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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
22MAY

Iran threatens to destroy Gulf energy

3 min read
10:57UTC

Iran's parliament speaker promised permanent destruction of regional energy infrastructure if Iranian power plants are struck — a threat that reaches the desalination plants on which Gulf populations depend for drinking water.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Threatening 'irreversible' Gulf desalination destruction marks a shift from calibrated deterrence to civilisational-scale escalation.

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf declared that regional energy and oil infrastructure "will be irreversibly destroyed" if the United States strikes Iranian power plants. The statement ratchets beyond the counter-threat issued by Iran's Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters , which promised retaliation against energy, IT, and desalination infrastructure serving US allies but did not specify permanent destruction.

The word "irreversibly" carries specific weight in a region where desalination plants produce the drinking water for entire nations. Saudi Arabia generates roughly 7.3 million cubic metres of desalinated water per day; the UAE approximately 4.6 million; Kuwait and Bahrain depend almost entirely on desalination for potable supply. Permanent destruction of these facilities would produce a humanitarian catastrophe within days — there is no alternative source. Iran has already demonstrated it can reach Gulf energy targets: drones struck Kuwait's Mina Al-Ahmadi refinery on consecutive days , , attacks on Qatar's Ras Laffan destroyed two LNG trains and removed 17% of the country's export capacity for three to five years , and debris from intercepted missiles forced UAE gas shutdowns at Habshan and Bab . Each of these attacks produced damage requiring years of reconstruction. Ghalibaf's threat promises the next round would ensure reconstruction is not possible.

Ghalibaf is not a military commander articulating doctrine. He is a political figure — Parliament speaker, former IRGC air force commander, two-time presidential candidate — and his statement carries institutional weight distinct from the Khatam al-Anbiya command's operational posture. The escalation in Iranian counter-threats has followed a clear progression since 28 February: military-for-military, then infrastructure-for-infrastructure, then permanent destruction as declared policy. Each rung has expanded the target set and raised the consequences. With Brent Crude at $114 per barrel and the IEA documenting the largest supply disruption on record , the destruction Ghalibaf describes would push oil markets toward the threshold Oxford Economics assessed would trigger global recession — $140 per barrel at negative 0.7% GDP growth 1.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Gulf Arab states like Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar derive a large share of their fresh water — in some cases 40–90% — from coastal desalination plants that convert seawater. Ghalibaf is threatening to destroy these permanently, not just damage them temporarily. That would cause acute humanitarian emergencies across the Gulf, entirely separate from any oil supply disruption. Critically, this threat targets states not formally party to the US-Israel operation — pulling neutral parties into the direct firing line.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The threat to 'regional' — not merely US or Israeli-allied — infrastructure pulls Gulf Arab states who have maintained studied neutrality directly into the threat perimeter. Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Qatar have avoided explicit alignment with either side. A credible threat to their desalination infrastructure fundamentally changes their calculus, creating pressure to either broker de-escalation actively or align more explicitly — ending Gulf Arab ambiguity as a stabilising factor in the conflict.

Root Causes

Ghalibaf's escalation beyond the IRGC's official military statement reflects an internal Iranian political dynamic not addressed in the body. With the IRGC effectively running operations under uncertain supreme leadership, parliament is asserting institutional relevance. The escalatory language serves a domestic function — signalling parliamentary toughness during an IRGC-dominated crisis — as much as an external deterrence function. This dual audience complicates assessment of genuine intent.

Escalation

The word 'irreversibly' carries analytical weight beyond what the body notes. Previous Iranian counter-threats retained implicit reversibility — reconstruction as a future bargaining chip. A commitment to 'irreversible' destruction signals Iran is prepared to eliminate rather than merely damage, foreclosing its own future negotiating leverage and suggesting a decision to maximise enemy costs rather than preserve diplomatic options.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Destruction of Gulf desalination infrastructure would create immediate humanitarian emergencies in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain, independently of any oil supply effect.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    The threat to 'regional' infrastructure draws Gulf Arab states maintaining neutrality into the direct threat perimeter, potentially forcing an end to their studied ambiguity.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    If 'irreversible destruction' becomes Iranian operational doctrine, it eliminates reversibility as a de-escalation mechanism that has historically constrained Gulf crises.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Risk

    Combined degradation of Gulf energy and water infrastructure could push crude prices past the $140 per barrel Oxford Economics recession threshold.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #45 · Ultimatum expires; Iran tolls Hormuz at $2m

Fortune· 23 Mar 2026
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