# [24H] Short-Lived Pause in Direct Strikes on Core Oil Installations Despite Hormuz Tanker Incidents

*Issued Saturday, July 18, 2026 at 4:10 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Issued**: 2026-07-18T04:10:19.331Z (3h ago)
**Expires**: 2026-07-19T04:10:19.331Z (21h from now)
**Category**: MILITARY | **Confidence**: 62% | **Impact**: CRITICAL
**Risk Direction**: volatile
**Affected Regions**: Saudi Arabia Eastern Province, UAE coast, Southern Iran, Strait of Hormuz
**Affected Assets**: Saudi Aramco export terminals, Iranian export terminals (Kharg, Bandar Abbas area), Gulf tanker traffic, Offshore loading platforms
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/forecasts/17604.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/forecasts

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## Prediction

Over the next 24 hours, both the U.S. and Iran are likely to refrain from overtly targeting major oil production or export terminals, even as tanker incidents in the Strait of Hormuz continue to raise perceived risk. Military action will concentrate on bases, logistics nodes, and unmanned systems rather than direct hits on Saudi, Emirati, or Iranian crude loading infrastructure, preserving some escalation headroom. This restraint protects immediate global supply but keeps crews, insurers, and navies on high alert, with miscalculation risk in crowded sea lanes. The forecast is confirmed if we see no verified strikes on major terminals like Ras Tanura, Jubail, Jebel Ali, Kharg, or Bandar Abbas; it is disproved by any confirmed disabling hit on loading or storage infrastructure.

## Drivers

- No confirmed strikes yet on energy infrastructure despite repeated base attacks
- Current US focus on bridges and logistics rather than terminals themselves
- Iranian actions against tankers and USVs suggesting pressure on shipping, not yet on production facilities
- Mutual interest in keeping some escalation ladder rungs unburnt
