On the second question, the evidence is more limited. Multiple outlets later summarized a Wall Street Journal report saying the UAE carried out covert strikes inside Iran, including the Lavan refinery attack . Those reports also say the UAE has not publicly acknowledged the operation
. That means the public record supports “reported UAE strike,” not “officially confirmed UAE strike.”
The key uncertainty is attribution. The early Iranian reporting described an enemy attack but did not name the attacker . The later UAE attribution comes through media reports citing people familiar with the matter, not through a public UAE statement
.
That distinction matters because a covert or deniable strike can carry strategic meaning without creating the same public diplomatic record as an acknowledged military operation. For now, the available sources do not establish the operational details, the decision chain, or an official Emirati rationale.
Lavan is not just a symbolic target. It is an oil refinery in the Persian Gulf, and NIORDC put its capacity at 55,000 b/d . A strike on that kind of facility moves the conflict beyond military launch sites and air-defense exchanges into energy infrastructure.
The timing also made the attack more consequential. NIORDC said the strike came hours after the U.S. and Iran announced a two-week ceasefire aimed at finalizing a peace deal . Even if the attribution remains disputed, an attack on an Iranian refinery during a ceasefire window undercuts confidence that battlefield activity is actually winding down.
If the UAE attribution is accurate, the strategic shift is significant. Reports framed the UAE as moving from a target of Iranian attacks to a direct participant willing to strike Iranian infrastructure . The Jerusalem Post, summarizing the same reporting, said the UAE acted secretly in response to Iran targeting Emirati civilian and energy infrastructure
.
That would suggest a different deterrence model for the Gulf: not only intercepting missiles and drones, but potentially retaliating inside Iran. It would also show that Gulf states with advanced Western-supplied air and missile-defense systems may be willing to pair defensive capabilities with offensive action when critical infrastructure is threatened .
The surrounding events show how quickly a refinery strike can become part of a wider exchange. On April 8, the UAE said its air defenses were firing at an incoming Iranian missile barrage . Kuwait also reported Iranian attacks, with damage to power, desalination, and oil facilities described in contemporaneous reports
. The Jerusalem Post reported that Iran later sent another barrage of drones and missiles against the UAE and Kuwait in response to the Lavan attack, while noting there was no official confirmation at the time of who was behind the strike
.
That creates three obvious risks for the Gulf conflict:
The cleanest answer is: reported, but not confirmed. The attack on Lavan Island is supported by Iranian official and state-media accounts . The claim that the UAE carried it out rests on later reports citing the Wall Street Journal, and those reports emphasize that Abu Dhabi has not publicly acknowledged the operation
.
If the attribution is eventually confirmed, it would mark a major escalation: a Gulf state directly striking Iranian energy infrastructure during a volatile conflict. Until then, it should be treated as a serious but still unconfirmed report — one that nonetheless signals how fragile the Gulf’s current security balance has become.
Comments
0 comments