Trump threatened to 'massively blow up the entirety of the South Pars Gas Field' if Iran struck Qatar's LNG infrastructure again, adding: 'I do not want to authorize this level of violence and destruction because of the long term implications that it will have on the future of Iran' 1. The statement came hours after Iran's Ballistic missile strike on Qatar's Ras Laffan Industrial City, which processes approximately 77 million tonnes of LNG per year.
The threat contains a geological contradiction. South Pars and Qatar's North Dome are two names for portions of the same reservoir — a single gas-condensate formation straddling the Iran-Qatar maritime border, the largest natural gas reserve on Earth. Iran draws from the southern section; Qatar draws from the northern. The reservoir's pressure systems and fluid dynamics do not respect political boundaries. Destroying 'the entirety' of South Pars — surface infrastructure, wellheads, subsea architecture — risks pressure disruption, well integrity failure, or contamination that could propagate across the formation into Qatar's extraction zone. Qatar's entire LNG export industry, roughly 20% of global supply, depends on the same geological structure Trump proposed to obliterate.
The escalation ladder has steepened in four days. On 14 March, Trump struck military positions on Kharg Island but deliberately spared its oil terminal, conditioning the terminal's survival on Iran keeping the Strait of Hormuz open . That was calibrated coercion: a defined red line with a defined consequence. The South Pars ultimatum abandons calibration. Iran had already warned that if its oil infrastructure were destroyed, it would strike Saudi, Emirati, and Kuwaiti installations — and on 18 March it followed through, naming five specific Gulf energy facilities as imminent targets. The mutual destruction logic now extends from oil to gas, from bilateral to regional, and from infrastructure serving one country to infrastructure underpinning the global market.
European gas storage stands below 30% — a five-year low, per the Atlantic Council — as the critical refill season begins. No alternative supply route exists at scale for the roughly 20% of global LNG trade that passes through the Strait of Hormuz or originates at Ras Laffan. Trump framed his threat as deterrence — a cost so extreme that Iran would not repeat the Ras Laffan attack. But the threatened action would itself eliminate a fifth of global LNG capacity. Qatar, whose economy depends on the other side of the same reservoir, now faces a war in which both its attacker and its principal ally have threatened the same geological formation.
