The Telegram (St. John's)

Trump orders more Iran sanctions HAMAD I MOHAMMED

- STEPHEN KALIN PARISA HAFEZI

JEDDAH/DUBAI — U.S. President Donald Trump ordered a major increase in sanctions on Iran on Wednesday as Saudi Arabia displayed remnants of drones and missiles it said were used in a crippling attack “unquestion­ably sponsored” by Tehran.

Trump gave no explanatio­n in a Twitter post announcing the order, but it followed repeated U.S. assertions that the Islamic Republic was behind Saturday’s attack and came hours after Saudi Arabia said the strike was a “test of global will.”

“I have just instructed the Secretary of the Treasury to substantia­lly increase sanctions on the country of Iran,” he wrote.

Iran again denied involvemen­t in the Sept. 14 raids, which hit the world’s biggest crude processing facility and initially knocked out half of Saudi output. Responsibi­lity was claimed by Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi group.

In an attempt to support its assertion that Iran was responsibl­e, Saudi Arabia displayed drone and missile debris it said was undeniable evidence of Iranian aggression.

A total of 25 drones and missiles were used in the attacks launched from Iran not Yemen, Defense Ministry spokesman Colonel Turki al-malki told a news conference.“the attack was launched from the north and unquestion­ably sponsored by Iran,” he said, adding Iranian Delta Wing unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) were used in addition to cruise missiles.

An investigat­ion into where the attacks were launched from was still under way and the result would be announced at a later date, he said.

Proof of Iranian responsibi­lity, and in particular firm evidence that it was launched from Iranian territory, could pressure Riyadh and Washington into a response. Both nations, however, were stressing the need for caution.

Trump has said he does not want war and is coordinati­ng with Gulf and European states.

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said the strike was a “real test of the global will” to confront subversion of the internatio­nal order.

His envoy to London, Prince Khalid bin Bander, told the BBC the attack was “almost certainly” Iranian-backed: “We’re trying not to react too quickly because the last thing we need is more conflict in the region.”

Iran dismissed the allegation­s.

“They want to impose maximum ... pressure on Iran through slander,” Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said.

“We don’t want conflict in the region ... Who started the conflict?” he added, blaming Washington and its Gulf allies for the war in Yemen.

Yemen’s Houthi movement, an ally of Iran battling a Western-backed, Saudi-led coalition for more than four years, has claimed responsibi­lity and said it used drones to assault state oil company Aramco’s sites.

The attack exposed the vulnerabil­ity of Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastruc­ture and threw down a gauntlet to the United States, which wants to curb Tehran’s influence in the region.

‘COMPELLING EVIDENCE’

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was to meet Prince Mohammed in Jeddah on Wednesday to discuss the crisis before heading to the United Arab Emirates.

U.N. officials monitoring sanctions on Iran and Yemen were also heading to Saudi Arabia to investigat­e.

France, which is trying to salvage an internatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran that Washington quit last year, said it wanted to establish the facts before reacting.

A U.S. official told Reuters the strikes originated in southweste­rn Iran. Three officials said they involved cruise missiles and drones, indicating a higher degree of complexity and sophistica­tion than initially thought.

The officials did not provide evidence or explain what U.S. intelligen­ce they were using for evaluating the attack, which cut five per cent of global production.

Saudi Arabia said on Tuesday the 5.7 million barrels per day of output lost would be fully restored by the end of the month.

Oil prices fell after the Saudi reassuranc­es, having surged more than 20 per cent at one point on Monday — the biggest intra-day jump since the 1990-91 Gulf War.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Saudi defence ministry spokesman Colonel Turki Al-malik displays remains of the missiles which the Saudi government says were used to attack an Aramco oil facility, during a news conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday. •
REUTERS Saudi defence ministry spokesman Colonel Turki Al-malik displays remains of the missiles which the Saudi government says were used to attack an Aramco oil facility, during a news conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday. •

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