The Kurdish tanker disappeared from Coast Guard radar screens following a month of legal wrangling over whether it can offload its cargo in the U.S.
As the disintegration of Iraq amid mounting violence continues, the semi-autonomous regime in Kurdistan – in the north of Iraq – is trying to cash in on Iraq's oil reserves and export its own crude.
Several other tankers transporting disputed oil from Iran or Kurdistan have switched off their transponders before unloading their cargo - making their movements extremely difficult to track.
A Coast Guard official told MailOnline today that the vessel might have turned off its beacon in the Gulf of Mexico, which it is not supposed to do.
The official also said it was possible the ship had traveled outside the range of the U.S. Coastguard antennas which would account for it vanishing from the AIS ship-tracking system.
United Kalavrvta, carrying one million barrels, has disappeared in the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday
Ship was anchored near Texas in preparation to unload its cargo to U.S. when it went dark
Legal dispute with Iraq and the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan means ship was in limbo for a month
Iraq sees Kurdish oil deals as smuggling and wants to block future exports
They filed lawsuit in U.S. court to order retrieval of cargo but case rejected
U.S. Coast Guard now believes ship has turned off its identifying beacon
By JACK CRONE FOR MAILONLINE and LOUISE BOYLE and REUTERS
Daily Mail (UK)
PUBLISHED: 04:18 EST, 29 August 2014 | UPDATED: 12:30 EST, 29 August 2014
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