Saudi Arabia says oil attacks ‘unquestionably’ sponsored by Iran

Riyadh: Saudi Arabia said Wednesday that strikes on its oil infrastructure were ‘unquestionably’ sponsored by Iran. It said that the strikes originated from the north but the exact launch site is yet to be pinned down.

It displayed what it said were fragments of the arsenal of 18 drones and seven cruise missiles that devastated two facilities in the country’s east, knocking out half the kingdom’s oil production.

“The attack was launched from the north and unquestionably sponsored by Iran,” Defence Ministry spokesman Turki al-Maliki told a press conference. “We are working to know the exact launch point.”

However, Turki al-Maliki would not be drawn on whether Saudi Arabia believed that Iran would ultimately be found to be the culprit, only stating they were confident they would find where the weapons were fired from.

Diplomats at the United Nations said experts were expected in the kingdom to lead an international inquiry.

Yemen’s Iran-backed Huthi rebels, who have claimed Saturday’s strikes, vowed meanwhile they had the means to hit ‘dozens of targets’ in the United Arab Emirates.

Saudi’s de facto leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman told Russian President Vladimir Putin over phone that the kingdom wants an international investigation that would be seen as highly credible, the state news agency ‘SPA’ reported.

President Donald Trump – who has already re-imposed sanctions that have crippled Iran’s economy – promised Wednesday to ‘substantially increase’ the measures, winning quick praise from Riyadh.

AFP

 

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