These are editorial notes from Veterans Today
[ Editor’s Note: This looks like a devastating attack, showing what a juicy target a big facility like this is. Remember that Yemen has no stealth planes, just their drones built under crushing pressure from the Saudi coalition war on them.
This
is also a huge defeat for the endless billions spent by Saudi Arabia
on Western arms, where we see the tiny Yemen economy while under huge
pressure is able to inflict this kind of punishment. It looks like
this facility, a major one, is destroyed.
So
what the Yemenis learned here was don’t send two drones to disrupt
operations for a week or two, but send ten to destroy the facility by
making sure you can set the whole place on fire first and let the
petroleum do the rest of the work.
And
last, which you notice that controlled media has never waded into, if
Yemen can inflict this much punishment, will this make the Saudis
rethink what Iran could do if the US coalition is crazy enough to get
a shooting war going in the Gulf?
This
is all that it would take to send the world economy into a tailspin,
which would trigger a series of bank collapses like we have seen
before. Who would be blamed for this? And how desperate would those
be who began this stupid Yemen war?
What
penalty should they have to pay for such a debacle, and what lengths
would they go to pin the blame on someone else, as we have also seen
before? … Jim
W. Dean ]
Attacks On Major Saudi Oil
Installations Show Urgent
Need For Peace With Yemen
14
September, 2019
Ten
drones controlled by Yemeni Houthi forces hit two major Saudi oil
installations last night and caused several large fires.
The
Abqaiq (also Babqaiq) oil processing facility is 60
km (37 miles) southwest of Aramco’s Dhahran headquarters.
The oil processing plant handles crude from the world’s largest conventional oilfield, the supergiant Ghawar, and for export to terminals Ras Tanura - the world’s biggest offshore oil loading facility - and Juaymah. It also pumps westwards across the kingdom to Red Sea export terminals.
The
oil and gas conditioning plant in Abqaiq is the largest of the world.
It sits at the center of Saudi Arabia's oil and gas infrastructure.
Abqaiq
processes 6.8 million barrels of crude oil each day. More than two
thirds of all Saudi oil and gas production runs through it. It is not
clear yet how much of the widespread facility was destroyed.
The
second target was a processing plant near Khurais 190 km (118 miles)
further southwest. It lies within the countries second largest oil
field. Both installations are more than 1,000 km (600 miles) from
Yemen.
Saudi
Arabia does not have air defenses that protect its oil facilities
from attacks from the south.
Aᴍɪʀ @AmirIGM - 11:34 UTC · Sep 14, 2019
This graphic shows Saudi Air Defences around the Abqaiq oil facilities that were struck early Saturday. The drones were well within PAC-2 range, but outside Hawk range. It's possible that the low-flying or the drones' small size and composite materials helped it avoid detection.
PAC-2
are older U.S. made air defense systems which can not 'see' small
drones or cruise missiles.
There
is smoke coming from four additional oil facilities but it may be
from emergency oil flaring that is now necessary because the
processing facilities further downstream are blocked or destroyed.
Saudi
Arabia said that the fires are under control. Video shot this
morning shows that
they continue.
In
one video taken last night on the ground near the facility one can
hear the
high pitched noise of a drone motor and then an explosion. In other
videos automatic
gunfire can
be heard.
These were probably attempts by guardsmen to take down drones.
But
drones may not have been the sole cause of the incident. Last night a
Kuwaiti fishermen recorded the
noise of a cruise missile or some jet driven manned or unmanned
aircraft coming from Iraq. Debris
found on
the ground in Saudi Arabia seems to be from an Soviet era KH-55
cruise missile or from a Soumar, an Iranian
copy of that design.
The Houthi have shown cruise missiles, likely from Iran, with a
similar design (see below). After an attack on Saudi oil
installations in August there were accusations that at least some of
the attacks came from Iraq.
Iran was accused of having been involved in that attack. While this sounds unlikely it is not inconceivable.
Iran was accused of having been involved in that attack. While this sounds unlikely it is not inconceivable.
That
attack in August was the checkmate move against the Saudi war on
Yemen. As we wrote
at that time:
Saudi Arabia finally lost the war on Yemen. It has no defenses against the new weapons the Houthis in Yemen acquired. These weapons threaten the Saudis' economic lifelines.
Saudi
Arabia has nothing that could stop mass attacks by these drones. It
would require hundreds of Russian made Pantsyr-S1 and BUK air defense
systems to protect Saudi oil installations. There would still be no
guarantee that they could not be overwhelmed.
This operation is one of the largest operations carried out by our forces in the depth of Saudi Arabia and came after a accurate intelligence operation and advance monitoring and cooperation of honorable and free men within the Kingdom.
The
claim of cooperation by people in Saudi Arabia will make the Saudi
rulers even more paranoid than they usually are. It may well be that
the drones were launched from inside Saudi Arabia and that their
launch point was far nearer to the target than is publicly assumed.
The
spokesman continued:
We promise the Saudi regime that our future operations will expand further and be more painful than ever as long as it continues its aggression and siege.
We affirm that our goals bank is expanding day by day and that there is no solution for the Saudi regime except to stop the aggression and siege on our country.
The
war on Yemen, launched by the Saudi clown prince Mohammad bin Salman
in 2015, cost Saudi Arabia several billion dollar per month. The
Saudi budget deficit again increased this year and is expected
to reach 7%
of its GDP. The country needs fresh money or much higher oil
prices.
Saudi
Arabia recently renewed plans to sell a share of its state owned oil
conglomerate Aramco. Earlier this month the long time Saudi Energy
Minister Kalid al-Falih was first demoted
and then removed from
his position and replaced by Abdulaziz bin Salman, a half-brother of
the clown prince:
"The long tradition of the oil minister as a technocrat non-royal has been broken, and the best theory is that departing minister Khalid Al Falih was too resistant to the pace of change pursued by Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman," wrote Paul Sankey, energy analyst with Mizuho.
The
removal of Kalid al-Falih ended the nationalist resistance against
the selloff of Aramco and the countries wealth.
But
who will buy a share of the company when its major installations are
not secure but under severe attacks?
The
Saudi clown prince will have to make peace with Yemen before he can
sell Aramco shares for a decent price. He will have to cough up many
billions in reparation payments to Yemen and its people before the
Houthi will be willing to make peace.
First
Saudi attempts
to sue for peace were
made two weeks ago. It seems that they asked the Trump
administration to
work out an agreement with the Houthi:
The Trump administration is preparing to initiate negotiations with Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in an effort to bring the four-year civil war in Yemen to an end, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
The effort is reportedly aimed at convincing Saudi Arabia to take part in secret talks with the rebels in Oman to help broker a cease-fire in the conflict, which has emerged as a front line in the regional proxy war between Riyadh and Tehran.
Nothing
has been heard of the initiative since. The Saudis need to move fast
to end the war. Unless that happens soon we can expect further
escalations and more attacks like the ones earlier today.
MAJOR CRISIS!! MOSCOW THREATENS TO SHOOT DOWN ISRAELI JETS! SAUDI OIL ATTACKED!
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