# [FLASH] Reports: U.S. ATACMS Barrage Hammers Iranian Ports as Tehran Shuts Hormuz to Oil Trade

*Sunday, July 12, 2026 at 1:25 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-07-12T01:25:26.824Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: US, Iran, StraitOfHormuz, Oil, Energy, MiddleEast, Shipping, Missiles
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/14055.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

---

**Summary**: Open military confrontation between the U.S. and Iran has widened overnight, with U.S. forces firing ATACMS and HIMARS missiles from Kuwait and Bahrain and conducting broad airstrikes against Iranian ports and coastal bases. Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz and confirmed missile hit on a commercial vessel now threaten physical disruption to a waterway carrying roughly a fifth of global oil, putting energy markets, shippers, and Gulf governments under acute pressure.

## Detail

A major U.S.–Iran clash entered a more dangerous phase between 00:20 and 01:05 UTC, as multiple sources report a coordinated U.S. missile and air campaign against Iranian targets along the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman. This follows Iran’s declared closure of the Strait of Hormuz and an IRGC anti-ship missile strike that damaged a commercial vessel in the chokepoint. The immediate consequence is a credible, near-term threat to physical oil and container flows through Hormuz, alongside heightened risk of further Iranian retaliation against U.S. forces and allied Gulf infrastructure.

Confirmed and strongly indicated developments:
- Around 00:20–00:26 UTC (Reports 19, 24), OSINT accounts and mapping indicate U.S. airstrikes hitting multiple southern Iranian locations: Bushehr, Konarak, Chabahar, Bandar Abbas, Bandar Kangan, Qeshm Island, Jask, Minab, and later Bandar‑e Mahshahr (Report 12). Separate reporting notes strikes on Asaluyeh and a fishing pier at Bandar Dayyer (Reports 31–32), pointing to a broad coastal target set.
- A detailed assessment at 00:55 UTC (Report 11) states that more than 85 munitions, including ~30 ATACMS ballistic missiles, struck port infrastructure, the Bushehr airbase, the Choghadak‑Bushehr missile site, and Jask Naval Base. While this is secondary OSINT, it aligns with earlier, more fragmentary reports.
- Between 00:55 and 01:02 UTC, multiple posts (Reports 1, 13, 14, 29, 30, 47) describe ATACMS/HIMARS launches from Kuwait and Bahrain toward Iran, with video evidence referenced and trajectories over Iraq noted. This implies a theater-level U.S. strike package using long-range precision fires from Gulf partners’ territory.
- On the Iranian side, state-linked and maritime channels report more than 10 explosions in Jask and along the southern coast (Reports 2, 3, 5, 17), unknown high-altitude jets over Tehran and Iranian fighters scrambling (Reports 6, 16), indicating an active air defense posture and concern about follow-on waves or cruise missile strikes.
- Critically, Iran has publicly announced the closure of the Strait of Hormuz “until further notice,” tying reopening to a halt in U.S. military operations (Reports 20, 47, 48). UKMTO confirms a commercial vessel was struck in the Strait by Iran (Report 33), while additional reporting cites the IRGC’s claim of a cruise missile strike on a ship that had disabled its transponder.

The human and commercial stakes are immediate. Civilian mariners on oil tankers, container ships, and bulk carriers now face elevated risk of missile or drone attack, misidentification by Iranian forces, or collateral damage from ongoing strikes. Any damage to port infrastructure at Bushehr, Bandar Abbas, Chabahar, Jask, and Bandar‑e Mahshahr will disrupt local economies, refinery operations, and coastal communities reliant on fishing and maritime trade. Port workers and nearby urban populations are likely experiencing power, communications, and logistics disruptions.

Strategically, this is a significant shift from episodic proxy strikes to a direct, theater-scale exchange between U.S. forces and Iran. Use of ATACMS and HIMARS from Kuwait and Bahrain firmly implicates Gulf hosting states, increasing their exposure to Iranian retaliation—through missiles, drones, cyber operations, or attacks on energy infrastructure and desalination plants. Iranian air activity over Tehran suggests leadership is preparing for the possibility of decapitation or command-and-control targeting, which, even if not currently underway, will shape Iranian military and political decision-making.

For markets and supply chains, Hormuz is the fulcrum. Around 17–20% of globally traded crude and a major share of Gulf LNG exports transit this corridor. Even partial or temporary closure will force rerouting to storage, create tanker queues at Gulf ports, and rapidly lift war-risk insurance premiums for transiting vessels. Brent and WTI are likely to gap higher with volatility spikes; European and Asian refiners, particularly in Japan, South Korea, India, and China, face immediate procurement and freight cost uncertainty. Shipping equities, especially tankers, will see sharp repricing; Gulf sovereign spreads could widen on elevated conflict risk. Gold and other safe havens are positioned for inflows as investors hedge a wider Middle East war and disruption to global energy supply.

Key watch points over the next 24–48 hours:
- Whether any major tanker or LNG carrier is hit, seized, or turned back in Hormuz, which would move this from perceived to realized supply disruption.
- Verified damage assessments at Bushehr, Bandar Abbas, Chabahar, Jask, and Bandar‑e Mahshahr, especially to export terminals, refineries, and naval facilities.
- Iranian retaliation patterns: ballistic or cruise missile launches toward U.S. bases in the Gulf, Israel, or shipping lanes; proxy attacks via Yemen, Iraq, Syria, or Lebanon.
- U.S. and allied rules of engagement—whether Washington signals a capped punitive strike package or prepares for sustained operations.
- Insurance and freight market moves overnight in London and Asia, and any emergency OPEC+ or IEA consultations on potential supply adjustments.

If confirmed closure of Hormuz persists beyond 24–48 hours, the confrontation shifts from military crisis to systemic energy and shipping shock, with cascading effects on inflation expectations, central bank reaction functions, and global risk sentiment.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Near-term spike in crude benchmarks (Brent/WTI) and refined products is likely, with volatility in shipping equities, energy majors, defense contractors, and Gulf sovereign credit; safe-haven flows into USD, CHF, JPY, and gold probable. LNG, petrochemical, and insurance-linked names face downside risk from disrupted Gulf traffic and sharply higher war-risk premiums.
