Iran threatens regional oil facilities after US-Israeli strikes on energy sites

Iran's military command has threatened to attack oil facilities across the region in retaliation for US-Israeli strikes on its energy infrastructure, warning that escalation could push global oil prices above $200 per barrel. The warning comes after Israeli warplanes targeted oil storage depots and refining facilities in Tehran on Saturday.
Iran's military leadership issued a stark warning Sunday, threatening to strike oil installations throughout the region in response to US-Israeli attacks on the Islamic Republic's energy infrastructure. The Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, the unified combatant command of the Iranian Armed Forces, delivered the ultimatum through the Iranian Students News Agency, raising the stakes in the rapidly escalating conflict.
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Tehran warns of economic consequences
The command characterized recent American and Israeli operations as "new brutal attacks" targeting "parts of Iran's fuel and energy infrastructure as well as service facilities serving Iranian civilians." In a direct appeal to regional governments, Iranian military leaders urged Islamic countries to pressure Washington and Israel to cease strikes on oil facilities, warning that "failure to do so could lead to similar retaliatory measures across the region." The statement explicitly suggested that widening the conflict could have catastrophic economic implications, with oil prices potentially exceeding $200 per barrel.
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Israeli strikes mark escalation
Saturday's Israeli airstrikes on oil storage depots and refining facilities in Tehran represented a significant expansion of targeting priorities, marking the first time Tel Aviv had struck such infrastructure since launching the broader offensive alongside the United States last week. The attack on Iran's energy sector follows a pattern of escalating military action that began Feb. 28 with joint US-Israeli strikes that have reportedly killed more than 1,200 people, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and wounded over 10,000 others according to Iranian authorities.
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Regional conflict expands
Tehran has already retaliated with missile and drone attacks targeting Israel, Iraq, Jordan, and Gulf countries hosting American military assets. The threatened expansion to regional oil facilities would represent a dramatic escalation, potentially disrupting global energy supplies and drawing additional nations into the conflict. Gulf Arab states, home to both US military bases and critical oil infrastructure, face particularly acute vulnerability as Iran signals willingness to target economic assets across the region in response to continued strikes on its own territory.
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Global energy markets on edge
The threat to regional oil facilities comes as global markets already grapple with supply disruptions and price volatility stemming from the conflict. With the Strait of Hormuz—a critical chokepoint through which approximately 20 million barrels of oil pass daily—already closed by Iranian forces, further attacks on production and export facilities could trigger unprecedented energy market turmoil. The Iranian military's explicit linkage of its retaliatory threats to potential $200-plus oil prices underscores Tehran's calculation that economic pressure may prove as potent as military action in shaping the conflict's trajectory.
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