Close Menu
newsnotenewsnote
  • News
  • World
    • Africa
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • America
    • Middle East
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Sport
  • Business
  • Lifestyle

Subscribe For All The Latest Updates

Get the latest news from Newsnote about Politics ,Sports and business.

Recent Stories

King Charles III’s 2026 U.S. State Visit

13 hours ago

Triple Murder in Johannesburg CBD Restaurant Sparks Police Investigation

13 hours ago

Fuel Levy Relief Extension: Enoch Godongwana to Announce Decision

13 hours ago
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
X (Twitter) Instagram Steam
newsnotenewsnote
☎ 080 000 1188 (Toll Free)  
Subscribe
  • News
  • World
    • Africa
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • America
    • Middle East
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Sport
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
newsnotenewsnote
Home » Confusion over Iran’s participation in naval drill 
World

Confusion over Iran’s participation in naval drill 

Kgaogelo MagolegoBy Kgaogelo Magolego3 months agoNo Comments7 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Iran’s largest naval vessel, IRIS Makran, arrived in the vicinity of Cape Town’s False Bay alongside Chinese warships and with Russian vessels arriving or en route. Source: TehraTiimes/X
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

It remains unclear who in the South African armed forces or the government Iran should be allowed to continue participating in the recent navy drill held in Simon’s Town, Capetown after President Cyril Ramaphosa issued an instruction for Iran’s vessels to be withdrawn from the display.

The exercise, part of a broader strategic cooperation among BRICS countries and their partners, includes Iran alongside Russia, China, South Africa, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Brazil, Egypt, and the UAE.

Pressure from pro-USA lobby groups saw President Ramaphosa getting cold feet ordering that Iran’s participation be reduced to observing the exercise, a directive that was either misunderstood, miscommunicated or simply ignored raising questions about the authority of the government on the country’s armed forces.

Defense Minister Angie Motshekga has since appointed a Board of Inquiry into the Naval exercise to establish how Iran continued to participate fully.

The DA wants Motshekga to be held accountable for the confusion saying the inquiry she has instituted is 

“Minister Motshekga must appear before the Portfolio Committee on Defence without delay and account for what the President ordered, how that instruction was handled, how it aligned – or conflicted, with prior public statements by senior SANDF leadership, who took the relevant decisions, and why the order was not acted on immediately,” said the DA Defence spokesperson Chris Hattingh in a statement.

Hattingh believes there’s been a trend of delinquency in the country’s armed forces that needs to be reigned in.

“This controversy did not arise in isolation. The Chief of the SANDF, Rudzani Maphwanya, made public remarks in Tehran that spoke positively about strengthening military cooperation with Iran.

“A consequence of these remarks was the creation of a public signal of deepening defence engagement at a time when Iran is diplomatically sensitive and heavily sanctioned. When reports later emerged that the President had instructed that Iranian vessels be excluded, it raised serious questions about whether prior military signaling conflicted with, or complicated, the execution of a presidential directive,” said Hattingh.

Some have pointed fingers at SA Navy chief Monde Lobese believing he must have decided to defy the president this following a meeting with his Iranian counterpart and subsequent comments in which he’s quoted as praising the defense cooperation between the two countries, comments that some believe misrepresent South Africa’s foreign policy.

Meanwhile Action SA has added its voice to those calling for a parliamentary probe claiming the BOI ordered by Motshekga may not be enough to establish what happened.

“ActionSA believes that a genuinely independent process led by Parliament, as a constitutionally empowered body, is far better placed to get to the truth of what has unfolded and to ensure that those responsible are held publicly accountable,” said Action SA in a statement.

Author

  • Kgaogelo Magolego
    View all posts
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
Kgaogelo Magolego

Related Posts

King Charles III’s 2026 U.S. State Visit

13 hours ago

Trump Delays Attacks on Iran as Diplomatic Talks Reportedly Underway Amid Market Relief

1 month ago

Robert Mueller, Ex-FBI Chief and Trump-Russia Investigator, Dies Aged 81

1 month ago
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top Posts

G20 Summit security measures trigger major Gauteng traffic disruptions as City denies vendor evictions

6 months ago5,942

G20 Summit Day 2: Major road closures and heavy traffic expected across Johannesburg

5 months ago1,253

Minister’s chief of staff Cedric Nkabinde to testify

6 months ago1,222

Brown Mogotsi’s alleged shooting raises eyebrows in Vosloorus

6 months ago1,210
Don't Miss
America

King Charles III’s 2026 U.S. State Visit

By newsnote correspondent13 hours ago5

King Charles III and Queen Camilla have arrived in the United States for their first…

Triple Murder in Johannesburg CBD Restaurant Sparks Police Investigation

13 hours ago

Fuel Levy Relief Extension: Enoch Godongwana to Announce Decision

13 hours ago

Four suspects killed in police shootout during crime intelligence operation in Yeoville

1 month ago
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
  • Soundcloud
  • WhatsApp

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from Newsnote

Demo
South African Press Council
© 2026 Newsnote
  • News
  • World
    • Africa
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • America
    • Middle East
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Sport
  • Business
  • Lifestyle

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.