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US President Donald Trump declared Monday it "looks" like Iran was behind the explosive attack on Saudi Arabian oil facilities. But he stressed that military retaliation was not yet on the table in response to the strike against a key US Mideast ally.
Oil prices soared worldwide amid the damage in Saudi Arabia and fresh West Asian war concerns. But Trump put the brakes on any talk of quick military action — earlier he had said the US was "locked and loaded" — and he said the oil impact would not be significant on the US, which is a net energy exporter.
Trump, who has repeatedly stressed avoiding new West Asian wars, seemed intent on preserving room to maneuver in a crisis that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had immediately called Iran's fault. Pompeo said Saturday, "Iran has now launched an unprecedented attack on the world's energy supply."
Trump, too, had talked more harshly at first. But by Monday afternoon he seemed intent on consultations with allies.
"That was an attack on Saudi Arabia," he said.
Trump said he was sending Pompeo to Saudi Arabia "to discuss what they feel" about the attack and an appropriate response.
One US official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, said the US was considering dispatching additional military resources to the Gulf but that no decisions had been made. The US already has the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier battle group in the area, as well as fighter jets, bombers, reconnaissance aircraft and air defences.
American officials released satellite images of the damage at the heart of the kingdom's crucial Abqaiq oil processing plant and a key oil field, and two US officials said the attackers used multiple cruise missiles and drone aircraft.
Private experts said the satellite images show the attackers had detailed knowledge of which tanks and machinery to hit within the sprawling Saudi oil processing facility at Abqaiq to cripple production.
"What the photos indicate is that someone planned a sophisticated, coordinated attack that really impacted the production of oil at this facility," he said.
The Saudis invited United Nations and other international experts to help investigate, suggesting there was no rush to retaliate.
Jon Alterman, the chief West Asian expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the Saudi caution reflects the kingdom's wariness of taking on Iran.
"I don't think there's a great independent Saudi capability to respond," he said. "You don't want to start a war with Iran that you don't have an idea how you're going to end."
In New York, the new US ambassador to the United Nations, Kelly Craft, condemned the attack and said that "emerging information indicates that responsibility lies with Iran."
At the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Mark Esper suggested Iranian involvement, too. In a series of tweets after meeting with Trump and other senior national security officials, Esper said the administration was working with partner nations "to address this unprecedented attack and defend the international rules-based order that is being undermined by Iran."
"Currently we don't see any sign from the Americans which has honesty in it, and if the current state continues there will be absolutely no chance of a meeting between the two presidents," spokesman Ali Rabiei said.
Downplaying any talk of imminent US military action, Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff, Marc Short, told reporters at the White House that Trump's "locked and loaded" was "a broad term that talks about the realities that" the US is "safer and more secure domestically from energy independence."
The new violence has led to fears that further action on any side could rapidly escalate a confrontation that's been raging just below the surface in the wider Persian Gulf in recent months.
Those tensions have increased ever since Trump pulled the US out of Iran's 2015 agreement with world powers that curtailed Iranian nuclear activities and the US re-imposed sanctions that sent Iran's economy into freefall.
The US and international benchmarks for crude each vaulted more than 14 percent, comparable to the 14.5 percent spike in oil on 6 August, 1990, following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait.
US stocks were down but only modestly. Major stock indexes in Europe also fell. Markets in Asia finished mixed.
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