In a shocking and reckless escalation, Iran has launched a devastating missile and drone attack on Kuwait’s largest oil refinery, turning the mᴀssive facility into a raging fireball. The Mina Al-Ahmadi refinery, one of the world’s biggest and most critical oil processing complexes, was struck by multiple Iranian ballistic missiles, causing catastrophic fires and forcing an immediate full shutdown.

Dramatic footage shows towering flames and thick black smoke engulfing the entire industrial zone. Kuwaiti authorities have declared a national emergency, with firefighters struggling to contain the inferno that has already destroyed several key processing units. The attack has removed hundreds of thousands of barrels per day from global supply.
The IRGC has proudly claimed responsibility, calling it “Mojtaba’s decisive response” to Kuwait’s support for American and Israeli operations. A senior commander warned: “Any country that hosts American bases or supports aggression against Iran will face the same fate. We still have not used our best and ᴅᴇᴀᴅliest missiles. The Gulf will continue to burn.”
This direct strike on a key U.S. ally marks a dangerous expansion of the war, as Iran deliberately targets the economic lifelines of Gulf Cooperation Council nations. The conflict has already seen repeated attacks on Haifa’s Bazan refinery, missile barrages on Tel Aviv, strikes on U.S. bases across the region, and long-range attempts on Diego Garcia.

Retired U.S. General Jack Keane condemned the attack as “an act of pure economic terrorism,” stating that Iran is now systematically trying to collapse the global energy market.
Global oil prices have reacted with absolute panic, exploding past $14,250 per barrel — an unthinkable new record — as traders fear a total breakdown of Gulf oil production.
Is Iran deliberately trying to trigger a worldwide energy crisis? By turning Kuwait’s largest refinery into a fireball, Tehran is sending a brutal message: no Gulf state is safe. With the entire region now on fire and the global economy facing meltdown, the question grows louder by the hour — how much more destruction must occur before this dangerous war is stopped?
