# [WARNING] UAE, Saudi Secret Strikes Hit Iranian Refinery, Escalating Gulf Risk

*Tuesday, May 12, 2026 at 8:09 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-12T20:09:36.189Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, SaudiArabia, UAE, Oil, MiddleEast, EnergyInfrastructure, Refineries, StraitOfHormuz
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6583.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

---

**Summary**: Between 19:24 and 19:53 UTC, new media reports from the Wall Street Journal and Reuters revealed that the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia carried out undisclosed airstrikes inside Iran during the recent war, including a refinery strike on Lavan Island that caused a major fire and refinery shutdown. This confirms direct Gulf Arab participation in attacks on Iranian energy infrastructure, raising the risk of renewed retaliation and long‑tail disruption across regional oil supply.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

At approximately 19:24 UTC on 12 May 2026 (Report 15), a summary of Wall Street Journal reporting stated that the United Arab Emirates "secretly attacked Iran" and specifically struck refinery facilities on Lavan Island in early April, around the time President Trump announced the current ceasefire. The report says the strike caused a large fire and shut down the refinery. A separate but consistent Reuters‑based post at 19:19 UTC and 19:53 UTC (Report 53, referenced again in 15) adds that Saudi Arabia also conducted unannounced airstrikes on Iranian territory in late March in retaliation for prior attacks on the kingdom during the recent Middle East war.

These actions were not previously publicly attributed to Riyadh or Abu Dhabi. They constitute direct attacks by key Gulf producers on Iranian soil and critical energy infrastructure during the same conflict in which the US and Israel also struck Iran. There is no indication from these posts that the refinery has returned to full operation, nor that Iran has publicly acknowledged the UAE/Saudi role.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

The actors identified are:
- United Arab Emirates: Conducted a strike on the Lavan Island refinery complex. Operational control would likely have run through the UAE Air Force and Air Defense Command, under the UAE Armed Forces GHQ, with political authorization from the top leadership (MBZ and senior security council).
- Saudi Arabia: Executed undisclosed airstrikes on Iranian territory in late March, likely via the Royal Saudi Air Force under the Ministry of Defense, with authorization from the Saudi leadership (Crown Prince/Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman and war cabinet structures).
- Iran: The target state, whose refinery infrastructure on Lavan Island and other unspecified sites was hit. The attacks would fall under the purview of the IRGC and Oil Ministry for response and repairs.
- United States/Israel: Not directly in these specific strikes but part of the broader coalition that has attacked Iran during this war, raising the possibility that these Gulf strikes were coordinated or at least deconflicted.

3. Immediate military/security implications

The revelation that UAE and Saudi Arabia have already crossed the threshold of covert airstrikes on Iranian soil materially worsens Iran–Gulf security dynamics, even if the ceasefire currently holds.

- Escalation ladder: Tehran now has public justification, if it chooses to use it, for asymmetric retaliation against UAE and Saudi critical infrastructure (oil, LNG, desalination, ports) and commercial shipping. The fact that these strikes hit refinery infrastructure could prompt Iran to respond in kind or via proxy attacks on Gulf energy assets if the ceasefire collapses.
- Deterrence and signaling: For Iran, the political cost of leaving these strikes unanswered may increase once they are widely recognized as Emirati/Saudi actions rather than just US/Israeli. For Riyadh and Abu Dhabi, the leak undercuts the deniability that has so far reduced direct Iranian reprisal against them.
- Threat to shipping and chokepoints: These developments intersect with Iran’s recent hardline demands over control of the Strait of Hormuz (already the subject of earlier alerts) and could feed into a scenario where Iran uses its naval and missile capabilities to pressure or intermittently disrupt traffic if talks fail.
- Coalition cohesion: UAE and Saudi having conducted unilateral secret attacks could complicate US and NATO diplomacy, especially as President Trump is publicly pressuring Iran and criticizing NATO's role (Report 21 at 19:28 UTC). Regional mediation efforts may be undermined as Tehran questions Gulf states’ neutrality and any role in reconstruction or de‑escalation frameworks.

4. Market and economic impact

The core market impact stems from realized and prospective damage to Iranian refining capacity and heightened risk to Gulf energy infrastructure:

- Oil and products: Even if Lavan’s output is modest in global terms, the symbolic value of a successful strike on a Gulf island refinery is high. Traders will likely rebuild a geopolitical risk premium into Brent and Dubai benchmarks, particularly front‑month spreads. The risk of delayed or disrupted Iranian exports, and the potential for retaliatory attacks on UAE/Saudi facilities, points to upside risk for crude and refined product prices.
- Shipping and insurance: If Iran responds by threatening or harassing tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, war‑risk premiums and insurance costs for tankers operating in the Gulf could rise again. Charter rates for VLCCs and product tankers in the region may increase.
- Currencies and sovereign risk: Gulf FX pegs remain firm, but CDS spreads for Saudi and UAE could widen marginally on fear of Iranian retaliation and infrastructure risk. Iranian assets remain heavily sanctioned and largely inaccessible, but this escalation further diminishes any near‑term sanctions relief scenario.
- Equities: Energy equities, especially integrated majors with upstream exposure outside the Gulf and refiners sensitive to crack spreads, could benefit from higher price expectations. Conversely, airlines, logistics, and tourism plays with heavy Middle East exposure face headline risk.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Iranian response: Watch closely for public Iranian statements acknowledging or condemning UAE/Saudi strikes. Tehran may summon Gulf ambassadors, file complaints at the UN, or use state media to threaten reciprocal action. IRGC Navy and Aerospace Forces could increase exercises or deployments near Hormuz.
- Gulf posture: Riyadh and Abu Dhabi will likely remain silent or issue vague denials, while quietly raising alert levels around critical infrastructure (refineries, export terminals, desalination plants, airports) and coastal defenses.
- US messaging: Given President Trump’s concurrent hardline rhetoric against Iran (Reports 8 and 17) and criticism of NATO (Report 21), Washington may either downplay the Gulf states’ role to preserve the ceasefire narrative or use the revelations to further pressure Tehran. Any overt US support for these strikes would be an additional escalatory signal.
- Market reaction: Expect a modest upward drift in Brent and potentially in time spreads as traders price in higher tail‑risk of infrastructure or shipping incidents. Gold could see safe‑haven inflows if Iran issues explicit retaliation threats.

Overall, these revelations materially harden the Iran–Gulf confrontation geometry, reduce space for a stable ceasefire, and raise the probability that any breakdown in talks will rapidly translate into high‑impact attacks on energy and shipping infrastructure across the Gulf.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Revelations of UAE/Saudi covert strikes on Iranian territory and refinery infrastructure raise perceived Iran–Gulf escalation risk and highlight the vulnerability of Gulf energy assets. This is supportive for crude and product prices (risk premium up), mildly bullish for gold and defense stocks, and negative for regional risk assets and airlines/shipping exposed to the Gulf.
