South Korea to Analyze Debris From Suspected Projectile in Hormuz Ship Fire
The move signals a state-led probe to pinpoint what hit a Korean-run ship in a key oil corridor.
Overview
- South Korea's foreign minister said Tuesday the recovered fragments will be brought home for testing by the Defense Ministry and specialist agencies.
- The pieces were collected after a May 4 fire on a cargo ship operated by a South Korean company near the Strait of Hormuz.
- The government said May 10 that an unidentified flying object struck the ship's stern, and on May 11 the national security adviser said attacks on civilian vessels cannot be justified.
- Officials have not released any forensic findings or attribution, and the planned analysis is meant to determine the object's origin and how it damaged the vessel.
- Japanese regional outlets reported the plan via Kyodo's Seoul dispatches, highlighting that early public details are coming through wire reports from a strategically vital oil chokepoint.