Trump Press
Secretary Falsely Accuses Iran of Attacking U.S.
Navy Vessel, an Act of War
By Zaid Jilani,
Alex Emmons
February
03, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
The Intercept" -
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer asserted at
Thursday’s press briefing that Iran had attacked a
U.S. naval vessel, as part of his argument defending
the administration’s bellicose announcement that
Iran is “on notice.”
National
Security Adviser Michael Flynn on Wednesday said he
was “officially
putting Iran on notice” following the country’s
ballistic missile test and an attack on a Saudi
naval vessel by Houthi rebels in Yemen (the Houthis
are
tenuously aligned with Iran’s government but are
distinct from it).
The White
House press corps wanted to know what being put “on
notice” entailed, and Spicer responded by
claiming that Iran’s government took actions against
a U.S. naval vessel, which would be an act of war.
“I think General Flynn was really clear yesterday
that Iran has violated the Joint Resolution, that
Iran’s additional hostile actions that it took
against our Navy vessel are ones that we are very
clear are not going to sit by and take,” he said. “I
think that we will have further updates for you on
those additional actions.”
Major
Garrett of CBS News quietly corrected him, saying “a
Saudi vessel,” and Spicer then responded almost
inaudibly: “Sorry, thank you, yes a Saudi vessel.
Yes, that’s right.” He did not in any way address
his false claim that it was an Iranian attack,
however.
Watch
Spicer’s remarks:
Pentagon
spokesman Christopher Sherwood confirmed to The
Intercept that the attack was in fact conducted
against a Saudi warship, and that the Pentagon
suspects Houthi rebels. “It was a Saudi ship – it
was actually a frigate” said Sherwood. “It was
[conducted by] suspected Houthi rebels off the coast
of Yemen.”
Fox News
initially misreported that a U.S. ship was somehow
the target — which is perhaps where some of the
confusion in the White House originated