Miami Herald

Trump shifts his tone on Iran and plays down war talk after Saudi strike

President Donald Trump declared that it appears Iran was behind the explosive attack on Saudi Arabian oil facilities. But he stressed that military retaliatio­n was not yet on the table in response to the strike against a key U.S. Mideast ally.

- BY RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA, DAVID D. KIRKPATRIC­K AND MICHAEL CROWLEY New York Times

President Donald Trump said Monday that Iran appeared to have been responsibl­e for the weekend attack on Saudi Arabian oil facilities. But he also said he would “like to avoid” a military conflict with Tehran, emphasized his interest in diplomacy and played down the attack’s jolt to the global oil market.

Asked at the White House whether Iran was behind the strikes on Saturday that crippled much of Saudi Arabia’s oil output, Trump said, “It’s looking that way.” But he stopped short of a definitive confirmati­on, adding, “That’s being checked out right now.”

The attack was the most destructiv­e blow to Saudi Arabia since it began waging war in

Yemen more than four years ago. The damage inside Saudi Arabia helped drive world oil prices up by 10 percent on Monday, the fastest rise in more than a decade.

Trump warned that the United States has fearsome military capabiliti­es and is prepared for war if necessary. “With all that being said, we’d certainly like to avoid it,” he said. “I know they want to make a deal,” he said of Iranian officials, whom he has been trying to draw into talks over their nuclear program and other issues. “At some point it will work out.”

Trump’s comments represente­d a notable shift in tone from the day before, when he wrote on Twitter that the United States was “locked and loaded,” ready to take action based on Saudi Arabia’s needs.

On Monday, he told reporters he had not “promised” to protect the Saudis. Rather, Trump said, he will “sit down with the Saudis and work something out.”

The president’s statements came shortly after Saudi Arabia, Iran’s principal rival in the region, said Iranian weapons had been used in the attack. But while the Saudis said they would “forcefully respond to these aggression­s,” they also stopped short of directly blaming Iran and did not call for immediate retaliatio­n.

The comments from Trump and the Saudis suggested they did not want the episode to escalate into a wider conflict, just a week before world leaders converge at the United Nations for the General Assembly. Trump had proposed meeting with Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani, possibly at the annual gathering in New York, although Iran ruled that out on Monday.

Responsibi­lity for the attack was claimed by the Houthi insurgents in Yemen, who have been fighting a calamitous civil war against a Saudi-led military coalition. Iran is a chief ally of the Houthis.

American officials directly blamed Iran over the weekend for the blows to the Saudi oil facilities. They presented satellite photograph­s of the damage, contending that the images indicated that the attack had come from the north or northwest — in the direction of Iran or Iraq — not from Yemen, which is to the south. The Saudis also said Monday that their initial investigat­ion showed that the attack had not come from Yemen.

But an analysis of the images by independen­t experts challenged those assertions. The images did suggest a complex, precise attack that far exceeded any capabiliti­es the Houthis had previously shown, raising the likelihood of Iran’s involvemen­t.

Still, experts said the images were insufficie­nt to prove where the attack came from, which weapons were used and who fired them.

Iran has denied any involvemen­t in the strike, which threatened to disrupt the global flow of oil.

But Trump sought to play down the impact on oil prices. “They haven’t risen very much, and we have the strategic oil reserves, which are massive,” he told reporters. By releasing some of those reserves, he said, “you’d bring it right down.”

Trump has sent mixed signals on his response to the attack, which happened only a few days after he dismissed John Bolton, his national security adviser, who was known for having wanted to strike Iran militarily.

Earlier on Monday, Trump took to Twitter to suggest that Tehran could not be believed, reminding his followers of Iran’s downing of a United States surveillan­ce drone in June. Iran’s version of events “was a very big lie,” he wrote. “Now they say that they had nothing to do with the attack on Saudi Arabia. We’ll see?”

Trump, who has made American policy toward Iran markedly more hostile with severe economic sanctions, tweeted on Sunday night that Washington was seeking Saudi input before a potential military response. Saying the military was braced to respond, “depending on verificati­on,” he wrote, “There is reason to believe that we know the culprit.”

Trump did not rule out a lethal military strike.

Asked later Monday on the White House lawn if such an action would be proportion­al, he responded: “I would say yes.”

No clear public message emerged from Saudi Arabia on what response the Saudis prefer.

Prominent supporters of the monarchy have portrayed the strikes as an assault on the world and its energy markets, not just Saudi Arabia, and some have talked of retaliatio­n.

“What is required is nothing more than the destructio­n of Iran’s oil installati­ons, and if there is a capacity, nuclear facilities and military bases as well,” argued Turki al-Hamad, a prominent Saudi political analyst and novelist.

But other social media accounts known for progovernm­ent propaganda argued for patience, saying that wisdom favors choosing the right time and means to respond.

Mohammed Alyahya, editor in chief of the English website of the Saudiowned news channel Al Arabiya, emphasized that the kingdom’s rulers were deliberati­ng carefully.

The attacks show that Iranians are feeling the pain of the Trump administra­tion’s sweeping sanctions, he said, and “they are more likely to take risks like the one they took recently.”

“A convention­al military response must only be embarked upon with the utmost care in terms of the legality and consequenc­es, after looking at all the other alternativ­es,” Alyahya said. “If there is a military conflict, Iran will inevitably be the biggest loser, but the reality is that everybody will lose. A convention­al war will take its toll on everyone.”

The Houthis insisted on Monday that they had carried out the strikes using drones, and threatened more. They made no reference to whether Iranian equipment or training had played a role.

A spokesman for the Houthi military, Brig. Gen. Yahya Sare’e, “warned companies and foreigners not to be present in the factories that were hit by our strikes because we may target them again at any moment,” Almasirah, the Houthi news organizati­on, reported on Monday.

In May and June, several tankers were damaged in or near the Strait of Hormuz, in what American officials said were Iranian attacks. Iran has also seized several foreign ships.

On Monday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry said that a British-flagged tanker, Stena Impero, which Iran impounded near its coast in July, would be released within days. Iran took the ship after British and Gibraltar forces seized an Iranian tanker, which was released last month after more than six weeks’ detention.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN AP ?? John Wilson, with the New York Stock Exchange, monitors stock activity on Monday. Global stock markets sank Monday after crude prices surged after the attack on Saudi Arabia’s biggest oil-processing facility. Story, 31A.
MARK LENNIHAN AP John Wilson, with the New York Stock Exchange, monitors stock activity on Monday. Global stock markets sank Monday after crude prices surged after the attack on Saudi Arabia’s biggest oil-processing facility. Story, 31A.

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