Trump disputes ground rules of meeting with Iran
President Donald Trump appears to be disputing the
comments of senior aides, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin, saying he would be willing to meet with Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani without precondition.
Following attacks on Saudi Arabia’s oil
infrastructure for which the U.S. alleges Tehran bears responsibility, Trump
tweets that “The Fake News is saying that I am willing to meet with Iran, ‘No
Conditions.’ That is an incorrect statement.”
But Mnuchin said Thursday that Trump had made clear
“he would sit down with Rouhani with no condition.” And Pompeo told reporters
days earlier that “the president has made clear he is happy to take a meeting
with no preconditions.”
Iran has said it is unwilling to meet with Trump
while crushing sanctions are in place over its nuclear program.
President Donald Trump says the U.S. has reason to
believe it knows who was behind the attack on Saudi Arabian energy facilities
and is “locked and loaded” depending on verification and other issues.
In tweets Sunday night, Trump says the U.S. is
waiting to hear from the Saudis as to who they believe was behind the attack
and, as he put it, “under what terms we would proceed!”
Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels claimed
responsibility for the attack, but U.S. officials say Iran is responsible. Iran
denies it.
The drone attacks hit Saudi Arabia’s biggest oil
processing facility and a major oil field, halting production of 5.7 million
barrels of crude a day. That’s about half of the country’s global daily output
and more than 5% of the world’s daily production.
Crude oil prices have shot up 9.5% to $60 after
trading opened Sunday evening in New York, a dramatic increase that comes after
a weekend attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastructure.
A spike in oil prices could have negative effects for
the global economy.
The attack interrupted the production of 5.7 million
barrels a day, more than half of Saudi Arabia’s crude oil production and about
5% of the world’s daily supply.
The Wall Street Journal cited Saudi officials as
saying a third of output would be restored on Monday, but a return to full
production may take weeks. The Saudis say they will use other facilities and
existing stocks to supplant the plant’s production.
President Donald Trump says he has approved the
release of U.S. strategic petroleum reserves “if needed” to stabilize energy
markets after a Saturday attack on Saudi Arabian energy facilities.
Trump tweets that the attacks could have an impact
on oil prices and says the final amount of the release, if any, would be
“sufficient to keep the markets well-supplied.”
The authorization alone could help prevent a spike
in oil prices after the attack led to suspension of more than 5% of the world’s
daily crude oil production. The Trump administration has blamed the attack on
Iran.
The federally owned petroleum reserve of hundreds of
millions of barrels of crude oil has only been tapped three times, most
recently in 2011 amid unrest in Libya.
The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the recent
attacks on Saudi Arabia oil facilities mean that a return to full production
may take weeks. That could mean a spike in oil prices as traders worry about
supply, with potential negative consequences for the global economy.
The Journal reports that Saudi officials say a third
of crude output will be restored Monday. Officials said they would use other
facilities and existing stocks to supplant the gap in production.
The weekend drone attacks hit Saudi Arabia’s biggest
oil processing facility and a major oil field, halting production of 5.7
million barrels of crude a day, about half of the country’s global daily output
and more than 5% of the world’s daily production.
Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels claimed
responsibility for the attack, but U.S. officials say Iran is responsible. Iran
denies it.
Senior U.S. officials are citing intelligence
assessments, including satellite imagery, to support their case that Iran was
responsible for Saturday’s attacks on key Saudi Arabian oil infrastructure.
The officials say the intelligence shows that the
strikes are inconsistent with the kind of attack that would have been launched
from Yemen.
The U.S. government is releasing satellite imagery
showing what officials say are at least 19 points of impact at two Saudi energy
facilities. The officials say the photos show impacts consistent with attack
coming from the direction of Iran, rather than from Yemen.
The officials say additional devices, which
apparently didn’t reach their targets, have been recovered and are being
analyzed by Saudi and American intelligence agencies.
The officials are speaking on the condition of
anonymity to discuss intelligence matters.
Satellite images examined by The Associated Press
appear to show damage at the heart of a Saudi oil processing facility targeted
in a claimed drone attack by Yemen’s Houthi rebels.
The images Sunday come from the European
Commission’s Sentinel-2 satellite.
The images appear to show black char marks in the
heart of Saudi Aramco’s Abqaiq oil processing facility in Buqyaq.
Those marks were not visible in a month’s worth of
earlier satellite images of the facility.
The Washington-based Center for Strategic and
International Studies in August identified the area with the char marks as the
plant’s stabilization area.
The center said the area’s functions mean “the
likelihood of a strike successfully disrupting or destroying its operations.”
Neither Saudi Arabia nor the state-run oil giant
Saudi Aramco have said how much damage was done to the facility.
Kuwait says it is increasing security across the
oil-rich small nation after an attack on oil sites in Saudi Arabia.
That’s according to a report Sunday night by the
state-run KUNA news agency.
KUNA said the order came from Prime Minister Jaber
Al Mubarak Al Sabah, who asked officials to “tighten security measures around
vital sites inside of the country.”
Separately, KUNA said authorities would investigate
reports of drones flying over Kuwait. It did not elaborate.
Local Kuwaiti media has reported that witnesses say
they saw a drone near a presidential palace on Saturday morning, around the
same time of the attacks in Saudi Arabia.
Germany is condemning the attacks on oil facilities
in Saudi Arabia and calling for de-escalation in the region.
The Foreign Ministry in Berlin said in a statement
Sunday that “there can be no justification for such an attack on Saudi Arabia’s
civilian and critical infrastructure.”
It noted that Yemen’s Houthi rebels have claimed
responsibility for the attack and said it “heightens tensions” in the region
when de-escalation is “urgently” needed.
The statement didn’t mention Iran, which the U.S.
alleges was behind Saturday’s attacks.
A leader of Yemen’s Houthi rebels says they were
able to “exploit vulnerabilities” in Saudi Arabia’s air defense system to stage
the attack previous day on the kingdom’s vital oil installations.
Muhammad al-Bukhaiti told The Associated Press on
Sunday that the U.S. allegations that Iran was behind the attack reflected
“political bankruptcy” of the administration in Washington.
The drone attack claimed by the Houthis hit the
world’s largest oil processing facility and a major oil field on Saturday,
sparking huge fires at a vulnerable chokepoint for global energy supplies.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has blamed Iran
for the attacks and said that here’s “no evidence the attacks came from Yemen.”
Pompeo said on Saturday that “Iran has now launched
an unprecedented attack on the world’s energy supply.”
Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Hariri has condemned
the drone attack on Saudi oil installations, describing it as an escalation
that could widen conflicts in the region.
Hariri said in a statement on Sunday that the attack
the day before in Saudi Arabia should push the international community to rein
in “all the arms of aggression and terrorism that are striking Arab countries.”
Hariri said Lebanon stands by Saudi Arabia, adding
that the latest “aggression” against the kingdom is part of attacks targeting
Gulf Arab states and also undermines regional and international security.
Iran’s foreign minister says that blaming Iran for
Yemeni rebel attacks on major Saudi oil sites will not end the war in the Arab
world’s most impoverished country — but that talks might.
Mohammad Javad Zarif also said in a tweet on Sunday
that “Having failed at ‘max pressure’, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
turning to ‘max deceit’.”
He also says: “US & its clients are stuck in
Yemen because of illusion that weapon superiority will lead to military
victory.”
Zarif also tweeted: “Blaming Iran won’t end
disaster. Accepting our April ’15 proposal to end war & begin talks may.”
Late Saturday, Pompeo directly blamed Iran for the
attack on major Saudi oil sites, without offering evidence to support his
claim.
Iraq is denying that its country was the site from
where Yemeni-rebel drones were launched to attack Saudi oil installations.
The statement came from Iraqi Prime Minister Adel
Abdul-Mahdi’s office on Sunday.
It says Iraq would act “decisively” if anyone tried
to use its territory to attack other countries.
U.S. officials previously alleged at least one
recent drone attack on Saudi Arabia came from Iraq, where Iran backs Shiite
militias, something denied by Baghdad. Those militias in recent weeks have been
targeted themselves by mysterious airstrikes, with at least one believed to
have been carried out by Israel.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry has dismissed the U.S.
accusation that it was behind an attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastructure
the day before, calling it part of Washington’s policy of “maximum lies.”
Abbas Mousavi made the statement on Sunday.
He says Washington adopted a ‘maximum pressure’
policy against Iran but because of “its failure, (the U.S.) is leaning toward
‘maximum lies’” now.
Saturday’s drone attacks by Iranian-backed Yemeni
rebels have halted about half of Saudi oil supplies after hitting the kingdom’s
biggest oil processing facility and a major oil field.
They set off huge fires and led to a suspension of
“production operations” at the Abqaiq facility and the Khurais field.