UAE Conducts Secret Strikes on Iran, Khamenei Orders Continued Attacks, Aramco CEO Issues Stark Warning

Originally published at: https://peakprosperity.com/uae-conducts-secret-strikes-on-iran-khamenei-orders-continued-attacks-aramco-ceo-issues-stark-warning/

Geopolitics

Iran’s Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, has reportedly ordered forces to continue decisive operations against the U.S. and Israel during a meeting with Major General Ali Abdollahi, amid reports of his recovery from minor injuries sustained earlier in the war. Iranian parliament spokesperson Ebrahim Rezaei stated that restraint has ended, with plans to strike U.S. bases and vessels in response to violations, including recent U.S. bombings of Iran’s coast.

Relatedly, Iran reportedly deployed at least 16 Ghadir-class midget submarines, each carrying two torpedoes or C-704 anti-ship missiles, in operational positions in the Strait of Hormuz to counter U.S. warships. Rear Admiral Shahram Irani described the “Persian Gulf Dolphins” as trigger-ready for asymmetric warfare and prolonged seabed surveillance. This comes after the U.S. Navy disclosed that an Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine arrived in Gibraltar en route to the Mediterranean and is reportedly likely to enter Middle East waters.

Lastly, the Wall Street Journal reported that the United Arab Emirates conducted secret strikes on Iran, including an early April attack on the Lavan Island refinery that sparked a large fire and reportedly sidelined much of its capacity for months. Iran reportedly responded with over 2,800 missiles and drones targeting UAE population centers, energy infrastructure, and airports—the highest volume against any nation. The UAE, equipped with Mirage fighters, F-16s, and drones, maintains close U.S. military cooperation and has closed Iran-linked schools and clubs in Dubai while backing UN resolutions to break Iran’s Hormuz chokehold.

Energy

Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser warned that another two weeks of Hormuz disruption could lose 100 million barrels weekly, delaying market normalization to 2027 after a one-billion-barrel supply shock already offset partially by U.S. exports and Chinese import cuts. Even reopening now requires months for restarts and repairs.

Meanwhile, Energy Secretary Chris Wright is considering suspending the federal 18.4-cent-per-gallon gas tax and 24.3-cent diesel tax, a move endorsed temporarily by President Trump. Some states, like Indiana, suspended taxes, cutting 59.3 cents per gallon, while California’s 70.9-cent tax contributes to $6.15 averages.

In other news, a fire broke out at HF Sinclair’s 125,000-barrel-per-day Tulsa refinery, which processes sweet and some sour Canadian crude for Mid-Continent gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and renewables. The blaze follows PBF Energy’s fire at its 190,000-barrel-per-day Chalmette refinery near New Orleans and fits a global surge including Moscow, Australia, Mexico’s Dos Bocas, and others amid tight inventories and Hormuz disruptions. Happening within the same 24-hour period, Mexico’s Pemex reportedly extinguished a fire at its Oaxaca refinery, with six injured. HF Sinclair reported the Tulsa refinery fire was contained by its internal brigade with no injuries or production disruptions.

Lastly, turning to US grid concerns, PJM Interconnection, serving 67 million across 13 states, forecasts scarcity with data centers facing their first power cuts during peaks due to surging demand, retiring plants, and four-year construction delays. Its queue reopened to 220 gigawatts of requests. Transformer shortages, with years-long lead times from material and labor constraints plus foreign reliance, delay grid upgrades as AI data centers double power needs by 2030, risking blackouts in 37 states per NERC.

Preparedness

A recent report by Mark Shryock outlines the case for empty shelves in eight weeks. U.S. oil inventories have kept falling since the Strait of Hormuz closed on February 28, 2026. The last buffer tanker (New Corolla) delivered its final 2 million barrels on May 3. Europe reached tank bottoms in May. The U.S. is expected to hit the same point around July 4, when pumps fail from low volumes and sediment. Even if the Strait reopens now, a 12–16 week lag means Midwest fuel relief may not arrive until late August or September.

Recent EIA data (week ending May 1) shows crude stocks down 2.3 million barrels, distillates down 1.3 million (11% below the five-year average and the lowest since 2005), and gasoline declining for the 11th week. Global deficit is running at 5.1 million barrels per day, with over one billion barrels already depleted. U.S. SPR is at 392.7 million barrels.

At current drawdown rates, widespread fuel shortages and empty shelves could begin in 4–8 weeks (mid-June to early July), worsening quickly after July 4.

Health

Former White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator Deborah Birx has advocated PCR testing for hantavirus linked to a cruise ship outbreak, suggesting tests for already disembarked passengers worldwide as 21st-century technology to detect early or asymptomatic cases. Birx referenced COVID lessons, stating populations are not tested enough to know subclinical spread and that tracking viruses through blood tests like PCR, rather than symptoms, proved effective. She noted that universities and schools stayed open during the pandemic via weekly testing and emphasized broader availability. Hantavirus, present for decades and primarily spread through rodent droppings with limited human-to-human transmission, prompted her call amid scrutiny of past measures like the 6-foot rule and extended lockdowns, which Birx’s 2022 book described as extended beyond the initial two weeks to gather data. Critics, including a hantavirus researcher, argued that mass PCR testing is unnecessary due to potential false positives and the virus’s primarily zoonotic nature.

Economy

The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) closed at $509.77 after a $511.68 intraday high, up 244 percent from its April 2025 low of $148.31 and 58 percent since mid-March, trading 62 percent above its 200-day moving average. Micron surged nearly 1,000 percent off lows, AMD 450 percent, and Nvidia 140 percent, with laggards leading amid AI capex, hyperscaler orders, and HBM shortages. The rally, steepening monthly, reflects multiples pricing 2026 earnings fully and portions of 2027-2028 growth in a cyclical sector. Some analysts cautioned the rally may price in earnings through 2028 amid cyclical risks reminiscent of past bubbles.

Privacy & Surveillance

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement surveillance tools, designed for immigration enforcement, have reportedly targeted American citizens, including Maine resident Liz McLellan, who photographed federal agents and later received a home visit warning. The system accesses data on over 300 million people via driver’s licenses (1 in 3 adults scanned, 3 in 4 accessible), utility records, and Palantir’s ELITE app for near real-time movement tracking. ICE spent $2.8 billion on such programs from 2008-2021. The Mobile Fortify app enables facial recognition and biometrics to query vehicles, addresses, and more, used against protesters who lost their TSA PreCheck status. Penlink geofences areas to track cell phones without warrants, drawing Fourth Amendment challenges akin to Carpenter v. United States. Florida wildlife commissions ran license plate lookups on Flock cameras for ICE. A border security official stated that U.S. citizens briefly detained during such operations are released once their identity is verified.

Sources

Eight Weeks to Empty Shelves: Tank Bottoms and the Road to Famine

Eight weeks to empty shelves. Sixty days to famine.

Source | Submitted by sand_kitty

Iran’s Midget Subs Deploy in Hormuz as US Nuclear Boomer Makes Rare Flex

Iran Deploys Combat-Ready Mini Subs In Hormuz As US Flexes Nuclear Submarine En Route

Source

Birx Smirks: PCR Testing the Hantavirus Cure-All?

It’s never good to track viruses through symptoms; we should be tracking viruses through blood tests like PCR, we learned that with Covid.

Source

Fire Engulfs HF Sinclair Tulsa Refinery Amid Global Surge in Blazes

There has been a notable uptick in “refinery fire” news stories, according to Bloomberg data

Source

Parabolic Semiconductor Rally Pricing in 2028 Already

The parabolic semiconductor rally has been spectacular. The exit will be too.

Source

Energy Secretary Eyes Gas Tax Suspension as Iran War Fuels $4.52 Pump Prices

Energy Secretary Open To Suspending US Gas Tax As Pump-Rage Surges

Source

Aramco CEO Warns: Hormuz Disruption Could Delay Energy Market Normalization to 2027

If the Hormuz chokepoint is disrupted for another couple of weeks, then it would take the global energy market until 2027 to normalize.

Source

Khamenei Orders Iranian Forces to Press Attacks on US and Israel

issued new directives and guidance for continuing operations and confronting enemies decisively

Source

ICE’s Border Surveillance Dragnet Snares American Citizens

Surveillance technology acquired by the U.S. government for immigration enforcement is being deployed against American citizens

Source

PJM’s Dire Warning: Data Centers First to Face Power Cuts as Grid Nears Collapse

From an era of managing surplus to an era of managing scarcity.

Source

Transformer Shortage Cripples US Grid Amid AI Power Surge

The surge in electricity demand from artificial intelligence data centers is cited as a key driver.

Source

UAE’s Secret Strikes on Iran: Lavan Island Refinery Hit in April

One strike in April hit an oil refinery on Iran’s Lavan Island

Source (Paywalled)

Pemex Extinguishes Oaxaca Refinery Fire, Six Injured

Mexico’s Pemex says fire inside its Oaxaca refinery fully extinguished, six injured

Source

In addition to sources submitted by community members, the following were also used in the creation of this report: DD India, Prof. Martin Zizi, HF Sinclair, Tulsa World, NewsOn6, Lance Roberts, and MSN.

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Eight Weeks to Empty Shelves: Tank Bottoms and the Road to Famine

I skimmed this article from Mark A. Shryock. I’m not familiar with him, but he sounds totally spot on and very comprehensive about this entire situation from beginning to end. It is lengthy, I will take the time later today to read this very carefully, I think it is worth our attention and looks like a good concise article to send people, maybe highlighting the main points.

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It is certainly worth reading and taking to heart. However, the picture Shryock paints for the near future might be characterized as “completely doomed,” where I lean more to the “grim but survivable” side of things.

For example, he paints the arrival of the last tanker of Iraqi crude to California as a complete hit-the-wall event, and it certainly is for California refineries. However, the US still produces 4 million bbl of conventional and offshore oil per day – and these oil grades can be refined into diesel and jet fuel. Additionally, we have Canadian and Venezuelan sources for heavy crude. We will likely lose out on casual jet travel, but for the rock-bottom food production needs we’re covered.

Of course we’ll be paying world market prices on all of that, and the Fed Gov’s fiscal house is very much not in order, and our financial system’s a house cards. Something going to break when these supply shocks hit and the world market price finally goes through the roof. It’s reason enough to plant a garden.

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This is why I want Chris to weigh in on this article. What is actually true here?

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I agree it’s not yet the End End, just an acceleration. But I do think the End of our culture is coming in a big way, we have been given a time to prepare and create our communities before the really big stuff hits (unless the whole world repents of its sins right now in sackcloth and ashes). Thanks.

…And it’s not only sin, it’s the fact that we have defied Nature and she cannot forgive like God can.

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@cmartenson

Thanks! I already tagged him in this way previously asking him to weigh in.

Btw, my husband and I read this article together, out loud, after supper last night. While I had a challenging time keeping track of all of what Shryock was saying about the number of barrels (missing, coming, going, etc.) and what the impact of all of that to one’s everyday life means, I did appreciate the detail of this article (as I always appreciate all that Chris presents on this subject) and I think I understand things a little more now, too.

My husband - who has been dragging his heels sometimes on a certain level of prepping - woke up in the middle of the night and started a new list of things we need to do RIGHT NOW. All to say, this article lit a fire under him in a way I haven’t seen before. He wants to cancel all of our plans for next weekend and do some shopping. Um, that never happens.

Even Shryock isn’t say this is “the end end”. We’re at a trigger point. For me, this aligns with where we are with the Fourth Turning (and also what others have said about where we are right now - see Shryock’s second article on the cycles through human civilization that was posted here on PP today).

I don’t see that he is saying that we are “completely doomed” at all. In fact, near the end of his article he makes the comment, “If emergency measures work and the worst does not come, you will have extra food in your pantry and fuel in your shed. If they do not work and you did nothing, you will have neither.” I think this is fair.

I feel he’s just offering some data and that data suggests that - if we continue on the path we’re on in this moment - S is really going to hit the fan. These are just the facts. Chris also lays things out in this same way.

It’s the data that he’s offering that I want to confirm, whether it’s accurate or not. Because if it is accurate, then everything he’s saying will pan out as he has stated. If it’s not - like if he stating some facts that are not really accurate - then that’s something else. This is one of the reasons why I’d like Chris to weigh in at some point.

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Right. Always good to double check facts. I love how it says on his info that “He holds an Honorary Professorship at the School of Ancient Wisdom.” It’s in India, I looked it up. This means more to me than a degree from Harvard lol.

Wow, I 'm going through the same thing with my husband, finally taking me seriously. My son too, to a degree. It will hit him harder when it hits the fan. Hard to see your baby go through this. Dreams destroyed.

To be fair, my husband has always taken me seriously and has taken prepping (more) seriously since Covid and the hell his employer put him through because of the mandated vax (which he refused to get, thank God). He is still working a day job and sometimes just gets too focused on that and then misses what’s going on around him and the bigger picture. This is when I try to shake things up a little and send him something to read or a video to listen to or whatever, just to remind him what’s happening and why I’m working so hard prepping to a certain level. This time that article just hit him the right way.

After we read the article together last night we talked about checking in with our two adult children again. I have yet to send the article to them. I might, but I think they might just ignore it because it’s so freaking long, so maybe, but I’m going to have a conversation with both of them this week. I have no sense of how that may go.

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That’s why I said highlight the main points, it might help. My hubby went through the same thing with his job and did not get it. But they put him through a lot and made him talk to our pastor and shit like that. The pastor said “Oh I got it because I have to travel.” But I think he did give him a note. Don’t get me started.

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Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) tells me that the COVID-19 whistleblower who will testify publicly & in person before his committee tomorrow morning is an active CIA employee who will testify that the intelligence community has covered up the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic for years.

“I think this whistleblower will help to confirm that this was known, has been known for a long time, and that when the scientists at the CIA looked at this, they discovered or they concluded that the virus had come from the lab,” Sen. Paul tells me.

"What we’re going to find is that the cover up is a real thing, that there are members of the community, the intelligence community, that still don’t want the truth to come out. I’ve said the government was involved not only in funding this research, but then in trying to obscure the truth.

And the truth is the US government funded research in Wuhan, China, and that research led to a virus that escaped, escaped the lab, in all likelihood accidentally."

I asked Senator Paul for any more details on who this CIA whistleblower is ahead of tomorrow’s hearing? “This is a brave person who’s spent a career in the CIA,” Sen. Paul said. “I don’t know how much can be revealed, but is actually famous within the community for being someone who, behind the scenes, has really helped our country.” I will be in the room & covering the hearing for tomorrow morning.

Source

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