Saudi stops drones heading for oil field in wave of new Gulf attacks

Saudi Arabia said Wednesday it had intercepted a wave of seven drones heading towards a strategic oil field, as Iran renewed fire on its Gulf neighbours and their energy infrastructure.

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A view of the logo on the ARAMCO headquarter, the national Saudi Arabian Oil Company, towers in the King Abdullah Financial District of Riyadh on March 9, 2026. Saudi Arabia is the world's second biggest oil producer after the United States, and Iran ranks among the top 10. Fayez Nureldine / AFP

2026-03-11 11:17:59

Saudi Arabia said Wednesday it had intercepted a wave of seven drones heading towards a strategic oil field, as Iran renewed fire on its Gulf neighbours and their energy infrastructure.

"Two drones heading towards the Shaybah oil field were intercepted and destroyed," the defence ministry said in a post on X. 

It said another five drones were intercepted and destroyed in separate posts.

The Shaybah oil field, crucial to the kingdom's vast oil production, sits near the border with the United Arab Emirates and is operated by Saudi giant Aramco, one of the world's biggest companies by market capitalisation.

The kingdom also said it intercepted seven ballistic missiles in separate attacks targeting the country's eastern region and the Prince Sultan Air Base, where an American soldier was hit on March 1 and died a week later.

The United Arab Emirates reported a new missile and drone attack from Iran on Wednesday.

The Gulf state's defence ministry said its air defences were responding to an unspecified number of missiles and drones, without providing further details about the target or location of the attack.

Iran's Revolutionary Guards said on Tuesday they had launched a new salvo of missiles at Israeli cities including Tel Aviv and US targets in the region.

The elite force later said it targeted US bases in Bahrain and Iraqi Kurdistan, according to Iranian media reports early on Wednesday.

In a statement carried by the Tasnim news agency, the Guards said "a mass" of ballistic missiles had been fired at the base of the US Navy's Fifth Fleet in Bahrain and at three other facilities in the Kurdish region of Iraq.

Bahrain has been targeted by waves of Iranian drones and missiles, which have so far killed two people in the country, according to authorities.

The Guards later said that at least two missiles targeted a United States base in Kuwait, according to Iranian news agencies Fars and Mehr.

"The American base in Arifjan was... hit by firing 2 missiles by the IRGC Ground Force missile unit," the Guards said, Fars and Mehr reported, referring to Camp Arifjan located south of Kuwait City. 

Kuwaiti authorities have not yet commented on the reports, but the paramilitary National Guard later said on Wednesday that eight drones targeting the country were downed.

© Agence France-Presse