The IRGC launched Kheibarshekan missiles at Israel's Haifa refinery within hours of the Israeli strikes on Tehran's oil infrastructure. Haifa is Israel's largest refinery, processing approximately 197,000 barrels per day. Iran's statement framed the strike as reciprocal: oil for oil. No damage assessment is available from either side.
The Kheibarshekan is a solid-fuelled medium-range Ballistic missile with a stated range of 1,450 kilometres and a warhead designed for hardened targets. Its use against a refinery rather than a military installation carries its own message: Iran chose a weapon built to penetrate bunkers and aimed it at industrial infrastructure. CENTCOM had claimed a 90% reduction in Iran's Ballistic missile attacks from Day 1 levels and an 83% reduction in drone launches , but the IRGC's ability to strike a specific named target inside Israel with a specialised missile system contradicts the claim President Trump repeated on Saturday that Iran's military is "almost non-existent" . The 109 drones and 9 ballistic missiles launched at UAE targets on Friday alone had already answered the question of whether reduced fire reflected destroyed or merely dispersed capacity.
Haifa and the smaller Ashdod refinery together process virtually all of Israel's domestically refined petroleum. Unlike Iran, Israel maintains strategic petroleum reserves and has shorter supply lines to alternative refined product sources in Europe. But replacement refining capacity does not exist domestically, and building it under wartime conditions is not feasible. Serious damage to Haifa would force Israel to import all refined fuel — at prices already inflated by the conflict causing the damage, with Brent above $92 and climbing .
The reciprocal logic — oil for oil — creates a new escalation ladder distinct from the military one. Military infrastructure can be rebuilt in months; a refinery takes years. Both sides have now committed to a form of mutual economic destruction that will outlast the air campaign regardless of when it ends. Every remaining refinery, storage depot, and pipeline on both sides is now a potential target. The restraint that kept the Iran-Iraq War's combatants from destroying each other's domestic refining capacity — even as they attacked tankers for eight years — lasted one week in this war.
