Assembled to protect Kuwait's tankers were four frigates, three cruisers, and a destroyer in or around the Persian Gulf and the
Strait of Hormuz. As well, the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier and its task force were nearby in the Indian Ocean, while the battleship , two more cruisers, and a helicopter carrier were patrolling the area. The operation's plan called for convoys protected by three or four U.S. warships and carrier-based aircraft, including A-6 attack aircraft, F/A-18 strike fighters, EA-6B jamming aircraft, and F-14 fighters. On July 21, 1987, the 414,266-ton
Bridgeton and the 48,233-ton gas tanker
Gas Prince sailed from the Gulf of Oman under the protection of three U.S. warships in the first convoy of Earnest Will. It transited the Strait of Hormuz without incident, although the group was approached by four Iranian F-4 fighters. When the convoy arrived at the midpoint of its voyage, Iran proclaimed that the convoy carried "prohibited goods".
Pasdaran commander
Mohsen Rezaee initially ordered an attack by Pasdaran speedboats from
Farsi Island, but later, based on advice from the Iranian
Supreme Leader,
Ayatollah Khomeini, it was agreed to that a
mining operation was preferable to direct confrontation. A special Pasdaran unit which had spent several weeks practicing for this mission laid a string of nine mines apart, and then hastened back to Farsi. American intelligence had discovered Rezai's aborted unauthorized attack but missed the mining operation. On July 24,
Bridgeton collided with mine at a position of 27°58' north and 49°50' east, 13 miles west of
Farsi Island. The explosion caused a dent in the body of the oil tanker.
Bridgeton slowed, but did not stop. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy warships took station in the tanker's wake, allowing the big double-hulled ship to break trail. ==Aftermath==