Spain pulls frigate from US group citing Gulf tensions

"Frigate Mendez Nunez has left the combat group of the USS Abraham Lincoln,” says Madrid after US deploys aircraft carrier to curb Iran ‘threat’.

MADRID - Spain has recalled a frigate accompanying a US aircraft carrier to the Middle East because of rising tensions between Washington and Tehran, the defence ministry said Tuesday.

"For the moment the frigate  has left the combat group of the USS Abraham Lincoln," a ministry spokesman said, confirming a report in the Spanish daily El Pais.

"It's a temporary withdrawal, decided by Defence Minister Margarita Robles, as long as the American aircraft carrier is in this zone," the spokesman added.

He said the Spanish frigate had joined the aircraft carrier's strike group for a military exercise.

"No possible confrontation or warlike action is envisaged (by Spain) and it is for this reason that the participation is suspended for the moment," he added.

On May 5, the United States announced it was deploying the USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group and a bomber task force to the Middle East in response to a "credible threat" from Iran.

Last Friday, the Pentagon announced the deployment of the amphibious assault ship the USS Arlington and a Patriot missile battery to the region.

Washington reiterated that intelligence reports suggested Iran was planning some sort of attack in the region.

Robles later told reporters in Brussels that the US decision to deploy the aircraft carrier to the Gulf "went beyond what was scheduled in the terms of a cooperation agreement that placed the Mendez Nunez frigate with he US fleet for training.

"This is not a problem of discrepancies with Iran or.. It's a question of interpretation of a techno-military agreement," she added.

The Spanish frigate is currently in Mumbai, the minister said.

The spike in tensions between the United States and Iran comes a week after Tehran announced it was suspending some of its commitments under the 2015 nuclear agreement. That came a year after President Donald Trump withdrew from the accord and slapped tough sanctions on the Islamic republic.

On Sunday and Monday, US allies Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates said oil tankers belonging to them were damaged in "sabotage attacks" in the Gulf. Neither country released further details.

No link has officially been drawn between the incidents and US accusations concerning "imminent" attacks by Tehran against US interests in the region.

Britain, France and Germany on Monday urged the US not to further escalate tensions over the Iran nuclear deal.