What next for F1 and the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix after missile attack?

Despite what turned out to be a brilliant Formula 1 race, a shadow was cast over last weekend’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.
Circuit atmosphere - fire following a missile strike on an Aramco oil facility.
Circuit atmosphere - fire following a missile strike on an Aramco oil facility.

F1 was already facing accusations of🥂 sportswashing a “blood-soaked regime” and criticism for its decision to go racing in a country with a dubious human rights reco✃rd heading into the second-ever Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.

The race t🐼ook place less than two weeks after Saudi Arabia executed 81 men in a single day in the largest mass execution in the modern history of the country. On the same day as F1’s season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix, an Aramco distribution plant in Jeddah was struck by drone and missile attacks.

Lewis Hamilton stressed ahead of the weekend that he still felt uncomfortable raci🎃ng in Saudi Arabia and added it should be “easy” for people in power to make changes in the country.

Other than Hamilton’s renewed calls for Saꦍu🧜di Arabia to improve its human rights record, F1 pressed on as planned. That was until the race was left hanging in the balance following a missile strike on the nearby Aramco depot while opening practice took place on Friday.

Circuit atmosphere - smoke from a missile strike on an Aramco oil facility.
Circuit atmosphere - smoke from a missile strike on an Aramco oil facility.

As thick black smoke engulfed th༺e sky and w🌊as visible from the Jeddah Corniche Circuit, F1 suddenly could no longer ignore what was happening on its doorstep.

The attack was the latest in a string of air strikes launched by Yemen’s 𒁃rebel Houthi group, which has spent seven years fighting the Saudi-led coalition backing the country’s official government.

It is a hugely complex conflict that has left Yemen, one of the poorest Arab countries♑, facing one of the worst humanitarian criওses in the world.

In response to the attack, a series of emergency meetings were held by F1 CEO Stefano Domenic🌱ali and FIA presidౠent Mohammed Ben Sulayem. Following lengthy discussions involving senior F1 figures, Saudi representatives and team principles, the decision was taken for the weekend to proceed as planned.

It did so without further incident but that did not stop a feeling of ꦰunease within the paddock that was underlined by Hamilton w🌊hen he spoke to the media after the race.

“I am so happy the weekend is done,” the🌟 Mercedes driver said after a difficult race in which he finished 10th. "I am also just so happy that everyone is safe and I am just looking forward to getting out.”

Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1.
Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1.

Why did the race go ahead?

On Friday night, F1 chief Domenicali stressed that “total assuranceꦓs” had been provided about security at the venue after receiving a briefing from Saudi authorities.

Ben Sulayem was confident that the Jeddah circuit was safe, while the Saudi Arabian government said it would have cancelled 💧the race if it felt there was a credible threat.

“We had meetings with high-level security and t💜hen we had meetings across the team principals and we had meetings with 🔥the drivers,” Ben Sulayem said.

“I mean, who are they 💮targeting? They are targeting the economic infrastructure, not the civilians, and of course, not the track.

“Of course we checked the facts from them and we had assurances from the highest level that this is a secure place, the whole thing will be secur🎐ed and let’s go on racing. For sure all the families are here, we are only looking forward but with an assurance that𒁃 nothing is going to happen.”

(L to R): Mohammed Bin Sulayem (UAE) FIA President and Stefano Domenicali (ITA) Formula One President and CEO address the media after a meeting if teams and drivers following a missile strike on an Aramco oil facility near to the circuit.
(L to R): Mohammed Bin Sulayem (UAE) FIA President and Stefano Domenicali (ITA) Formula One…

However, F1 drivers remained uneasy about the situation and it is 💟understood that several expressed their concerns during an extraordinary four-hour meeting after second practice that stretched into the early hours of Saturday morning.

Drivers discussed a🌊 potential boycott but this was ultimately averted following f💮urther talks with team principals, who helped to alleviate their worries.

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas later revealed that one of 🅷the most compelling arguments to continue racing was that calling off the race at short notice would have been impractical and led to logistical delays.

But the drivers have made it clear that they 𒁏want to revisit the topic of Saudi’s presence on the F1 calendar, not just because of what happened off-track, but also for what happened on it.

After Mick Schumache💯r walked away unscathed from an enormous 33G crash in qualifying, there have been calls for further safety improvements at the circuit which Red Bull’s Sergio Perez described as being “definitely the most dangerous plac♚e in the calendar.”

The damaged Haas VF-22 of Mick Schumacher (GER) Haas F1 Team is removed from the circuit after he crashed during qualifying.
The damaged Haas VF-22 of Mick Schumacher (GER) Haas F1 Team is removed from the circuit after…

What does this mean for Saudi Arabia’s F1 future?

Despite the missile attack, ltxcn.top understands F1 intends to return to Saudi Arabia. The world championship holds a lucrꦚative 10-year deal, worth £50 million a year, to race in Jeddah before moving to a new venue at Qiddiya.

F1 has given drivers as💜surances that it will reconsider the safety and security of all its events and plans to share more information about the events in Jeddah as soon as possible, potentially ahead of the Australian Grand Prix on April 10.

Domenicali insisted F1 is “not blind” to the concerns about Saudi Arabia’s place on🦋 the calendar and argued that the series is helping to modernise the country, which he explained🐼 cannot be done overnight.

“I think that it's not a matter of que🎶stion mark,” he said. “It is a matter of understanding the situation.

“We ar🌜e not blind, but we don't have to forget one thing: that this country, also through F1 and the sport on which we believe, is doing a massive step forwa🐭rd.

“You cannot pretend to change a culture that is more than a millennium 🅷in a blink of an eye. The resources they're putting in place to move forward you can see here.

"Don't forget, a couple of years ago, women couldn't drive, and they're here oꦇn the grid, cheering the kids. They're partying, they're seeing the sport, they are changing a lot of laws in order to make sure that this is happening. We don't have to not consider that.

“Of course, there are tensions inside, there are things 💜that have to be improved. We don't want to be political on that. But I do believe that we are playing a very important role in the modernisation of this country. We are focused, of course, on making sure that these are the centre of our agenda.”

Circuit atmosphere - flags.
Circuit atmosphere - flags.

Similarly, Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff believes it is important for F1 to shine a “spotlight” ꦿon problems in the Middle East, rather than simply ignoring them.

“We just need to understand that this is culturally very different to how we 🍨see our western cultures,” he said.

"For us, is it acceptable to race 10 miles away from🧸 a drone rocket that is g🍷oing in a petrol tank? Certainly not. But for here, within their culture, these things happen here.

"I don't want to say that I'm not racing 🐈because I am generally someone thatꦕ wants to give people the chance to better themselves.

"Does Saudi Arabia and some of the other Middle Eastern countries share the same values and culture as we do in Europe? They don't. Are they where we want them to be? No. Can we by coming here put the spotlight into this place by racing💦 here in Formula 1, by making those things visible and therefore making it a better place? I still think so.

"I'd rather come here and make the spotlight shine on the r𝐆egion so it needs to be a better place rather than﷽ say I'm not going there and I don't want to hear anything about it.”

No matter how you slice it, there is no doubt that the Saudi Arabian GP has put F1 in an awkward situa🍬tion and leaves it facing some pretty big questions.

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