Yes, it is very, very, very likely that Iran did the strike on Saudi Arabia — due to its sophistication, which was clearly stated in my prior post in page 5 of this thread.
Mmm well my option 2 was that Iran did it and you are also saying that Iran did it so not sure how this is wrong? But anyway thanks for your insight.
I am interested that you believe the Saudis are going to hit back and you may well be proven correct. But it would be a massive gamble on their part, despite the impressive arsenal of Military Toys they have assembled their ability to fight effectively with them is doubtful at best. And they are currently making big dollars from their Oil Exports while Iran has been virtually squeezed out of the game. Getting into a full blown War with Iran surely puts their Position at risk. For these reasons I don't see them doing much at all unless Iran escalates again.
Option 2 as you presented it is problematic as it conflates US and Saudi interests, which can diverge. The Americans have the capability (to hit 400 to 800 targets in 1 night, for a 2nd strike, should escalation from a 1st strike be necessary, without fear of Iran) but lack the desire. The Saudis have the desire but would need to incur risk (because I suspect Iran will not tolerate even 1 a strike at their key facility). But it is also certain Iran can’t invade Saudi Arabia.
2) Iran is not going to accept the Sanctions and has decided to create ongoing mischief in the Region in an attempt to force the US to lift the Sanctions. They have calculated the Saudis/US either don't have the capacity or the will to go to War with them and will prefer to negotiate rather than deal with ongoing disruptions and uncertainty
Both US and Saudi Arabia can do a 1st strike. It’s the consequence after the 1st strike that is the problem (or what I call escalation dominance). For Saudi Arabia, they have to take risk and plan for 1st strike to 5th strike and work out their game theory on Iranian responses. US has escalation dominance but it is a problem for Saudi Arabia. If you had split option 2 into 2A or 2B, one of your choices would be correct.
To Iran, the sanctions is economic warfare — the US does not want to fight, as Trump believes he is winning.
The 1979 Iranian revolution created a militant Shiite theocracy that advances a hostile anti-Western form of Islam. The regime's foreign policy objectives include exporting its religious-political doctrine, empowering Shiite peoples abroad, undermining Western interests in the Middle East, and establishing itself as a regional hegemon. All of this takes place along geopolitical, military, economic, and ideological lines. For instance, Iran promotes a Shiite pilgrimage to Karbala in Iraq to undermine the hajj to Mecca. Iran also arms numerous proxy Shiite militias—from the Lebanese Hezbollah, to the Yemenite Houthi rebels, to a string of Iraqi militias including Asaib Ahl al-Haq and Kata'ib Hezbollah. In the despairing words of an Iraqi bureaucrat: "You don't know what imperialism is like until you have been an Iraqi Arab dealing with Persian imperialists.
Iran and Saudi Arabia are on divergent paths with Riyadh attempting reforms led by Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman (MBS), and Tehran doubling down on its revolutionary goals. This will require long-term US pressure for robust reforms as difficult as that may be in Saudi Arabia, and the pursuit of strategies that encourage the Iranian regime's self-destructive impulses. MBS as Crown Prince is caught between ambition and credibility — in his geo-strategic plays.
Saudi Arabia aims to deter Iran using two main methods: denying benefits or imposing costs.
- One, deterrence by denial involves convincing the aggressor that it will not reach its objective, or that the perceived benefits are of little or no value — but Iran sees continued attacks as having value, as it is militant Shiite theocracy that advances a hostile anti-Western form of Islam.
- Two, deterrence by imposing costs, or punishment, is about convincing Iran that the risk of suffering large losses is high and that the cost of a counter-attack significant. The Saudi military need to do a limited strike, to preserve deterrence (but Iran has said its all or nothing). If they don’t, Iran will hit them again and again with these pin pricks.
IIRC Trump has said, Saudi Arabia must pay to play. They are looking at the size of Donald’s bill — even the limited air tanking support provided by the USAF for Yemen (after price reduction) is so expensive —
Facing Iran, Saudi Arabia still owes US $181 million for Yemen refuelling. For limited protection against Iran, Donald will bill Saudi Arabia in the tens of billions.
How much did Saudi Arabia pay for GWI? If you were MBS, watching to Donald at work, you too would hesitate at a US$600 billion or more potential bill, as MBS will need money to institute domestic reforms.
The Koreans (see:
Trump says South Korea will pay more for US military protection) and Japanese have just completed 1 cycle of the Donald shakedown — which MBS is watching. Fundamentally, it is better for NE Asia to reduce reliance on the US, a path on which Korea has started, with its focus on China (as a counter weight to Japan) but I am not sure which way Riyadh will lean towards.