The Scotsman

Drone strikes damage oil pipeline in attack on Saudi Arabia soil

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

Saudi Arabia has said oil infrastruc­ture sites belonging to the country’ s state-run oil company Aramco have been targeted and that at least one of the attacks was carried out by drone strikes.

The announceme­nt yesterday came shortly after Yemen’s Houthi rebels claimed an assault on the kingdom.

The state Saudi Press Agency quoted Saudi energy minister Khalid al-falih as saying that between 6am to 6:30am (3-3:30am GMT), a petroleum pumping station supplying an east-west pipeline between the Eastern Province and to the Yanbu Port on the Red Sea was targeted by drones.

He said a fire broke out at a station along the pipeline and was subsequent­ly put out.

A ram co has temporaril­y stopped pumping petroleum through the pipeline until inspection of the damage is complete.

The kingdom’s state security body also says two oil infrastruc­ture sites in the greater region of Riyadh – its landlocked capital – were targeted at the same time.

The statement described it as a “limited targeting” of petroleum stations in areas al-dud a mi and A fif in Riyadh region. The spokesman for the rebels, Mohammed Abdel-salam, said the Houthis launched a series of dr one attacks on the kingdom.

He said: “This is a message to S audi Arabia – stop your aggression.”

Mr Abdel-salam also said: “Our goal is to respond to the crimes they are committing every day against the Yemeni people.”

In Yemen, the high-pitched whine of dr ones has been a par t of life for more than 15 years, ever since the first US drone strike here targeting al-Qaida in 2002.

But now Iran-backed Houthi rebels increasing­ly deploy drones in Yemen’s brutal civil war.

Neighbouri­ng Saudi Arabia, which has been battling the rebels since 2015, said drones attacked an oil pipeline as other assaults targeted energy infrastruc­ture elsewhere in the kingdom yesterday.

The H out his claimed a co-ordinated dr one attack, underscori­ng how the Arab world’ s poorest country has become one of the world’s top battlefiel­ds for drones.

Both the rebels and the Saudi-led coalition fighting them, as well as the US, continue to use them for surveillan­ce and attacks. While the US uses American-made drones and the coalition has turned to Chinese suppliers, the manufactur­er of the Houthis’ drones in both the air and the sea has been a contentiou­s question.

Saudi-led coalition forces last year showed journalist­s a Houthi “drone boat” filled with explosives that had failed to detonate. For its part, Iran repeatedly has denied supplying the Houthis with drone or ballistic missile technology.

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