Weapons used in Aramco attacks ‘came from Iran’
Shoura Council calls for efforts to punish perpetrators
Iran provided the weapons used to strike two Saudi Aramco facilities in the Kingdom, the Arab coalition said on Monday.
“The investigation is continuing and all indications are that weapons used in both attacks came from Iran,” coalition spokesman Turki Al-Maliki told reporters in Riyadh, adding they were now probing “from where they were fired.”
The coalition supports the Yemen government in the war against the Iran-backed Houthi militia, which claimed they had carried out the attack on Saturday.
US officials have said Iran was behind the attack on an oil processing plant and an oil field, and that the raid did not come from Yemen, but from other direction.
“This strike did not come from Yemen territory as the Houthi militia are pretending,” Al-Maliki said, adding that an investigation was ongoing into the attacks and their origins.
The Houthis have carried out
UNITED AGAINST TERROR
scores of attacks against Saudi Arabia using drones and ballistic missiles.
Al-Maliki labeled the Houthis “a tool in the hands of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards and the terrorist regime of Iran.” On Sunday, the US president raised the possibility of military retaliation after the strikes, saying Washington was “locked and loaded” to respond.
The US has offered a firm response in support of its ally, and is considering increasing its intelligence sharing with Saudi Arabia as a result of the attack, Reuters reported.
A US official told AP that all options, including a military response, were on the table, but added that no decisions had been made.
The US government late on Monday produced satellite photos showing what officials said were at least 19 points of impact at the oil processing plant at Abqaiq and the Khurais oil field. Officials said the photos show impacts consistent with the attack coming from the direction of Iran or Iraq, rather than from Yemen to the south.
Iraq said the attacks were not launched from its territory and on Sunday Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi said US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had told him that Washington possesses information that backs up the Iraqi government’s denial.
Condemnation of the attacks continued from both within Saudi Arabia and from around the world. Saudi Arabia’s Shoura Council called on Monday for concerted efforts to hold those behind the attacks accountable.
Meanwhile, the UN’s special envoy to Yemen Martin Griffiths said the attack on Abqaiq had consequences well beyond the region and risked dragging Yemen into a “regional conflagration.”