An Iranian Ballistic missile struck the BAPCO Energies refinery at Sitra, Bahrain on Thursday — the first confirmed Iranian strike on Gulf energy infrastructure in this conflict. A fire started and was reported "contained." One hotel and two residential buildings were also hit. Bahraini authorities reported no casualties.
BAPCO is Bahrain's primary refining operation. The official language — "limited material damage," "contained" fire — does not address the operational question. Refineries that process flammable hydrocarbons at high temperature and pressure do not resume operations after a Ballistic missile strike without comprehensive safety inspections, a process that typically requires days. Whether BAPCO is currently producing refined product is unknown.
Bahrain has now absorbed 75 missiles and 123 drones since 28 February . The island — 780 square kilometres, roughly the area of New York City — hosts the US Fifth Fleet headquarters, where satellite imagery already confirmed several buildings destroyed and two AN/GSC-52B satellite communications terminals knocked out . The BAPCO strike extends Iranian targeting from the military infrastructure hosting American forces to the civilian energy infrastructure sustaining the Bahraini economy.
The distinction matters for Iran's strategic messaging. Striking the Fifth Fleet headquarters can be framed as self-defence against the force prosecuting the war. Striking a civilian refinery, a hotel, and residential buildings cannot. If Iran's Decentralised Mosaic Defence doctrine has devolved targeting authority to 31 provincial commanders , the question is whether the BAPCO strike reflects central strategic direction or an autonomous decision by a regional unit — and whether Tehran retains the ability to control that distinction.
