The 'Straits of Tiran' (
Arabic: مضيق تيران ), are the narrow sea passages, about 13 km (8 miles) wide, between the
Sinai and
Arabian peninsulas which separates the
Gulf of Aqaba from the
Red Sea. It is named after
Tiran Island located at its inflow, on which the
Multinational Force and Observers has an observation post to monitor the compliance of
Egypt in maintaining freedom of navigation of the straits as provided under the
Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty.
Sanafir Island lies to the east of Tiran, southeast of the shallow strait between Tiran and Saudi Arabia.
Access to
Jordan's only seaport of
Aqaba and to
Israel's only
Indian Ocean seaport of
Eilat is contingent upon passage through the Gulf of Aqaba, giving the Straits of Tiran strategic importance. Egypt's blockade of the Straits to Israeli ships and ships bound for Israel in 1956 and again in 1967 was the catalyst to the
Suez Crisis in 1956 and the
Six-Day War in
1967.
International documents inconsistently refer to the passage/s as both, the 'Straits of Tiran' and the 'Strait of Tiran'. There are several passages formed by the islands between
Egypt and
Saudi Arabia. The westernmost strait, between Egypt and the island of Tiran, overlooked by the Egyptian city
Sharm el-Sheikh is the 'Strait of Tiran'. It has two passages deep enough to be navigable by large ships. The Enterprise passage, 950 feet deep, is right next to the Egyptian side, while the 240-foot-deep Grafton passage, surrounded by shallows, is to the east, nearer to the island of
Tiran. To the east of Tiran, between it and Saudi Arabia, the other strait has reefs and shallows with a single channel 54 feet deep.
A project to build a 9.3-mile bridge across the straits, linking Egypt and Saudi Arabia, is said to be under renewed consideration by the Egyptian government. A bridge at this point would bypass Israel, which physically stands between the Arab lands of Africa and the Arab lands of Southwest Asia.
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Notes & References
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