Iran continues Gulf strikes as war nears three-week mark
Israel said it struck infrastructure across Iran, including in the capital Tehran, with hostilities showing no sign of easing
Iran pressed
ahead with attacks on Gulf Arab states even after Israel signalled it would
stop targeting the Islamic Republic’s energy infrastructure, further unsettling
oil and financial markets.
The United
Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia said they intercepted missiles and drones
overnight and into Friday, while Bahrain reported a fire at a warehouse. Kuwait
shut several units at its Al Ahmadi refinery after multiple strikes.
Israel said
it struck infrastructure across Iran, including in the capital Tehran, with
hostilities showing no sign of easing.
The war, now
three weeks long, has killed more than 4,200 people across the region and
brought shipping through the Strait of Hormuz — a chokepoint for about a fifth
of global oil and liquefied natural gas flows — to a near standstill. Iran’s
attacks on critical energy sites have eased from a peak earlier this week, yet
crude prices maintained their rise after closing on Thursday at the highest
since mid-2022.
The U.S. is
considering an operation to take over Kharg Island, Iran’s major oil-export
site, to pressure the Islamic Republic to reopen the Strait, Axios reported,
adding that a decision hasn’t been made. The U.S. struck military sites on
Kharg last weekend, but stopped short of targeting oil infrastructure.
U.S.
President Donald Trump has consistently said the U.S. has no plans to send
ground troops into Iranian territory, but also hasn’t ruled it out.
The risk of
lasting damage to energy supplies from the war is great, even if fighting ends
imminently. Qatar has said almost a fifth of its LNG production has been
knocked out for as long as five years, while QatarEnergy said the attacks would
cost about US$20 billion a year in lost revenue.
The fallout
of the war is spreading globally, with fuel, shipping and household costs on
the rise. Central banks in Europe have pivoted toward potential interest-rate
hikes to combat an expected rise in inflation, reversing a cutting cycle.
Israel said
it would no longer target energy infrastructure after an attack on Iran’s
largest gas field on Wednesday sparked retaliatory strikes on similar assets
and a rebuke from Trump.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday said his forces would aid U.S.
efforts to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and that the war would be over sooner
than some anticipated — comments that helped calm markets on a day when energy
prices had spiked once again.
For
Washington, the costs of the Iran campaign it started alongside Israel on Feb.
28 are becoming clearer. Iran said its air defence “seriously damaged” a US
F-35 stealth fighter, with U.S. Central Command saying one of the warplanes
made an emergency landing and the pilot was in stable condition.
The Pentagon
has asked Congress for an additional $200 billion to pay for the war, a person
familiar with the matter said. The enormous funding request suggested the U.S.
is girding for a protracted conflict, though Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
downplayed such concerns and said the U.S. was “on plan” with its war goals.
The Trump
administration moved ahead with $23 billion in weapons sales to the UAE, Kuwait
and Jordan, aiming to bolster those countries’ defences as they come under
attack, according to a State Department spokesperson.
Iran’s
average missile and drone launches were down about 81 per ceet as of Thursday
from their March 1 peak, Bloomberg Intelligence analysis shows. Gulf states led
by the UAE have borne the brunt of Iranian attacks.
Iran has
curbed retaliatory strikes on regional energy sites in response to calls for
de-escalation, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said, while warning Tehran would
show “ZERO restraint” if its oil and gas infrastructure is hit again.
Brent crude
rose to about US$109 a barrel heading into the weekend. Equity markets declined
and gold was on track for its worst weekly drop since the onset of the
pandemic.
Iran
accounts for more than three quarters of the war’s fatalities. More than 1,000
people have been killed in Lebanon, where Israel is waging a parallel war
against Iran-aligned Hezbollah militants. Dozens of others have been killed
across the Middle East, while the U.S. has lost 13 military personnel and at
least 16 military planes and drones.
https://nationalpost.com/news/iran-continues-gulf-strikes-as-war-nears-three-week-mark
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