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My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.



March 20, 2026

Schrodinger's cat???

Khamenei's new purported message only fuels the doubts over who is running Iran

Analysis by Nick Paton Walsh in Beirut

It’s a void that is growing. For the second time since he came to power, Iran’s new supreme leader has delivered a purported message without the salient confirmation: I am alive and well.

Friday’s New Year message contained again no audio or video of the leader, or even an adequately or assuredly new still image of him. Even after the death of his security chief, Ali Larijani, and the statement from Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he did not know who was running Iran.

It is now beyond explanation by security concerns alone: there is clearly a problem with Mojtaba Khamenei’s physical appearance or level of consciousness that he can’t dispel the doubts. It will add to the fears there is a vacuum at the top in Tehran and that hardliners are doing whatever they can to inflict damage and prove their leadership chops in the gap.

His message did, however, contain some elements of new policy. He said attacks in Turkey and Oman were not from Iran but by Israel – a bid to heal, and obfuscate, with a tired old false flag fiction.

He claimed to have traveled the streets of Iran anonymously in a taxi, hearing grievances about the economy (run by his father) and largely agreeing with them. He asked the media to keep tabs on dissent and he praised Iran’s fending off the “coup” – read protests – of January.

But ultimately there was no message he could deliver that could distract from the glaring takeaway question: is he conscious and in control, and if not, who is?

They will make fun of him in prison no matter what he does....

Trump faces legacy-defining dilemmas in Iran

Analysis by Stephen Collinson

The question is no longer whether President Donald Trump has lost control of the narrative of his new war in Iran. It’s whether he’s lost control of the war itself.

Wars, once begun, create their own insidious momentum that can outpace a White House’s political messaging. If they defy a president’s capacity to determine their direction, political quicksand beckons.

After the thunderclap opening of the conflict with the assassination of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Trump’s team might have hoped to be in a better place three weeks in. Instead, the way out remains impossible to identify.

While the United States and Israel have undeniably visited huge destruction on Tehran’s military industrial complex and machinery of repression, Iran has seized the initiative by widening the impact of the war. Its closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a vital oil shipping route, threatens to paralyze the global economy. Americans are already hurting, with average gasoline prices heading towards $4 a gallon.

And things could get worse. Regional oil and gas installations across the Gulf region are under attack. Trump insisted Thursday he hadn’t known that Israel planned to attack Iran’s South Pars gas field. CNN sources contradicted his claim – which was hard to square given tight US-Israeli coordination. The president then said he’d told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “don’t do that.”

But the episode only exacerbated concern among MAGA critics that Israel, and not the US, is running the war.

Warning

Iran warns that not even "tourist sites" worldwide are safe for its enemies

By Nadeen Ebrahim

Iran’s military warned on Friday that “tourist sites, recreational areas, and leisure centers” worldwide are no longer safe for its enemies, referring to officials of the United States and Israel.

In a post published by the state-affiliated news outlet Tasnim, spokesperson of the Iranian army, Brigadier General Abolfazl Shekarchi, said that unlike Iranian officials who live among the people, Israeli and American officials have “hidden underground and in shelters or use civilians as human shields.”

“The time is not far when we will drag you out of your hiding places and shelters in humiliation and disgrace and make you face the consequences of your actions,” Shekarchi was cited as saying by Tasnim. “From now on, based on the information we possess about you, even tourist sites, recreational areas, and leisure centers around the world will not be safe for you,” he said.

Israel and the US have embarked on a decapitation campaign in Iran, assassinating key officials, many of whom are yet to be replaced.

Really??? You think???

War with Iran could weaken the US economy more than expected, key Fed official says

By Lucy Bayly

If the war with Iran continues for many more months, US consumers are likely to “start backing off,” Federal Reserve Governor Chris Waller told CNBC this morning.

Consumer spending drives two-thirds of US economic activity.

“They’re looking at their gas tank, they’re looking at the price, and they’re seeing how much is going into their car versus going into other things,” Waller said. “That starts affecting consumers’ outlooks on the economy.”

“So all these things could end up tipping the [economy], I don’t want to say, into a recession, but suddenly a much more weakening of the economy than we thought,” he said.

President Donald Trump has urged the Fed to slash interest rates to boost the US economy. However, central bank officials have opted so far this year to keep interest rates at their current levels as they parse the effects of tariffs and monitor a weakening labor market.

But Waller, who was appointed to his role by Trump in his first term and was on Trump’s short list to replace Fed Chair Jerome Powell, said he had been ready to cut rates — until he saw the February jobs report on March 6, which showed that the US economy lost 92,000 jobs that month.

“I thought, that’s it, I’m dissenting. I’m supporting a rate cut,” he said of the upcoming monetary policy decision.

However, since that time, the Strait of Hormuz has closed, he said. “This is looking like it’s going to be a much more protracted conflict. And oil prices are going to stay high for a longer time. So that suggested inflation was more of a concern than I was putting it.”

They are not stupid..........

Trump berates allies, Khamenei issues purported statement, and more news you should know

From CNN staff

President Donald Trump has called America’s allies “cowards” for not doing more to open up the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran effectively closed after the United States and Israel launched the war, sending global energy prices soaring.

Meanwhile, as Iranians held muted celebrations for Persian new year, the country’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei appeared to issue his second major statement without audio or video since his appointment two weeks ago. Khamenei has still not appeared in public since the war began.

Here’s what you need to know:
  • Trump lashes out: The US president has once again berated allies, calling them “COWARDS” over their reluctance to get involved in assisting with the Iran war. “They complain about the high oil prices they are forced to pay, but don’t want to help open the Strait of Hormuz, a simple military maneuver,” he wrote on Truth Social.
  • Khamenei’s purported statement: Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has purportedly given his second statement since he was appointed nearly two weeks ago. In the message — read out in his name on state television, without accompanying video or audio — Khamenei called for unity in Iran and claimed he had ridden the streets of Tehran “anonymously” in a taxi.
  • Iran’s replacements: Iran has not named replacements for most of the senior officials killed by Israeli strikes since the war began on February 28. A CNN survey of official announcements showed that no successors have been named for more than a dozen senior officials whose deaths have been confirmed by Tehran. Israel has repeatedly vowed to keep targeting senior officials in the Iranian regime.
  • Lebanon evacuations: Meanwhile, more than 1,000 people — including at least 110 children — have been killed in Lebanon since Israel began its military operations in response to Iran-backed Hezbollah’s rocket attacks on March 2. Israel issued widespread evacuation orders in southern Lebanon today. The United Nations warned a fifth of the country’s population has been uprooted from their homes in the past two weeks.
  • Oil price rises: The price of oil remains well above $100 a barrel, as the nearly three-week-old war shows little signs of stopping. Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, has bobbed up and down today after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would heed Trump’s call to halt its strikes on key Iranian energy sites.

More US Marines are deploying

Thousands more US Marines are deploying to the Middle East, officials say

By Haley Britzky and Zachary Cohen

Thousands more US Marines and sailors are heading towards the Middle East as the war with Iran is about to enter its fourth week. The 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit and Boxer Amphibious Ready Group have had their deployment rerouted and accelerated and are now expected to go to the Middle East, two US officials told CNN.

One of the officials said it was unclear if the entire ARG-MEU (Amphibious Ready Group and Marine Expeditionary Unit) would be deploying or if only some elements would be going to the Middle East. The group was originally expected to deploy to the Indo-Pacific region, the official said. It is also unclear when the original deployment date was, when the Marines would arrive in the region, or what specifically they would be doing when they arrived.

The deployment, first reported by Newsmax, comes as a second Marine expeditionary unit — the 31st MEU, and the Tripoli Amphibious Ready Group — are also deploying to the region. CNN previously reported that the USS Tripoli was seen approaching Singapore earlier this week.

It’s unclear if both MEUs will operate in the Middle East simultaneously and for how long, or if the 11th MEU will replace the 31st upon its arrival.

The MEUs are rapid-response forces consisting of roughly 2,200 Marines and sailors. With the Amphibious Ready Group, the total number of personnel is roughly 4,500. While they can provide on-the-ground capabilities, the ARG-MEUs also come with aviation, logistics, and other support elements that provide more options to commanders and could “relieve pressure” on current operations in the Middle East, the first US official said.

MEUs are a Swiss Army knife of military capabilities: they have supported large-scale evacuation operations and other on-the-ground missions, and they come with substantial aviation and logistics components. The 11th MEU is capable of “conducting amphibious operations, selected maritime special operations at night or under adverse weather conditions, crisis response and limited contingency operations,” the unit’s website says.

Hormuz has to reopen!

‘Hormuz has to reopen’: Why the oil industry can’t help Trump tame rising gasoline prices

Oil industry executives say much of the administration’s messaging on supply disruptions from the Iran war has discouraged drilling.

By Zack Colman, James Bikales and Mike Soraghan

President Donald Trump promised to “drill, baby, drill,” but as the war in Iran stretches into its fourth week, he’s having a difficult time persuading U.S. oil and gas producers to expand production.

The administration has said it’s been reaching out to oil companies to persuade them to speed their drills to help curb the steady rise in gasoline prices caused by the war with Iran, which has caused the largest disruption in global oil supplies in history.

But so far that potential solution — like others before it — has failed to move the needle, as the market chaos brought by the war has left many in the industry unwilling to spend money on potentially unprofitable new wells. Trump himself has said that “when this is over, oil prices are going to go down very, very rapidly” — not exactly a message that will convince companies to start drilling more, industry executives said.

Much of the administration’s messaging has acted as a disincentive for drilling, said an oil and gas executive granted anonymity because they were not authorized to speak with the media. Facing blowback from Trump’s base over getting involved in another foreign war and the broader population for rising costs the intervention has caused, top Trump officials have contended the war will wrap in weeks and prices will quickly plummet.

“[Treasury Secretary Scott] Bessent says oil prices will fall in a few months. It takes several months to stand up a rig and drill from scratch. Why would I expand my drilling campaign now if prices will fall?” that executive said.

Gasoline prices reached a national average of $3.91 a gallon on Friday, drawn up by crude prices that have risen $30 in the three weeks since the war started, potentially threatening Republicans’ chances at the polls in this year’s midterm elections. Prices are expected to climb further as Iran continues attacks on oil tankers traversing the Strait of Hormuz and widens its aggression against oil and gas fields in the Middle East in retaliation against the U.S. and Israeli military strikes that began nearly a month ago.

The U.S. military has started sending more warplanes and helicopters to clear the strait, according to a Pentagon briefing cited Friday by The Wall Street Journal.

“I think they’re looking for solutions,” said one industry executive, granted anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to talk to the media. “I just don’t know that they’ve found any. It’s the apocalypse for the oil and gas industry. The solution is Hormuz has to reopen.”

The administration has started asking companies to increase their oil production to reverse the climb in prices at the pump. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said on CNBC last week that he expected oil companies to announce “that they’ve increased production, you know, here in the United States in response to the price signals and in response to the need that we have right now.”

The Trump administration’s efforts to temper oil prices come as Vice President JD Vance and Energy Secretary Chris Wright met with oil executives at the American Petroleum Institute board meeting Thursday in Washington. Vance promised the executives that the administration would not ban oil exports in a bid to lower prices, according to a senior official who attended the event.

“I don’t want to get ahead of the president on that, but we recognize this is an issue,” Vance said of gasoline prices during an event in Michigan on Wednesday.

White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said in a statement that it should not shock oil and gas companies that Trump wants them to produce more.

“President Trump has called on oil companies to ‘Drill, Baby, Drill’ since day one — that hasn’t changed and it never will,” she said in a statement. “Since Operation Epic Fury began, President Trump has said these short-term disruptions will end once the clearly outlined objectives of the operation are achieved.”

The Trump administration is quietly pressuring oil and gas majors to uncap wells that produce relatively low volumes, but several companies are skeptical prices will remain high enough for long enough to justify spending money on those higher-cost sites, said Dan Eberhart, CEO of oil services company Canary LLC.

U.S. oil output is already near record highs, coming in at 13.65 million barrels a day in December, the last full month for which data is available. That level of production occurred even amid lower prices, as the West Texas Intermediate crude spot price averaged $65 per barrel in 2025.

Major producers have indicated they are more focused on getting the Strait of Hormuz back open than increasing production, even if the U.S. does have leverage as the world’s top producer.

“The United States is uniquely positioned to be responsive to changing market dynamics, but any production response would not happen overnight,” Dustin Meyer, senior vice president of policy, economics and regulatory affairs at the American Petroleum Institute, said in a statement. “Restoring normal traffic to the Strait of Hormuz remains essential for stabilizing global markets.”

The administration would need to offer policy assurances — such as limiting its promised withdrawals from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve — to convince companies the bottom won’t fall out on prices, Eberhart said. Companies that do put more rigs in the field would have to worry about a sharp drop in oil prices making them unprofitable.

“They really need to figure out how to get the Strait open. That’s what’s really going to solve this,” Eberhart said. “There’s not enough excess supply or policy prescriptions to completely solve this problem without opening the Strait.”

Meanwhile, some in the industry are frustrated over Trump assumptions that companies will benefit from higher prices.

While U.S. drillers struggled to sink new wells when prices fetched $60 per barrel, spiking prices will “crush the economy” and curb demand, one oil and gas refining executive said. The price signal is also not strong, stable or sustained enough to incentivize expanding production, the refining executive and the oil and gas industry official said.

Prices will continue rising if and when the Strait reopens. That’s because Middle East drillers have mothballed production — storage tanks are filling up with travel through the Strait throttled — and the time to restart operations increases with the duration of shutdowns. American tankers will also be reluctant to travel through the Strait for a long while given the geopolitical and security instability, the refining executive said.

Other oil company executives said they hadn’t gotten a call from the White House yet but are confident one is coming.

“President Trump will pull every lever he can to bring down the price of energy,” said Ed Longanecker, president of the Texas Independent Producers and Royalty Owners Association, or TIPRO.

But just because Trump pulls that lever, Longanecker says, there isn’t much the domestic oil industry will be able to do.

“We’re already at record production,” he said. “I think you could see some incremental growth in production.”

The type of growth needed to make a dent in output lost in the Middle East would have to come from massive productivity gains or from completing a backlog of unfinished wells. But that backlog — wells that have been drilled but not fracked — is currently at a low ebb, Longanecker said. Companies have been returning to these wells amid low oil prices to add production for less cost.

The producers that are publicly traded companies finalized months ago their plans on how much they intend to spend on drilling new wells. Any change would be closely scrutinized by investors, who have made it clear in recent years that they want returns on investment, not just high production. Producers don’t want to spend big on new wells only to have prices suddenly drop.

U.S. rigs have nudged slightly higher since the Iran war began, hitting 553 on March 13 compared with 550 on Feb. 27, according to oil services firm Baker Hughes. The U.S. rig count is down 39 compared with the previous year.

It takes three to nine months, sometimes longer, from when a rig arrives at a well site until the first oil is produced, Longanecker noted.

“Shale development isn’t a light switch,” Longanecker said. “The industry tends to be cautious during extreme periods of market volatility, and many operators are reluctant to chase a temporary surge only to see prices retract.”

John Auers, managing director at consulting firm RBN Energy, said he would expect oil companies, especially independent ones, to ramp up production in response to higher prices. But barring a severe escalation in the war, that ramp up is unlikely to take place until after shipping has resumed in the Strait of Hormuz.

“By the time you’ve increased that production, you’ve already solved the problem,” Auers said.

$1.99 Gas time 3 = A New President.....

Cracks emerge in GOP over Iran war cost as administration floats more than $200B request to Congress

By Sarah Ferris, Manu Raju, Annie Grayer, Lauren Fox, Zachary Cohen

Cracks are emerging among congressional Republicans over the Iran war with key lawmakers skeptical about spending hundreds of billions of dollars to prolong the conflict and several refusing to support any money without a clear White House strategy.

In the coming weeks, President Donald Trump could ask Congress to spend as much as $200 billion to fund the ongoing war. But it will be enormously difficult to pass. GOP leaders do not believe they have the votes to fund the war even in their own party without far more detailed plans from the White House, according to multiple people involved in those preliminary discussions.

Trump previewed the funding request on Thursday, saying he wants to ensure the military has “vast amounts of ammunition” but without offering specifics on what the Pentagon needed the funding for.

“We want to be in the best shape, the best shape we’ve ever been in,” Trump said from the Oval Office Thursday. “It’s a small price to pay to make sure that we stay tippy top.”

The Pentagon has asked the White House to approve a request to Congress for over $200 billion in additional military funding to fund the ongoing war, according to two sources familiar with the matter. It will likely be days, if not weeks, before that request comes to Congress. Yet already, many lawmakers – even some Republicans – appear skeptical of approving such a large sum, particularly since the Trump administration has yet to seek Capitol Hill’s approval for the war with Iran, which is about to enter its fourth week. The White House and Pentagon have yet to articulate a clear timeline for ending military operations, which is a major concern inside the Capitol, sources said.

The supplemental funding request would, in part, be used to help offset munitions expenditures and operations costs from the conflict — which totaled roughly $11 billion during just the first week of military strikes alone, the sources said. Some of the requested funding could also go toward other areas not directly associated with the Iran war, both sources added – an accounting maneuver the Pentagon has used before to fund defense projects.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Thursday morning the figure could change because “it takes money to kill bad guys.” But he and other administration officials will need to make a hard sell to their own party about quickly approving that request.

Rep. Lauren Boebert, a staunch Trump ally, told CNN she would not support more money for Iran under any circumstance.

“I am a no. I have already told leadership. I am a no on any war supplemental. I am so tired of spending money over there,” Boebert told CNN. “I have folks in Colorado who can’t afford to live. We need America first policies right now.”

So far, Boebert is an outlier in her party. But plenty more Republicans told CNN they are increasingly anxious about whether the US is being dragged into an “endless war” that Trump himself ran against. Several said they would only consider the Iran funding request if the White House better explains its plans — including the possibility of thousands of US troops being sent to the Middle East.

“What are we doing? We’re talking about boots on the ground. We’re talking about that kind of extended activity. Now we’re in a whole ‘nother zip code,” Texas Rep. Chip Roy, a fiscal hawk who has long scrutinized Pentagon spending, told CNN. “They got a whole lot more briefing and a whole lot more explaining to do on how we’re going to pay for it and what’s the mission here?”

Fellow fiscal hawk, GOP Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, added: “It begs the question, how long do they plan to be there? What are the goals? Is this the first $200 billion? Does this turn into a trillion?”

It’s not just the GOP’s hard-right wing with questions. Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski — a centrist and top GOP spending leader in the Senate — said she won’t fund more money for the war until the White House outlines its plan to Congress.

“The people in Alaska are asking me how long is this going on? Are there going to be boots on the ground, how much is this going to cost?” Murkowski said Thursday. “The answer to most of this is I don’t know.”

GOP anxiety over boots on the ground

The question of ground troops, in particular, is rattling Republicans, with even Trump’s staunchest allies in Congress advising a quick exit. GOP Rep. Derrick Van Orden, a former Navy SEAL, told CNN he has specifically advised the administration against any boots on the ground: “I don’t want to see it.”

“I think we need to find an exit strategy as fast as possible,” added Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee. “I don’t want to put Americans on the ground out there in any shape, form or fashion.”

Congressional Republicans have so far avoided publicly entwining themselves in the Iran war. They’ve been briefed in secret. They’ve taken no formal votes authorizing the action. And they’ve chugged away on their own agenda.

As the Pentagon’s price tag increases, though, Congress will soon be in charge of what’s next. Behind the scenes, some Republicans have joined Democrats in pressing administration officials about the war’s costs, multiple sources told CNN. Only two cost assessments – both in the billions –have been shared with lawmakers to date, and both are incomplete.

Some Republicans are already laying out conditions for any more Pentagon money. Roy, Burchett and Rep. Andy Ogles of Tennessee told CNN they want the money offset.

House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, meanwhile, told CNN he wants to pay for it by targeting the “boatload of waste, fraud and abuse through the federal government.”

Rep. Eric Burlison said the Pentagon should “pass an audit” before he could consider backing $200 billion in additional funds: “We’ve known that they haven’t passed an audit in many, many years, so I want to it’ll give me comfort to if they pass an audit, and then I’ll know that at least they’re keeping track of the dollars.”

Other fiscal hawks including Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Rick Scott of Florida said they want more details about the war funding request before weighing in on how they would vote.

“I don’t want to get too far over my skis on this, I’d like to see what they actually request,” Hawley said.

Meanwhile, anxiety is creeping up in the GOP about the possibility of a long-term conflict, with a critical election ahead and an already-skyrocketing national debt.

Privately, many lawmakers and operatives acknowledge the political reality in Washington: This GOP is simply no longer the hawkish party of decades past. In less than a decade, Republicans went from a party led by war hero Sen. John McCain to one led by Trump and MAGA with his “no more forever wars” mantra.

GOP leaders have maintained that it’s a short-term war, with Speaker Mike Johnson insisting on Thursday that the US mission will end “very soon,” while acknowledging that the closure of the Strait of Hormuz “is dragging it out a little bit.”

“It’s a limited operation, the mission is all but complete,” Johnson said.

Johnson, along with his Senate counterpart, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, were both noncommittal about whether Congress would fulfill the White House’s Iran funding request, the price tag of which the Washington Post first reported.

Thune said “it remains to be seen” if it could pass in the Senate where it would likely need several Democratic votes to overcome a filibuster.

“I think they’re going to have to show us how they want to use it,” Thune said. “For sure.”

But Republicans are concerned that a prolonged war, where gas prices continue to increase will hurt their chances in the midterms.

“We know that we are temporarily going to have higher gas and petroleum prices, but if those prices stayed high, if we continue to have problems with the Strait of Hormuz, if we continue to be involved in this, then it’s more of an issue,” GOP Rep. Jeff Van Drew said.

Across Washington, most Democrats remain adamantly opposed to Trump’s war and even centrist, pro-Israel Democrats have told CNN they remain skeptical of funding the war under current conditions. That further complicates Trump’s push to pay for the operation — which would typically need at least some support from Senate Democrats to get any bill to his desk.

GOP leaders are already drawing up an alternative plan: Approving the war funds using the same budgetary tool they used to pass Trump’s tax cuts last year.

But that path would expose a massive divide in the GOP, with fiscal hawks eager to use the special powers to bypass a filibuster to tackle major overhauls of government programs — like the contentious Medicaid cuts. Republicans close to GOP leadership, however, have said that would be an enormous lift.

As Republicans await the formal funding request from the White House, many are hoping to see a major deescalation in the coming weeks.

GOP Rep. Mike Flood, who stood at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware earlier this month at the dignified transfer of six fallen soldiers who were killed in Kuwait, including a sergeant from his state, said he doesn’t “want families to go through that” and hopes the war is nearly over.

“Everybody wants this over,” Flood said.

March 19, 2026

Great!

Kent says former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was moderating Iran's nuclear program

By Aleena Fayaz and Samantha Waldenberg

Former Trump administration counterterrorism chief Joe Kent said the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei had been moderating the country’s nuclear program ahead of his death.

“I’m no fan of the former supreme leader, you know, Ali Khamenei, however, he was moderating their nuclear program. He was preventing them from getting a nuclear weapon,” Kent told former Fox News host and influential conservative podcaster Tucker Carlson in his first interview since his resignation.

“If you take him out, if you kill him aggressively, people are going to rally around that regime,” Kent added.

Asked by Carlson if Iran was on the verge of getting a nuclear weapon, Kent replied,“No, they weren’t,” before adding that Iran’s strategy was “to not completely abandon the nuclear program.”

Khamenei, who ruled Iran with an iron fist as its supreme leader for nearly four decades, was killed last month in joint US and Israeli strikes.

This isn't getting out of control.....

Saudi Arabia has “reserved the right to take military actions” against Iran, FM says

By Dalia Abdelwahab and Lex Harvey

Saudi Arabia has “reserved the right to take military actions” against Iran if deemed necessary, Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan told reporters Thursday after a meeting with Arab and Islamic foreign ministers about Iranian attacks in the region.

“Iran’s message today was quite clear… The targeting of Riyadh, while a number of diplomats are meeting, I cannot see as coincidental,” the Foreign Minister said, hours after Saudi air defenses intercepted ballistic missiles over the capital.

“It doesn’t believe in talking to its neighbors. It tries to pressure its neighbors. And what I can say, categorically, that’s not going to work.”

Saudi Arabia “is not going to succumb to pressure,” bin Farhan added, saying the pressure will “backfire.”

“We have reserved the right to take military actions, if deemed necessary, and if the time comes, the leadership of the Kingdom will take the necessary decision. We will not shy away from protecting our country and our economic resources.”

Iran turned its attention to attacks on energy facilities in the region Wednesday after accusing the US and Israel of targeting oil and gas facilities – including the South Pars natural gas field, the world’s largest.

Two refineries in Riyadh “were attacked,” bin Farhan said. An Iranian missile strike also caused “extensive damage” at Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City, a key natural gas processing facility.

Global oil prices surged, hitting $110 per barrel, as the sthrikes on energy infrastructure across the Middle East jolted markets.