jyixi*; d look It )UI ■ 10 Pi ven MSI of y III ?rM ■vi MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Your Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL BREADED FISH FILET w/TARTAR SAUCE Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Yankee Pot Roast (Texas Salad) Mashed Potato w/ gravy Roil or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING ROASTTURKEY DINNER Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - CoffeorTea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable hijack a tanker sailing through the strait, but experienced sailors dis miss this prospect as totally un realistic. “You’ve got to be a right little James Bond to go up the side of a tanker steaming at 15 knots,” said Fewtrell. “If I were a madman, I might try it, but no professional sailor would. It’s virtually impossible.” The Omanis do take one threat seriously — mines. They are cheap, easy to lay and difficult to sweep. A few well-placed mines could bottle up millions of barrels of oil in the gulf. They are all the more danger ous since neither the Americans, the Omanis nor any other gulf state has a minesweeper in the vicinity. Ironically, the only minesweeper around belongs to the Soviet navy. And nobody knows what it’s doing there. 13 Liberian officials killed by firing squad United Press International MONROVIA, Liberia — Firing squads executed 13 former ministers and officials of the ousted Liberian regime Tuesday, including the brother of slain President William Tolbert. A large crowd shouting “kill the rogues” and “let us be free” watched as the 13 were led to their deaths near the military training center in Monrovia. Among those executed was Frank E. Tolbert, the former president’s eldest brother, who had been presi dent pro tern of the Senate. instructions to prepare to return home, leaving only a handful on duty in the Iranian capital. In an earlier crisis in January, the British Embassy staff in Tehran was slashed to eight members, but was later built up again. 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