President Donald Trump on Sept. 16 questioned Iran’s denial of involvement in the recent drone attacks on oil facilities that knocked down half of Saudi Arabia’s daily production.
He compared it to an earlier claim Iran made after shooting down an American drone in June.
Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels claimed responsibility for what was initially reported as drone attacks on the world’s largest oil-processing facility in Saudi Arabia and a major oil field on Sept. 14. The resulting fires halted about 5.7 million barrels in daily crude oil production, Saudi state oil company Aramco said.
Blame
U.S. State Secretary Mike Pompeo on Sept. 14 blamed Iran for the attacks.U.S. officials said they believed the attacks came from the opposite direction, possibly from Iran itself rather than Yemen, and may have involved cruise missiles.
Missile fragments found after the attacks suggest it was either the Iranian-made Soumar cruise missile or the Quds-1 missile used by Houthis, which is “clearly derived from the Soumar,” said Rick Fisher, senior fellow on Asian Military Affairs at the International Assessment and Strategy Center, a Virginia-based think tank.
He said the Soumar missile was reverse-engineered from the Russian KH-55, obtained by China from Ukraine in the 1990s.
China Behind the Curtain
Fisher pointed to China as the beneficiary of the escalation of Saudi–Iranian tensions.“Iran is hoping to escape blame by arming a proxy—the Houthi forces. And in turn, China is also hoping to escape blame by arming a larger proxy—Iran,” he said.
“But when you look at the systems that are being employed, it’s very clear that in the Middle East, China is trying to play both sides against the middle [the United States] for the ultimate benefit of China.”
China has been buying oil from and supplying military technology to both Iran and Saudi Arabia in an effort to make both countries dependent on it. That makes the U.S. position more difficult: If the United States engages too much with the conflict, it could be drawn into a war. If it disengages too much, China may eventually sweep in, posing as a peacemaker, using its leverage on both sides to make the conflict deescalate, thus politically displacing U.S. influence in the region, Fisher said.
Trump seems to be countering China’s influence on Riyadh. He’s approved massive arms sales to the Saudis, who have fought the Houthis in the Yemeni civil war since 2015. The U.S. military provides intelligence and targeting support to Saudi airstrikes, as well as mid-flight refueling to its aircraft.
Trump has consistently said he’s ready both for a conflict as well as negotiations with Tehran, saying he’s hoping for the latter. He also has said the United States is not seeking a regime change in Iran and has predicted Iran will eventually start negotiating as the sanctions squeeze its economy.
“I know they want to make a deal. ... At some point, it will work out,” he told reporters on Sept. 16.
Aggressive Actions
Iran seems to have escalated aggressive actions in the region since the United States withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal in 2018 and reimposed sanctions on much of the Iranian economy.After the U.S. drone was shot down on June 20, Trump said he called off a retaliatory strike at the last moment to prevent loss of life. Instead, he ordered cyber attacks on Iranian targets, multiple media reported.
Iran also attempted to shoot down a U.S. drone arriving at the scene of the attacks, according to a Fox News report that cited a senior U.S. official.
Nuclear Deal
The Iran nuclear deal, called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, was signed during the Obama administration by the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council—the United States, Russia, China, the United Kingdom, and France—along with Germany.On May 8, Trump announced that the United States would withdraw from the deal and reimpose “the highest level of economic sanction[s],” which had been lifted under the deal.
The two main concerns that the Trump administration had with the deal were that it included so-called sunset clauses, which would have allowed Iran to install thousands of advanced uranium centrifuges by 2026. Another concern was that Iran’s ballistic missile development was not covered under the agreement.
The withdrawal from the agreement came after Iran was given months of opportunity to renegotiate these parts of the deal.
Iran tried to salvage the deal with the remaining signatories, but the European nations largely failed to deliver on promises of devising a trade mechanism that would dodge U.S. sanctions.
On July 1, Iran announced that it had accumulated 300 kilograms of uranium hexafluoride, which would have put it in breach of the deal.