In a devastating repeat strike that has plunged the Gulf into fresh crisis, Iran has once again targeted and severely damaged Kuwait’s mᴀssive Mina Al-Ahmadi oil refinery — the country’s largest and one of the most critical energy hubs in the world. Multiple ballistic missiles struck the complex early this morning, triggering enormous explosions and uncontrollable fires that have turned the facility into a raging inferno.

Thick columns of black smoke are visible for dozens of kilometers as firefighters struggle to contain the blaze. Kuwaiti authorities have declared a national emergency and ordered a complete shutdown of the refinery, removing hundreds of thousands of barrels per day from global supply at a time when markets are already on the edge of collapse.
The IRGC has claimed full responsibility, calling the attack “Mojtaba’s Second Warning.” A senior commander stated: “We told them clearly — any nation that stands with America and Israel will burn. Mina Al-Ahmadi is only the latest. We still have not used our best and ᴅᴇᴀᴅliest missiles.”

This latest strike is part of Iran’s systematic campaign to punish Gulf states supporting US and Israeli operations. The war has already seen repeated attacks on Haifa’s Bazan refinery, missile barrages on Tel Aviv, strikes on US bases across the region, and long-range attempts on Diego Garcia.
Retired U.S. General Jack Keane described the situation as “a deliberate strategy to trigger a global energy meltdown,” warning that continued attacks on Gulf refineries could push the world economy into irreversible recession.
Global oil prices have reacted with absolute panic, surging past $20,850 per barrel — shattering every historical record — as traders fear a total breakdown of energy production in the Persian Gulf.
As flames devour Kuwait’s most important oil facility once again, the world faces a terrifying reality: Iran is successfully weaponizing oil itself. With the entire Gulf now burning and the global economy hanging by a thread, one urgent question must be asked — how many more refineries must be destroyed before this dangerous and destructive war is finally stopped?
