Iran carried out additional strikes Tuesday against several Gulf Arab states while its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned that no oil would be allowed to leave the Persian Gulf during the ongoing U.S.–Israeli bombing campaign targeting the Islamic Republic.
Bahraini officials said the island nation, which hosts the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet, was struck by three missiles and a drone. One of the strikes hit a residential building in the capital, Manama, killing a 29-year-old woman and injuring eight others.
Saudi Arabia reported that its air defenses intercepted and destroyed two drones over the kingdom’s oil-producing eastern region. Kuwait’s National Guard also said it shot down six drones that entered its airspace.
In the United Arab Emirates, the defense ministry said nine Iranian drones reached their targets on Tuesday while air defense systems intercepted another 26 drones and eight missiles. Authorities said there were no immediate reports of casualties.
The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center also reported a suspected incident involving a commercial vessel in the Persian Gulf near Abu Dhabi. According to the report, the captain of a ship observed “a splash and heard a loud bang in proximity of a bulk carrier.”
If confirmed, the incident would indicate that Iranian attacks during the war have expanded further into shipping lanes in the Gulf.
Since the U.S.–Israeli bombing campaign began on February 28, Iranian strikes on the UAE have killed six people and wounded 122 others, according to figures released by the country’s defense ministry.
Officials in the Emirates said firefighters were battling a blaze Tuesday in the industrial city of Ruwais after an Iranian drone struck the area. Ruwais hosts major petrochemical facilities. Authorities said no injuries were reported.
A source familiar with the situation told Reuters that the fire erupted within the Ruwais complex operated by Abu Dhabi’s state oil company ADNOC. As a precaution, the refinery at the site was shut down, representing the latest disruption to energy infrastructure during the conflict.
The source added that other operations within the industrial complex continued functioning normally.
Ruwais is home to major Abu Dhabi National Oil Company facilities capable of processing up to 922,000 barrels of oil per day and serves as the center of the emirate’s downstream oil industry, including large chemical, fertilizer, and industrial gas operations.
Energy industry monitoring firm IIR Energy reported that ADNOC shut down the only crude distillation unit at its Ruwais Refinery 2 (West), which processes 417,000 barrels per day, and plans to carry out a safety shutdown across the plant.
The firm also noted that ADNOC had already scaled back operations by roughly 10 to 20 percent at several units in Ruwais Refinery 1 (East), which processes about 400,000 barrels per day, beginning March 6 because of the escalating regional conflict.
Officials from ADNOC, the Abu Dhabi Media Office, and the UAE foreign ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment regarding the incidents.
Gulf officials have warned that continued attacks on energy infrastructure and shipping could have severe global consequences.
Iran’s strikes have forced some countries to reduce production, while maritime traffic through the critical Strait of Hormuz — the narrow passage connecting the Persian Gulf to the open ocean and used to transport roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply — has slowed dramatically. President Donald Trump has warned that Iran could be hit “much harder” if it continues interfering with oil shipments.
A spokesman for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps issued a direct threat Tuesday regarding oil exports from the region.
Iran “will not allow the export of even a single liter of oil from the region to the hostile side and its partners until further notice.”
“Their attempts to reduce and control oil and gas prices will be temporary and ineffective,” said Ali Mohamad Naeini. “Trade in wartime conditions is subject to security considerations.”
Qatar, which has also faced Iranian strikes during the conflict, warned that attacks on civilian sites and energy facilities could trigger a humanitarian disaster.
“This region cannot take these kinds of attacks on its facilities,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman Majed Al-Ansari. “We will see a humanitarian catastrophe.”
“We have seen these kinds of attacks on both sides of the Gulf,” he said, pointing fingers at both Iran and the US and Israel.
“The attacks on energy facilities, which have also happened on both sides, is a dangerous precedent,” he said. “What is happening right now is going to have grave consequences for the international economy.”
Amin Nasser, chief executive of Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil company Aramco, also warned that prolonged disruption in the Strait of Hormuz could have devastating effects.
“While we have faced disruptions in the past, this one by far is the biggest crisis the region’s oil and gas industry has faced,” Nasser said in a media call following the release of the company’s 2025 financial results.
{Matzav.com}