Maybe they didn't necessarily need to stop that ship. Maybe they needed to stop one of the other ships for a period of time without it appearing that was what they were doing. Maybe it really was just what it appeared to be. A giant ship lost power and beached crosswise in the canal. Or, maybe they did want to stop that ship, but they are done with whatever they were doing on it. Any of these is possible. We really don't know.
Not exactly. There’s a lot of rubble that the ship dragged with it and is under the ship. So they’ll still have to get those containers off to completely get the ship to float.
Maybe they didn't necessarily need to stop that ship. Maybe they needed to stop one of the other ships for a period of time without it appearing that was what they were doing. Maybe it really was just what it appeared to be. A giant ship lost power and beached crosswise in the canal. Or, maybe they did want to stop that ship, but they are done with whatever they were doing on it. Any of these is possible. We really don't know.
Not exactly. There’s a lot of rubble that the ship dragged with it and is under the ship. So they’ll still have to get those containers off to completely get the ship to float.
So what? What's your actual point...?
What are we all supposed to do with that statement? Is there some rule I'm unware of that, once a stuck ship become unstuck, it's no longer relevant?