Yemen's Houthi launch missile, drone attack on Aramco's oil facilities

Attack on Aramco's facilities came as Saudi-led military coalition bombed Yemen's Houthi-controlled capital Sanaa

By AFP
March 08, 2021
Smoke billows following a reported airstrike by the Saudi-led coalition in the Yemeni capital Sanaa, on March 7, 2021. The Saudi-led military coalition mounted air strikes on Yemen's Houthi-controlled capital after it intercepted 10 drones launched by the Iran-backed rebels, state media reported. "The military operation targets Houthi military capabilities in Sanaa and a number of other provinces", the coalition was quoted as saying by the official Saudi Press Agency. Photo: AFP

Advertisement


RIYADH: Analysts fear an escalation in the conflict in Yemen after Houthi rebels on Sunday launched a missile and drone attack targeting the heart Saudi Arabia's Aramco facilities creating fears of new escalation in the six-year conflict.

The attack on energy giant Aramco's facilities came as the Saudi-led military coalition bombed Yemen's Houthi-controlled capital Sanaa after intercepting a separate flurry of cross-border Huthi drones and missiles.

The rising hostilities underscore a dangerous intensification of Yemen's conflict between the coalition-backed Yemeni government and the Iran-backed Houthi, despite a renewed US push to end the war.

The Saudi defence ministry said it had intercepted a drone targeting a petroleum storage yard at Ras Tanura — one of the world's biggest oil ports — and a ballistic missile aimed at Aramco facilities in Dhahran city in eastern Saudi Arabia.

Shrapnel from the missile fell close to an Aramco residential compound in the city, which is home to thousands of company employees and their families, the energy ministry said.

The attacks did not result in any casualties or damage, it added, without specifying who was behind them.

The Houthi rebels claimed on Twitter they had fired drones and missiles at Ras Tanura and military targets in the area of Dammam, which is close to Dhahran.

The kingdom's oil-rich eastern region is home to most of Aramco's production and export facilities.

In 2019, aerial assaults on two Aramco facilities in the eastern region temporarily knocked out half of the kingdom's crude production, underscoring the vulnerability of Saudi Arabia's oil infrastructure.

The defence ministry said Sunday's attacks targeted "the backbone of the world economy, oil supplies and global energy security".

'Red line'

Earlier Sunday, the coalition said it pummelled Yemen's Houthi-controlled capital Sanaa with air strikes, with AFP correspondents on the ground reporting huge explosions that sent plumes of smoke rising in the sky.

"The military operation targets Houthi military capabilities in Sanaa and a number of other provinces," the coalition said in a statement on Saudi state media.

That came after the coalition said it had intercepted a total of 12 drones and two ballistic missiles launched by the rebels, in a sharp uptick in cross-border attacks on the kingdom.

The coalition said the drones were aimed at "civilian" targets in Saudi Arabia, SPA reported, without specifying the locations.

The two intercepted missiles targeted the southern city of Jizan, the coalition added, without stating whether there were any casualties or damage.

The rebels on Twitter claimed they attacked military targets in the southern cities of Jizan and Asir.

The Houthi have stepped up attacks on Saudi Arabia in recent weeks as they escalate an offensive closer to home, to seize the Yemeni government's last northern stronghold of Marib.

In a statement after its strikes, the coalition said that targeting civilians in the kingdom was a "red line", adding that the Houthis' actions "will not lead to an imposition of a political settlement".

Escalation in fighting

The escalation comes as Washington resumes efforts for a resolution to the grinding conflict, which has claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced millions, according to international organisations.

The United States last month delisted the Houthi as terrorists and stepped up efforts to resolve the six-year war.

The terror designation, imposed in the final days of the Trump administration, had been widely criticised by aid groups who warned it would hamper efforts to alleviate a humanitarian crisis in Yemen.

The coalition said the Houthi had interpreted their removal from the list "in a hostile way", adding that coalition "victories" in Marib had prompted the rebels to step up their attacks inside the kingdom.

On Saturday, Yemeni government sources said fierce fighting between pro-government forces and the rebels in oil-rich Marib had killed at least 90 fighters on both sides over 24 hours.

Years of bombing have failed to shake the rebels' hold on Sanaa, and they have steadily expanded their reach in the country's north.

US President Joe Biden has halted support to Saudi offensive operations in Yemen's war, which he called a "catastrophe" that "has to end".

But he has also reiterated US support for Saudi Arabia in defending its territory.

Advertisement