Woman killed in Bahrain as Gulf states intercept more Iranian missiles

One person has been killed in an Iranian attack in Bahrain, as regional countries including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates continue to intercept drones and missiles from Iran.

A 29-year-old woman was killed and eight people injured when a residential building in Bahrain’s capital Manama was hit, the country’s Ministry of Interior said on Tuesday.

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The attack came after Bahrain’s Ministry of Health reported on Monday that two people, including several children, were wounded in an Iranian drone attack on the island of Sitra, south of Manama. Bahrain said on Tuesday that its air defences had intercepted and destroyed 105 missiles and 176 drones launched against it by Iran.

In a statement, the General Command of the Bahrain Defence Force said its air defence systems continued to respond to “heinous” Iranian attacks.

Separately on Tuesday morning, incoming missile sirens sounded in the UAE’s Dubai city. Later, authorities in Abu Dhabi were responding to a fire caused by a drone attack at a facility in the Ruwais industrial complex, the emirate’s media office said. No injuries were reported.

At the same time, the Saudi Ministry of Defence said it had destroyed two drones over the kingdom’s oil-rich eastern region; in Kuwait, the National Guard said it shot down six drones attacking the country’s northern and southern areas; and in Qatar, the armed forces intercepted a missile attack targeting the country.

Iran’s latest attacks on neighbouring Gulf states come as United States President Donald Trump told Republican lawmakers late on Monday that the US-Israeli war on Iran was likely to be a “short excursion”.

But hours later, Trump threatened in a post on social media that the US would dramatically increase attacks if Iran tried to close the Strait of Hormuz.

In addition to firing missiles and drones at Israeli and US bases in the Gulf region, Iran has been attacking energy infrastructure, which, combined with its stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz, has sent oil prices soaring.

Attacks ‘focused on energy infrastructure’

Qatar’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Majed al-Ansari, in his weekly briefing on Tuesday afternoon, said Doha still believes in diplomacy, but any attack would be “dealt with appropriately”.

Al-Ansari added that there has been only one contact between Qatar’s prime minister and Iran’s foreign minister since the start of the war. However, he emphasised that communication channels have not been cut off and Qatar was focused on de-escalation.

He also said Qatar had taken the “necessary measures” to counter the possibility of vital facilities being targeted, adding that attacking energy facilities would have repercussions beyond the region.

Al Jazeera’s Aksel Zaimovic, reporting from Doha, said, in the latest attack on the country on Tuesday, “17 ballistic missiles and seven drones were intercepted and destroyed”, adding that the escalating attacks and inability to move oil and gas shipments across the Strait of Hormuz have forced Qatar to stop some of its production.

“These attacks are particularly focused on energy infrastructure,” Zaimovic said, explaining that Bahrain’s Bapco has had to declare force majeure after waves of Iranian strikes hit its energy installations.

“That means that it cannot meet some of these contractual supply obligations because of these disruptions,” he said.

Talking about Iran’s recent attack on Saudi Arabia’s Shaybah oilfield, Zaimovic said, “That facility, for example, produces one million barrels of oil every single day, and now they have come under relentless attacks in the past couple of days … This is something that’s really raising a lot of questions about the security of energy coming from the Gulf.”

Brent crude, the international standard, spiked to nearly $120 on Monday before falling back, but was still at about $90 a barrel on Tuesday, nearly 24 percent higher than when the war started on February 28.

Iran has stopped tankers from using the Strait of Hormuz, the shipping lane between the Gulf and the Gulf of Oman – the gateway to the Indian Ocean – through which 20 percent of the world’s oil is carried.

In a post on social media on Tuesday, Trump seemed not to acknowledge that, saying, “If Iran does anything that stops the flow of Oil within the Strait of Hormuz, they will be hit by the United States of America TWENTY TIMES HARDER than they have been hit thus far.”

In an apparent response to Trump’s remarks, published in Iranian state media, a spokesperson for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Ali Mohammad Naini, said, “Iran will determine when the war ends.”

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