The transfer of power came not with a profane sideline...

US military and intelligence analysts on Tuesday were scrutinizing apparent drone and cruise-missile debris as they continued investigating the aerial attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil industry.

One image circulating on Arab social media showed the remains of a suspected Iranian-made cruise missile, including what appeared to be part of a tail assembly with wires hanging from it.

The purported missile debris was said to be discovered in the Saudi town of Abqaiq, not far from the target of Saturday’s ­attack.

US analysts suspect that Iran was behind the attacks and that the missiles were likely launched from the Islamic Republic, dismissing a claim from Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen that they had launched the precision drone and missile strikes.

The Pentagon is preparing a report on who was responsible for the weekend attack and intends to make it public within 48 hours, a US defense official told Bloomberg news.

The official couldn’t confirm or deny a CBS News report that the US has identified locations in southern Iran from which it believes more than 20 drones and cruise missiles were launched.

But NBC News later reported that the Trump administration is weighing a range of options for a retaliatory action against Iran, including a cyberattack or physical strike on Iranian oil facilities or Revolutionary Guard assets, citing US officials and others briefed on the deliberations.

The report said military leaders provided President Trump with a menu of possible actions against Iran. But the president, seeking a narrowly focused response that wouldn’t draw the US into broader military conflict with Iran, asked for more options.

Fabian Hinz, of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, blogged that while questions remained about the debris, it appeared to be Iranian-made.

“While the images appear real, neither the date the photos were taken nor their location can be verified,” Hinz wrote, adding that the photo “is much more likely to be a Quds 1” missile made in Iran than another type of missile used in the past by the Houthis.

The attacks, carried out with an estimated 20 drones and a number of cruise missiles, hit their targets 17 times at the Abqaiq oil refinery and the Khurais oil field Saturday morning.

Meanwhile, crude-oil prices that had spiked in the wake of the attack began dropping Tuesday after Saudi Arabia said it would fully restore production by the end of the month following the strikes — contradicting analysts who said it could take months.

Trump, speaking during a fundraising trip to California, said he was willing to open the country’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve to ensure stability in the world’s oil markets.

“I don’t think I need to, but I’m willing to do it,” he said.

Trump also said he would rather not meet Iranian President Hassan Rouhani at the UN next week.

“I never rule anything out, but I prefer not meeting him,” he said after Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ruled out talks “at any level” with the US amid the rising tensions.