# [FLASH] Reports: Iran Missile Barrage Hits Jordan, Kuwait As US-Iran Clash Engulfs Hormuz

*Tuesday, July 14, 2026 at 11:08 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-07-14T23:08:13.164Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, UnitedStates, Jordan, Kuwait, StraitOfHormuz, Missiles, Drones, Energy
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/14478.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Iranian forces are reported to have launched ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and drones at U.S. bases in Jordan and at Kuwaiti naval assets, while U.S. airstrikes continue inside Iran and naval clashes erupt in the Strait of Hormuz. The fight is spilling onto Gulf Arab territory and into the world’s most critical oil chokepoint, raising acute risk to energy flows, regional governments, and global markets overnight.

## Detail

Iran and the United States appear to have crossed a new threshold of open confrontation across the Gulf on the night of 14 July, with multiple reports between 22:00–23:05 UTC of Iranian missile and drone barrages targeting U.S. positions in Jordan, U.S. vessels near the Strait of Hormuz, and Kuwaiti naval and civilian sites. This marks a dangerous broadening of the conflict into the sovereign territory and territorial waters of key oil producers and transit states.

Confirmed and claimed details:
- Around 22:07–22:22 UTC, Iranian media and regional outlets reported a “heavy naval clash” between IRGC and U.S. Navy forces in the Strait of Hormuz, with additional OSINT indicating IRGC use of Shahed-136/101 drones, Arash-2 loitering munitions and short-range ballistic missiles against U.S. bases and vessels (Reports 3, 24).
- At 22:49–23:03 UTC, multiple sources reported Iranian ballistic missiles launched toward Jordan, with at least four missiles reportedly aimed at the Amman area (Reports 7, 13). Observable launches were geolocated to Tabriz and likely Urmia in northwestern Iran (Reports 6, 15).
- Jordanian air defenses fired interceptors—likely Patriot-class—over Amman shortly after, with visual evidence of launches (Reports 14, 16–17). Iran’s army then claimed a kamikaze drone strike on the staging area for F‑18 fighters, a residential building, and a large equipment hangar at Al‑Azraq air base in Jordan (Report 4). Battle damage and casualties remain unconfirmed.
- In parallel, Kuwait’s Defense Ministry stated that Iranian forces attacked a Kuwaiti Navy vessel, wounding four, and that Iran launched toward Kuwait one ballistic missile, five cruise missiles, and 33 drones, with impacts on civil infrastructure and debris falling in multiple locations (Report 53). This is a formal government claim of hostile Iranian action against a non-combatant Gulf state.
- U.S. operations continue: fresh OSINT at 23:02 UTC indicates U.S. airstrikes on the Iranian 388th Mechanized Assault Brigade base near Bampur in southeastern Iran (Report 22), part of a widening U.S. strike pattern already hitting multiple Iranian military sites.
- Politically, Donald Trump has publicly threatened to attack Iranian power plants and bridges “next week” if Tehran refuses to negotiate, while stating he has ordered that Iranian oil facilities not be struck to avoid wrecking the global economy (Reports 5, 10, 12, 30–32). Iran has announced it is withdrawing from commitments under a memorandum with the U.S. (Report 11), further eroding diplomatic restraints.

Human and industry stakes:
Civilians in Jordan and Kuwait have now been brought into the line of fire, with reported hits on residential structures near Al‑Azraq and confirmed injuries aboard a Kuwaiti naval vessel. U.S. and allied aircrews, logistics personnel, and contractors at Jordanian bases are under direct missile and drone threat. For Kuwait, even limited physical damage to infrastructure will sharpen domestic pressure on the ruling family to demand restraint from Washington or, conversely, to seek stronger air defense guarantees.

For shipping, any perception that IRGC missiles and drones are operating freely around Hormuz will rattle tanker crews, insurers, and charterers. Naval clashes between IRGC and U.S. forces raise the risk of misidentification and collateral damage to commercial vessels in one of the tightest straits on the planet.

Military and security implications:
Operationally, Iran is demonstrating the ability and willingness to fire ballistic and cruise missiles from deep inside its territory (Tabriz, Urmia) at U.S. basing hubs in Jordan—beyond the immediate Gulf. Combined with multi-vector drone swarms and reported attacks on U.S. and Kuwaiti naval assets, Tehran is signaling it can stretch U.S. air defenses and create dilemmas across several theaters simultaneously.

The reported 100% hit rate at King Faisal Air Base in Jordan in a prior strike (Report 18) and the current volley toward Amman, if verified, suggest gaps in allied missile defense coverage and could force rapid redeployment of U.S. air defense batteries and additional Patriot/THAAD assets into Jordan and Kuwait. That rebalancing could leave other areas thinner, including key energy infrastructure in Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Politically, Kuwaiti confirmation of direct Iranian attacks may push the GCC toward a more overt alignment with Washington, but also risks internal backlash if Gulf publics perceive their countries becoming launchpads or targets in a U.S.–Iran war they did not choose.

Market and economic pressure:
Energy markets face immediate upside risk. Any credible threat to shipping through Hormuz—through which roughly a fifth of global crude and significant LNG volumes transit—will be rapidly priced into Brent and Dubai benchmarks. Even if flows remain physically uninterrupted in the next 24 hours, insurers will reassess war risk premia for tankers and LNG carriers, raising freight costs.

Kuwait and Jordan, both reliant on stable external financing, could see sovereign spreads widen if conflict exposure deepens. GCC equity markets, particularly shipping, airlines, tourism, and petrochemicals, are vulnerable to a sentiment shock. Gold and U.S. Treasuries are likely to attract safe‑haven flows; EM FX and high‑beta equities may see pressure as traders reduce risk ahead of a possible U.S. strike wave on Iranian power and transport infrastructure.

What to watch in the next 24–48 hours:
- U.S. confirmation: Pentagon or White House statements on damage and casualties in Jordan, the scope of Kuwaiti impacts, and any downed U.S. assets.
- Follow-on strikes: whether Washington accelerates timelines and expands target sets inside Iran, especially against power plants, bridges, or coastal missile batteries.
- Hormuz shipping posture: changes in U.S. and allied naval rules of engagement, convoying of tankers, or temporary pauses in sailings by major tanker operators.
- GCC response: official Kuwaiti, Saudi, and Emirati positions on the Iranian strikes, and any visible moves to raise alert levels or seek UN Security Council action.
- Iranian targeting pattern: whether Iran continues to hit Jordan and Kuwait, or begins to range further afield toward Israel or deep into Saudi/UAE infrastructure.

The conflict has shifted from contained U.S.–Iran tit‑for‑tat strikes toward a dispersed, regionalized confrontation directly touching the security of U.S. allies and the arteries of the global energy system. Markets will trade this as a live escalation risk, not a one‑off incident.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
High immediate upside pressure on crude and refined products, with insurance premia for Gulf shipping and tankers likely to jump. Gulf sovereign and regional credit risk widens; flight-to-quality into USD and gold likely; EM FX and risk assets exposed. Defense, surveillance, cyber, and energy infrastructure names could see bid; airlines and shipping equities face downside.
