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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Major Blaze At Iran Abadan Oil Refinery Raises Suspicions Of Saudi Revenge Attack
2019-10-21
48 hour rule?
[ZH, so salt to taste] A section of Iran's sprawling Abadan oil refinery in the southwest of the country went up in flames Saturday, and state media sources reported the emergency was under control as of Sunday morning.
Spokesman Chip Diller said "It's fine. Really"
State media is describing it as "a fire in a canal carrying waste from Iran's Abadan oil refinery," with Iranian official broadcaster IRIB saying, "The refinery's fire department contained the fire and prevented it from spreading to other units."

However, given the extent of the blaze captured in social media circulating videos, and especially given it comes after a tense summer of attacks on tanker and refineries ‐ notably the Sept. 14 Saudi Aramco drone and missile attack ‐ the newest Iran facility fire raises serious question.

Could the clearly massive Abadan blaze, which Iranian state sources appear ready to downplay, be the result of a Saudi revenge attack?
Insh'allah Maintenance and lack of parts, more likely
Though unverified and unconfirmed, Iranian opposition sources are pointing to a potential cyber attack as a possible cause for the fire.

Again, local authorities say it's the result of an accident, and though yes the occasional oil refinery blaze does happen, it's the fact that it comes after months of unprecedented Saudi-Iran (and allies) tit-for-tat targeting of tankers and energy resources that should raise some eyebrows.

The blaze is currently subject of intense speculation online after early reports cited an initial "explosion" at the facility.

Interestingly, the Abadan refinery has been subject of major foreign investment, with a Chinese firm Sinopec signing a $1.2 billion deal with Iran's oil ministry for a major modernization project at the facility in 2016.

And earlier this year it was announced that "China's Sinopec International Petroleum Exploration and Production Corporation has invested €2 billion in development projects in the refinery since 2017," as initially cited by IRNA.

However, with new US sanctions now targeting major Chinese shipping firms and entities caught importing Iranian oil, Beijing has begun pulling out of major oil and gas infrastructure projects inside Iran.

The fire is currently said to be under control, per state sources, but a definitive cause is as yet still unclear.
Posted by:Frank G

#9  #2 Dron, training the indigenous forces isn't always what it's cracked up to be.
Posted by: Cesare   2019-10-21 22:12  

#8  Iran used to import nearly half the gasoline consumed because they couldn't maintain the refineries after the islamic takeover.

Looks like the Chinese refinery investment and increased domestic production both get wiped out. Bad luck for bad people.
Posted by: Vespasian Angomoting1359   2019-10-21 20:36  

#7  As long as it doesn't involve us, let 'em fight. Stay out of it. We have absolutely nothing to gain.
Posted by: Herb McCoy   2019-10-21 16:04  

#6  On second eval it's staged stunt. Nicely caught in frame kudos to the creators.
Posted by: jpal   2019-10-21 15:40  

#5  Did that round really exit backwards? He was holding it backwards?
And are those really lens caps on those binoculars, or maybe some heavy filter?
Posted by: Whiskey Mike   2019-10-21 15:18  

#4  Can't stop watching that and I'm not even on qat ATM.
Posted by: jpal   2019-10-21 15:13  

#3  "Penalty... Offense... Illegal Forward Motion... 5 yards..."
Posted by: Raj   2019-10-21 14:53  

#2  Those qat addled Houthis again !

Posted by: Dron66046   2019-10-21 14:39  

#1  
Posted by: DarthVader   2019-10-21 14:33  

00:00