The IRGC struck Ras Laffan Industrial City in Qatar for the second time on 19 March, three days after the initial attack that QatarEnergy said caused extensive damage and sizeable fires . QatarEnergy described the second wave as causing 'extensive further damage' 1. The attack was one element of simultaneous IRGC strikes on Energy infrastructure in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, and Israel — the first time Iran has hit hydrocarbon facilities in four countries in a single operation.
The escalation sequence is direct. Israel struck Iran's South Pars gas field on 16 March — the first attack on Iranian energy production since the war began. Within hours, Iran fired ballistic missiles at Ras Laffan . Qatar expelled Iranian military and security attachés within 24 hours, severing a diplomatic channel it had maintained with Tehran intermittently since 1979 . The IRGC then issued facility-specific warnings naming five Gulf energy installations as 'legitimate targets' with strikes due 'in the coming hours' . The 19 March operation carried out that threat across a wider target set than the original warnings had specified.
The four-country simultaneity Marks a shift from Iran's earlier pattern of sequential, country-by-country retaliation to coordinated multi-front operations. Previous Iranian strikes on Gulf Energy infrastructure had targeted one state at a time — the UAE's Shah gas field , Fujairah's oil hub , Saudi air defence engagements . Hitting four states in a single wave forces each country's air defences to operate without mutual reinforcement and confronts the United States with the problem of defending an entire region's Energy infrastructure simultaneously rather than protecting individual facilities in sequence.
The Gulf States' response has been diplomatic rather than military. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan warned after the 17 March emergency meeting that the kingdom's patience is 'not unlimited' and that Iranian escalation 'will be met with escalation, whether on the political level or others' . The seven-nation joint statement on Hormuz published later on 19 March committed no forces and set no timeline 2. The distance between the severity of the attacks — which have now damaged LNG capacity Qatar will take three to five years to rebuild — and the response, which remains confined to statements and emergency arms purchases, is the central tension for Gulf security. Iran is demonstrating the capacity to inflict years of economic damage in hours. The defence against that capacity rests, for now, on Patriot batteries, diplomatic language, and US strike operations that have not stopped the missiles from arriving.
