In a sheet show of night, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has stated that an American submarine sank an Iranian warship in the Indian Ocean.
He noted that the Iranian warship was sunk by a torpedo on Tuesday, and that it died a “quiet death”.
The defense secretary of US refused to name the ship, but his announcement surfaced after Sri Lankan officials said its navy had responded to a distress call from an Iranian ship on Wednesday morning named the Iris Dena, which had gone down about 40km (25 miles) from its southern coastline.
Eighty bodies from the ship were discovered by rescuers, a Sri Lankan defence official told BBC Sinhala. Another 32 were rescued, the Sri Lankan navy said.
A spokesman of the navy said some 180 people were though to have been aboard the Iris Dena, based on the ship’s documentation.
The survivors were “seriously injured” and had been taken to a hospital in the southern port of Galle, foreign affairs minister Vijitha Herath said.
Hegseth told a news conference on Wednesday that a US submarine had sunk an Iranian warship “that thought it was safe in international waters”.
He also claimed it was “the first sinking of an enemy ship by a torpedo since World War Two”.
While it is the first time since 1945 that an American submarine has sunk an enemy ship this way, the UK and Pakistan have both sunk vessels using torpedoes since then.
Video released by the US Department of Defense shows a ship being struck, causing the stern to rise up before exploding.
Earlier, Sri Lankan navy spokesman Budhika Sampath rejected reports that the Iris Dena had been attacked by a submarine.
He added that, at the time rescue operations were launched, rescuers had not seen the vessel – nor any other ships in the region – but saw oil patches and life rafts floating on the water.
Though the ship’s location “was beyond our waters”, Sampath said, “it was within our search and rescue region. So we were obliged to respond as per international obligations”.













