Drone Attack On Oil Facilities Shuts Down Half Of Saudi Arabia’s Oil Production

Drone Attack On Oil Facilities Shuts Down Half Of Saudi Arabia’s Oil Production

Saudi Arabia has shut down approximately half of its oil production capacity after “coordinated drone strikes on facilities in [its] Eastern Province” set blazes at the Hijra Khurais oil field and Abqaiq, the world’s largest oil stabilisation facility, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Yemen’s Houthi rebels, who took control of Yemen’s capital of San’a in 2014 and have been targeted by Saudi Arabia in a vicious counter-insurgency campaign that has killed thousands of civilians, took credit for the attack, according to the Journal.

The Saudi Arabian government has not assigned any blame and there were no immediate reports of deaths, the paper wrote, though the attack is estimated to have halted around five per cent of world oil production. It is also likely to disrupt state-owned oil giant Saudi Aramco’s upcoming initial public offering, likely the world’s largest.

A panel of experts told the United Nations Security Council that the Houthis had acquired drone technology from Iran in January 2018, according to the New York Times. Though the Houthis have used drone strikes before, at a distance of 800 kilometres from Yemen this attack would be deeper into Saudi territory than prior missions and (if the rebels are to be believed) involved 10 drones.

According to the Associated Press, Houthi drone capabilities have steadily increased from off-the-shelf models to “versions nearly identical to Iranian models,” with the United Nations, Gulf nations, and the West saying Iran has supplied the rebels with weaponry.

The AP wrote that there are some indications that Saudi security forces tried to shoot down the drones, apparently to limited success:

First word of the assault came in online videos of giant fires at the Abqaiq facility, some 330 kilometres northeast of the Saudi capital, Riyadh. Machine-gun fire could be heard in several clips alongside the day’s first Muslim call to prayers, suggesting security forces tried to bring down the drones just before dawn… In daylight, Saudi state television aired a segment with its local correspondent near a police checkpoint, a thick plume of smoke visible behind him.

The fires began after the sites were “targeted by drones,” the Interior Ministry said in a statement carried by the state-run Saudi Press Agency. It said an investigation was underway.

A Houthi military spokesman, Yahia Sarie, said on the Houthi-run Al-Masirah satellite news channel that rebel forces had received “intelligence” from within Saudi Arabia and that “The only option for the Saudi government is to stop attacking us,” the AP wrote.

Yemen is the Arab region’s poorest country, and the civil war that began there in 2015 has since spiraled into one of the world’s greatest ongoing humanitarian catastrophies. The U.S.-based Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project estimates that roughly 90,000 people have died as a result of the conflict, according to the AP, and the Saudi-led and U.S.-backed coalition has reportedly engaged in atrocities such as the bombing of markets, hospitals, weddings, and in one instance a bus carrying dozens of children.

The UN stated last year that the majority of the casualties have been the result of coalition airstrikes rather than Houthi action, though Group of International and Regional Eminent Experts on Yemen chairperson Kamel Jendoubi said “There is little evidence of any attempt by parties to the conflict to minimise civilian casualties.”

None of this, however, has driven a wedge between Saudi Arabia and Donald Trump’s administration, which has stood with the country’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman through both the disastrous military venture and accusations of other human rights abuses ranging from the murder of a dissident journalist to sweeping crackdowns on dissent.

As the Jerusalem Post noted, the weekend attack is a major escalation not just because the rebels are repeatedly proving they can carry out long range, precision drone attacks, but because it will only serve to increase tensions between the U.S. and Iran that have been growing since Trump decided to walk away from a 2015 agreement designed to limit the scope of Iran’s nuclear program.

“It is quite an impressive, yet worrying, technological feat,” Department of International Security Studies at Yale University visiting research fellow James Rogers told CNN. “Long-range precision strikes are not easy to achieve and to cause the substantial fires in Abqaiq and Khurais highlights that this drone has a large explosive yield.”


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