Iran Threatens Gulf Energy, Water Over Trump Ultimatum

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Iran said on Sunday that it would strike the energy and water systems of its Gulf neighbours in retaliation if U.S. President Donald Trump ​follows through with a threat to hit Iran’s electricity grid in 48 hours, escalating the three-week-old war.

The prospect of tit-for-tat strikes on civilian infrastructure could deepen the regional crisis and rattle global markets when they ‌reopen on Monday morning.

Air raid sirens sounded across Israel from the early hours of Sunday, warning of incoming missiles from Iran, after scores of people were hurt overnight in two separate attacks in the southern Israeli towns of Arad and Dimona.

READ ALSO:Israel, Iran Trade Attacks as US Sends Marines to Middle East

The Israeli military said hours later that it was striking Tehran in response.
Trump threatened overnight to obliterate Iran’s power plants if Tehran did not fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours, barely a day after he talked about winding down the war. He made the new threat as U.S. Marines and heavy landing craft are heading to the region.

But while attacks ​on electricity could hurt Iran, they would be potentially catastrophic for its Gulf neighbours, which consume around five times as much power per capita. Electricity makes their gleaming desert cities habitable, and most of them produce nearly all ​of their drinking water by purifying it from the sea.

Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf wrote on X that critical infrastructure and energy facilities in the Middle East could be irreversibly ⁠destroyed should Iranian power plants be attacked.

Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards said it would also mean the shipping lane where a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas normally transits along Iran’s southern coast would remain shut.

“The Strait of Hormuz will ​be completely closed and will not be opened until our destroyed power plants are rebuilt,” the Guards said in a statement.

More than 2,000 people have been killed during the war the U.S. and Israel launched on February 28, which has upended markets, spiked ​fuel costs, fuelled global inflation fears and convulsed the postwar Western alliance.

 

Reuters

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