Arab Coalition: Investigations indicate weapons in Aramco attacks were Iranian

The Arab Coalition said that investigations
indicated that the weapons used in the attacks on two Saudi Aramco oil
facilities are Iranian.
The coalition’s spokesperson Turki al-Maliki said on
Monday that the coalition has the ability to confront attacks, and defend vital
oil facilities.
“The investigation is continuing and all indications
are that weapons used in both attacks came from Iran,” al-Maliki told reporters
in Riyadh, adding they were now probing “from where they were fired.”
Al-Maliki said the results of the investigation
would be made public to the media when complete.
Saturday's attacks hit Saudi Aramco oil facilities
in Abqaiq and Hijrat Khurais in Saudi Arabia.
Al-Maliki's comments come a day after US President
Donald Trump said that the US knows who was behind the attacks and is “locked
and loaded,” but is waiting for verification and for a Saudi assessment of
responsibility before deciding how to proceed.
The scope and precision of drone attacks on Saudi
Arabian oil facilities show they were launched from a west-northwest direction
rather than from Yemen to the south, where Houthi rebels claimed
responsibility, added senior US administration officials on Sunday.
US officials pointed to satellite imagery showing 19
points of impact on the oil facilities. The attacks on Saturday risk
disruptions to the world’s oil supplies.