Saudi oil attack part of dangerous new pattern
The assault on the beating heart of Saudi Arabia’s
vast oil empire follows a new and dangerous pattern that’s emerged across the
Persian Gulf this summer of precise attacks that leave few obvious clues as to
who launched them.
Beginning in May with the still-unclaimed explosions
that damaged oil tankers near the Strait of Hormuz, the region has seen its
energy infrastructure repeatedly targeted. Those attacks culminated with
Saturday’s assault on the world’s biggest oil processor in eastern Saudi
Arabia, which halved the oil-rich kingdom’s production and caused energy prices
to spike.
Some strikes have been claimed by Yemen’s Houthi
rebels, who have been battling a Saudi-led coalition in the Arab world’s
poorest country since 2015. Their rapidly increasing sophistication fuels
suspicion among experts and analysts however that Iran may be orchestrating
them — or perhaps even carrying them out itself as the U.S. alleges in the case
of Saturday’s attack.
“Iran can count on public skepticism to afford it
some deniability under any circumstances, but an attack of this magnitude
stands a much greater chance of provoking very severe diplomatic and military
consequences,” warned Michael Knights, a senior fellow at The Washington
Institute for Near East Policy.
For its part, Iran only claimed one attack during
this period, the shootdown of a U.S. military surveillance drone it alleges
entered its airspace on June 20. It publicly gave medals to the paramilitary
Revolutionary Guard members who manned the anti-aircraft battery that downed
the drone. It separately has acknowledged seizing oil tankers, the
most-prominent one the British-flagged Stena Impero on July 19.
However, the attacks on the oil tankers and the
Houthi-claimed assaults on Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastructure would match up
with previous incidents blamed on Tehran. Experts describe Iran as relying on
so-called nonattributable attacks, when blame is difficult to assign given the
circumstances.
The reasons for this are severalfold. Since its 1979
Islamic Revolution, Iran has been unable to purchase sophisticated weapons from
the West like its Gulf Arab neighbors. Its air force remains replete with pre-revolution,
American-made F-4s, F-5s and F-14s, as well Soviet- fighter jets. The U.S. Navy
sank half of Iran’s operational fleet in a one-day naval battle in 1988 amid
the so-called “Tanker War.”
While it has built its own missile arsenal, experts
say Iran’s armed forces would suffer in a head-to-head military confrontation.
Launching attacks that can’t be easily linked back to Tehran limits the chance
of direct retaliation.
Separately, Tehran has worked to grow a network of
proxy forces in the Mideast. Iran backs the Lebanese militant group and
political party Hezbollah, which offers it a way to pressure Israel, a longtime
foe in the region. Iran has worked to do the same with the Houthis, members of
a Shiite Zaydi sect who seized the capital, Sanaa, in September 2014. Attacks
claimed or attributed to these groups may have involved Tehran directly or
indirectly, analysts say.
Those who allege Iran’s involvement point to the
timing of the attacks coinciding with key moments in the unraveling of Iran’s
2015 nuclear deal with world powers, which President Donald Trump unilaterally
withdrew the U.S. from on May 8, 2018. That sparked a U.S. sanctions campaign
that has cut off much of its oil exports from the international market, amid
promises by Iranian officials that no one would be able to export oil from the
region if Tehran couldn’t.
A year to the day Trump withdrew from the nuclear
deal, Iran warned it would begin enriching its uranium closer to weapons-grade
levels. Four days later, on May 12, the first mysterious attacks struck oil
tankers off the Strait of Hormuz. Two days after that, the Houthis said they
struck Saudi Arabia’s crucial East-West Pipeline in a drone attack.
As Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei met
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe who carried a message from Trump on June 13,
a Japanese oil tanker and another vessel came under attack. A video later
released by the U.S. military appeared to show Iranian forces removing a
magnetic bomb, known as a limpet mine, from the Japanese vessel, something
never explained by Iran. The Guard shot down the U.S. drone on June 20.
Saturday’s attack on Saudi Arabia came after Iran
further stepped away from the nuclear deal and ahead of the United Nations
General Assembly later this month amid speculation of a possible meeting there
between Trump and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. Iran’s supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Tuesday squashed the idea of any Trump-Rouhani talks.
Satellite images of the attacked Saudi sites
released by the U.S. afterward show damage done largely in a northern direction
at the sites. If any attack had come from Yemen, the southern sides the
structures would have been damaged, U.S. officials say. To the north across the
Persian Gulf lies Iran and Iraq, where Iranian-backed Shiite militias operate.
Iraq has denied that the attack came from there. Kuwait, which sits between
Iraq and Saudi Arabia and is close to western Iran, separately has acknowledged
investigating reports of a drone or low-flying object speeding over the
oil-rich country early Saturday just before the Saudi attack.
U.N. investigators have said the Houthis’ new UAV-X
drone likely has a range of up to 1,500 kilometers (930 miles). That in theory
could put the plant and the oil field struck Saturday in range. The U.N., Gulf
Arab nations and the U.S. accuse Iran of supplying arms to the Houthis,
something Tehran denies.
But Houthi drones typically detonate in the air or
when they slam into a target, spraying out shrapnel like buckshot. The Houthis
have used their drones in attacks this way in the past, with one captured on
video in January exploding over a crowd at a military parade.
The images from Saturday’s attack, however, show
precise, deeply penetrating hits on structures at the oil processing facility.
“Previous Houthi drone strikes against oil
facilities tended to result in quite limited damage which could be an
indication that a different weapons system was used this time,” said Fabian
Hinz, a researcher at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at
the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in Monterey, California.
As authorities probe the Saudi attack, they’ll rely
on forensic examination of the weapons used to determine what actually struck
the site. That, coupled with specifics on damage, may allow investigators to
more firmly assign blame in just the latest murky attack in the region.