# [FLASH] Reports: Iran and Proxies Hit Multiple US, Gulf Targets as Saudi Missile Alerts Sound

*Saturday, July 18, 2026 at 9:29 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-07-18T09:29:40.837Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, UnitedStates, SaudiArabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, MiddleEast
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/15177.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Overnight strikes and alerts across Jordan, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain and now Saudi Arabia mark a clear expansion of the Iran–US confrontation from targeted exchanges into a region‑wide pressure campaign. With 14 US soldiers now confirmed killed and Tehran vowing a shift to “attack and total destruction,” Washington, Gulf governments, and energy markets are being pushed toward choices that could reshape oil flows and security guarantees in the Gulf.

## Detail

Iran and aligned militias have broadened the battlefield over the past several hours, turning a series of discrete strikes into a multi‑country confrontation that directly touches the world’s core energy corridor.

Between roughly 08:00 and 09:05 UTC on 18 July, multiple OSINT and media reports indicated:
- [Report 1] At 08:50 UTC, 14 US soldiers were confirmed killed in the Middle East. This follows earlier reports of Iranian missile strikes on US assets, including a major US fuel terminal in Kuwait and a base in Jordan.
- [Report 20] Around the same window, Mohsen Rezaei, senior military adviser to Iran’s Supreme Leader, used a televised interview to declare that the policy of “negotiation and war simultaneously” has ended, threatening a move within 2–3 days to a doctrine of “attack and total destruction” beyond Iran’s borders if the US continues military action.
- [Report 23] At 08:12 UTC, missile alerts were reported activated twice overnight in Saudi Arabia—over the Al‑Kharj area and Yanbu port—described as apparently the first Iranian missile launches toward Saudi territory in the current escalation.
- [Report 21] At 09:02 UTC, reports from Sulaymaniyah, northern Iraq, described a UAV strike on what is characterized as an ammunition depot at an American base area, attributed to the Shiite axis.
- [Report 22] Concurrently, additional reports stated that Iran conducted attacks last night in Jordan, Bahrain, Iraq, and Kuwait, with CBS cited as reporting US wounded in earlier Iranian attacks on Jordan.
- [Report 24] In response to the deteriorating security picture, the US State Department and Canada’s Foreign Ministry updated travel warnings overnight, advising citizens to avoid travel to the Middle East due to escalation risks.

These developments are layered on top of earlier verified Iranian strikes on a US fuel terminal in Kuwait and reported hits on Kuwaiti power and desalination infrastructure, and US retaliatory strikes on bridges and a desalination plant in Iran’s Hormozgan Province, which have already disrupted water and power for multiple Iranian villages.

The human stakes are now explicit: at least 14 US soldiers dead, US personnel wounded in Jordan, and civilians and workers across several Gulf states exposed to missile, drone, and infrastructure strikes. Populations in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Jordan, Iraq, Bahrain, and Iran are facing air-raid alerts, power and water interruptions, and the prospect of rapid escalation that could overwhelm civil defense systems.

For governments, this is morphing from a contained US–Iran exchange into a test of alliance commitments and red lines. Riyadh appears to have been targeted for the first time in this round; if confirmed, Saudi leadership will face pressure to respond or be seen as vulnerable. Kuwait, Bahrain, and Jordan are absorbing blows directed at US forces and facilities on their soil. Washington, confronting double‑digit US military fatalities and explicit Iranian threats of “total destruction,” will be pushed to decide within days whether to cap the confrontation or strike deeper into Iranian territory and command infrastructure.

Militarily, the pattern points to Iran and its proxies leveraging distributed missile and UAV capabilities to hit US and partner infrastructure across several countries simultaneously, complicating US air defense allocation and stressing Patriot and regional systems. The apparent willingness to fire toward Saudi territory and strike near US ammunition depots in Iraqi Kurdistan signals that rear‑area sanctuaries and logistics nodes are increasingly at risk. The geography of strikes—Jordan, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, and potentially Saudi Arabia—maps onto key air, land, and maritime routes that support US and coalition operations and shield Gulf energy infrastructure.

Market and economic pressure will intensify. Each additional Gulf state touched by missile alerts raises insurers’ war‑risk assessments for tankers calling at ports such as Yanbu, Jubail, and Kuwait’s export terminals. Even before any verified hit on a major export facility, traders will price higher probability of disruption to flows through the northern Red Sea and the wider Arabian Gulf. Brent and WTI are likely to see a bullish reaction, with options skew widening as desks hedge tail‑risk of a direct US–Iran clash. Gold and US Treasuries typically gain in such risk episodes; regional equity markets and sovereign bonds for Iraq, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia could face selling pressure, particularly in banks, airlines, tourism, and port operators. The updated US and Canadian travel warnings are an early signal of tourism and aviation demand erosion into the region if this persists.

In the next 24–48 hours, the key pressure points to watch are:
- Any formal US statement acknowledging the 14 deaths and outlining a response; a commitment to further strikes inside Iran or against IRGC leadership would materially raise war risk.
- Saudi confirmation or denial of Iranian missile launches toward Al‑Kharj and Yanbu, and any sign of Saudi or GCC‑coordinated military retaliation.
- Additional Iranian or proxy attacks on desalination plants, power infrastructure, or export terminals that would move from perceived risk to realized disruption of oil, gas, or refined product flows.
- Shifts in naval posture: US carrier and destroyer movements, or new Iranian threats to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea.
- Diplomatic activity—emergency UN Security Council meetings, Gulf Cooperation Council sessions, or back‑channel mediation—that might indicate an off‑ramp or, conversely, hardening of positions.

A miscalculation in this environment could escalate quickly into a direct Gulf war with global economic consequences; market and policy responses over the next 48 hours will signal whether actors are preparing for containment or a much broader confrontation.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
High immediate upside pressure on crude and refined products, Gulf shipping risk premiums, gold, and defense equities; downside risk for regional equities and high-yield sovereigns (Iraq, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi) and for EM FX exposed to oil-import costs. Watch US rates and dollar for safe-haven bid if escalation continues.
