Within hours of the South Pars strike, Iran fired ballistic missiles at Qatar's Ras Laffan Industrial City — the world's largest LNG processing complex, handling approximately 77 million tonnes per year, roughly 20% of global LNG supply. QatarEnergy reported "extensive damage" and "sizeable fires" 1. Civil defence teams extinguished the flames. No injuries were reported. The target was the one Tehran's earlier threats had promised: after the US struck Kharg Island , Iran warned it would hit regional energy infrastructure in retaliation . The South Pars strike appears to have triggered that contingency.
But Iran did not strike Israel or American bases. It struck Qatar — a neighbour that had maintained diplomatic channels with Tehran throughout the conflict and, intermittently, since 1979. Qatar hosts Al Udeid Air Base, the largest US military facility in the Middle East and CENTCOM's forward headquarters. Tehran's calculus appears to treat Gulf hosting of American operations as complicity, regardless of any individual state's efforts at neutrality or Mediation. The message to Doha, Riyadh, and Abu Dhabi is blunt: there is no diplomatic middle ground while the infrastructure that enables strikes on Iran sits on your territory.
Ras Laffan has no substitute at scale. Qatar's LNG goes to Japan, South Korea, China, India, the United Kingdom, and continental European states that increased LNG imports after cutting dependence on Russian pipeline gas in 2022. The Atlantic Council warned this week that European gas storage stands below 30% — a five-year low — as the critical autumn refill season approaches 2. The European gas benchmark jumped more than 30% on The News 3. Brent Crude surged toward $110.90 per barrel, up from $106.18 the previous day and more than 64% above the pre-war $67.41 — its highest level since 2014. Three weeks ago, oil was at its cheapest since 2021.
The repair timeline will determine whether this is a shock or a crisis. QatarEnergy's description — "extensive damage" — could mean days or months of reduced output. Each week offline tightens a market already stretched before the war began. For the roughly 450 million people in the European Union who pivoted from Russian pipeline gas to diversified LNG as an energy security strategy after 2022, the destruction at Ras Laffan tests that strategy's core assumption: that supply spread across multiple seaborne sources would prove more resilient than dependence on a single pipeline from Moscow. A fifth of global LNG now flows from a facility within range of Iranian ballistic missiles, in a war with no Ceasefire framework and an Iranian foreign minister who has publicly stated he does not believe in one 4.
