Английская Википедия:International Maritime Security Construct

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox organization The International Maritime Security Construct (IMSC) is a consortium of countries whose official stated aim is the maintenance of order and security in the Arabian Gulf, Strait of Hormuz, Gulf of Oman, Gulf of Aden, Bab-el-Mandeb, and Southern Red Sea, particularly regarding maritime security of global oil supply routes.[1] It was formed on 16 September 2019 in Bahrain, by the United Kingdom, Australia, Albania, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Lithuania, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States. The operational arm of the IMSC is Coalition Task Force SENTINEL (CTF SENTINEL).[2][3][4][5][6]

The security construct was formed by U.S. in 2019 after oil tankers were allegedly attacked by Iran. The coalition also aims to address the oil tankers seizure by Iran in the region's waters.[3] The IMSC's primary task is monitoring international waters of the region to ensure the freedom of navigation of merchant vessels plying their trade in the area.

Formation

Early in summer 2019 near the Strait of Hormuz, a Norwegian tanker and a Japanese tanker were attacked, and the British tanker Stena Impero was seized by Iranian naval forces.[4]

Shortly thereafter, the IMSC was formed "in support of regional and international efforts to deter and counter threats to maritime navigation and global trade in order to secure freedom of navigation in the Gulf amid heightened regional tensions after attacks on oil tankers that were widely blamed on Iran, as well as to address Iran's illegal seizure of tankers in the region."[3] Several Persian Gulf countries signed on to IMSC in mid-September in the wake of Iranian cruise missile attacks on the Saudi Arabian Abqaiq oil facility.[5] It was joined by countries from the Baltics in 2020.[7][8]

U.S. Air Force General Paul Selva, Vice Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, describes the purpose of the IMSC as protecting the freedom of navigation in the waters of the region and the commander of U.S. Naval Forces in the Middle East defines its role as strictly defensive.[1]

IMSC is a flexible and temporary construct that can scale operations to conditions in the maritime environment. There are currently eight nations supporting IMSC, with several other nations in various stages of joining the organization. The IMSC is not part of the U.S. Maximum Pressure Campaign against Iran and does not play a part in United Nations sanctions enforcement against any nation. IMSC has no affiliation to any political agenda other than protecting freedom of navigation on the high seas. Ships, aircraft, and maritime forces for IMSC are sourced from Coalition force contributions to operations within the Middle East. Forces supporting IMSC are prohibited from simultaneously accomplishing other national missions that would conflict with the IMSC mandate.

Operations

Файл:IMSC Bahrain Headquarters photo, November 24, 2019.jpg
IMSC personnel at headquarters in Bahrain, November 24, 2019

IMSC, through the operational arm of Coalition Task Force SENTINEL, conducts overt security patrols of the waters of the Persian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, Gulf of Aden, and the Southern Red Sea. Significant maritime industry engagement, reconnaissance, and intelligence support enable the IMSC coalition to target areas of concern, and to accomplish their major objectives of deterring state-sponsored malign maritime activity while reassuring the merchant industry by ensuring maritime security and freedom of navigation.

Command

The IMSC is a political construct of willing nations who share common desires to ensure freedom of navigation within the Middle East, therefore, there is no single IMSC Commander. Command and staffing for the operational arm of IMSC, Coalition Task Force SENTINEL, is shared between coalition countries. Commanders are 1-star navy flag officers nominated from within IMSC Coalition nations and typically serve four to six months terms. Coalition Task Force SENTINEL is headquartered in Manama, Bahrain.

US Navy Rear Admiral Alvin "Bull" Holsey (who concurrently served as Commander of US Carrier Strike Group ONE) assumed command for the formation and development of initial operating capability of Coalition Task Force SENTINEL. He was relieved on January 30, 2020, by Royal Navy Commodore James Parkin (the Commander of the UK Littoral Strike Group).[9][10] At this point, in conjunction with the completion of initial staffing, CTF SENTINEL achieved full operating capability. Parkin handed over command to Royal Navy Commodore Robert Bellfield in April 2020.[11]

Name Service Photo Term began Term ended Notes
1. Rear Admiral Alvin "Bull" Holsey Шаблон:Naval Файл:Alvin Holsey.jpg November 7, 2019[12] January 30, 2020 Served concurrently as Commander, Carrier Strike Group ONE.
2. Commodore James Parkin Шаблон:Navy Файл:200130-N-IO414-1080-Parkin.JPG January 30, 2020 April 30, 2020[13] Served concurrently as Commander Littoral Strike Group
3. Commodore Robert Bellfield Шаблон:Navy

Файл:Cdre Bellfield.jpg

April 30, 2020[13] November 19, 2020[14]
4. Commodore Craig Wood Шаблон:Navy Файл:181203-N-WO404-111 Commodore Craig Wood (cropped).jpg November 19, 2020 [14] March 30, 2021[15]
5. Commodore Adrian Fryer Шаблон:Navy Файл:Commodore Adrian Fryer.jpg March 30, 2021[15][16] July 26, 2021
6. Commodore Gordon Ruddock Шаблон:Navy July 26, 2021[17] November 18, 2021
7. Commodore Donald Mackinnon Шаблон:Navy November 18, 2021[18] August 18, 2022[19]
8. Commodore Ben Aldous Шаблон:Navy Файл:Commodore Ben Aldous.jpg August 18, 2022[19] May 17, 2023[20]
9. Commodore Peter Laughton Шаблон:Navy May 17, 2023 [20] Incumbent

Member nations

Current

Former

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Iran–Saudi Arabia relations Шаблон:Iran–Saudi Arabia proxy conflict Шаблон:Iran–United States relations Шаблон:Iran–United Arab Emirates relations Шаблон:Bahrain–United States relations Шаблон:Saudi Arabia–United States relations Шаблон:United Arab Emirates–United States relations Шаблон:Australia–United States relations