TEHRAN, Iran - Iran would find it "really easy" to close the world's most important oil transit channel, the Strait of Hormuz at the Gulf's entrance, but would not do so right now, Iran's navy chief said Dec. 28.
"Shutting the strait for Iran's armed forces is really easy - or as we say (in Iran) easier than drinking a glass of water," Adm. Habibollah Sayari said in an interview with Iran's Press TV.
"But today, we don't need (to shut) the strait because we have the Sea of Oman under control and can control the transit," he said.
Sayari was speaking a day after Iran's vice president, Mohammad Reza Rahimi, threatened to close the strait if the West imposed more sanctions on Iran, and as Iran's navy held wargames in international waters to the east of the channel.
World prices climbed after Rahimi warned on Dec. 27 that "not a drop of oil will pass through the Strait of Hormuz" if the West broadened sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program.
"The enemies will only drop their plots when we put them back in their place," the official news agency IRNA quoted Rahimi as saying.
New York-traded light sweet crude rose to $101.36 on the threat.
More than a third of the world's tanker-borne oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic chokepoint that links the Gulf - and its petroleum-exporting states of Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates - to the Indian Ocean.
The United States maintains a navy presence in the Gulf in large part to ensure that passage for oil remains free.
But Sayari asserted that the Strait of Hormuz "is completely under the control of the Islamic Republic of Iran."
He said Iran's navy was constituted with the aim of being able to close the strait if necessary.
Sayari added that the navy maneuvers east of the strait were designed to show Gulf neighbors the power of Iran's military over the zone.
Ships and aircraft dropped mines in the sea on Dec. 27 as part of the drill, and on Dec. 28 drones flew out over the Indian Ocean, according to a navy spokesman, Adm. Mahmoud Mousavi.
Iran has several times said it is ready to target the strait if it is attacked or economically strangled by Western sanctions over its nuclear program.
An Iranian lawmaker's comments last week that the navy exercises would block the Strait of Hormuz briefly sent oil prices soaring before that was denied by the government.
Although the foreign ministry said such drastic action was "not on the agenda," it reiterated Iran's threat of "reactions" if the current tensions with the West spilled over into open confrontation.
Tehran in September rejected a Washington call for a military hotline between the capitals to defuse any "miscalculations" that could occur between their navies in the Gulf.
In Washington, U.S. State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner dismissed the latest threat from Iran's vice president.
"I just think it's another attempt by them to distract attention from the real issue, which is their continued noncompliance with their international nuclear obligations," Toner told reporters.
The United States accuses Iran of using its uranium enrichment program to build nuclear weapons. Iran denies the charges.
Extra U.S. and European sanctions aimed at Iran's oil and financial sectors are being considered.
The last round of Western sanctions, announced in November, triggered a pro-regime protest in front of the British embassy in Tehran during which militia members answering to the Revolutionary Guards overran the mission and ransacked it.
London closed the embassy as a result and ordered Iran's mission in Britain shut as well.