# [WARNING] US-Israel Basing in Iraq, Wider Hormuz Operation Hint Escalation

*Monday, May 11, 2026 at 3:22 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-11T15:22:06.516Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: US-Iran-war, Israel, Iraq, Strait-of-Hormuz, oil, maritime-security, Middle-East
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6448.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 14:35 and 15:02 UTC, multiple reports highlighted an Israeli forward operating base in Iraq’s Najaf desert, established pre-war with US knowledge and now under active US ISR coverage, while Trump at roughly 15:01 UTC publicly floated renewing ‘Project Freedom’ as part of a broader military operation around the Strait of Hormuz. These developments point to an expanded US-Israeli operational footprint in Iraq and preparations for wider maritime action that could further destabilize the US–Iran war theater and global oil shipping.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 14:35:22 UTC (Report 5) and reiterated contextually at 14:46:54 UTC (Report 2), Israeli military sources are reported as saying that a forward operating base (FOB) in Iraq’s Najaf desert was established before the current war with Iran began, and that this was done with US knowledge. The earlier report notes that a US Bombardier E‑11A (a battlefield airborne communications/relay platform) is now flying over the Israeli FOB, indicating active US support and real-time connectivity for operations out of this site.

In parallel, at 15:01:26 UTC (Report 31), Trump stated he is considering renewing “Project Freedom,” specifying that US escorts in the Strait of Hormuz would be only one part of a broader military operation. This follows previous alerts on a US naval blockade of Hormuz and Iran’s rejection of US proposals, signaling a potential expansion beyond defensive escort missions to a larger campaign framework.

Additional context at 14:19:40 UTC (Report 19) describes sustained US aerial reconnaissance along Iran’s western border with multiple aircraft and drones daily, consistent with intensified targeting and battle management preparation.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

The key actors are:
- Israel: Operating the Najaf desert FOB inside Iraq; likely under IDF General Staff and intelligence directorates, potentially in coordination with Israeli Air Force and special units for Iran-focused missions.
- United States: Awareness of and apparent enabling of the FOB, plus current operation of an E‑11A over it implies US Central Command (CENTCOM) involvement and integrated C4ISR. Trump’s public comments suggest White House/NSC-level direction toward a broader maritime and possibly regional campaign.
- Iraq: Host territory but apparently not in control of the FOB, raising sovereignty and domestic political issues, particularly with Iran-aligned blocs.
- Iran: The adversary whose nuclear, military, and maritime capabilities remain the central target of US-Israeli planning.

3. Immediate military and security implications

The Najaf FOB’s existence and current US ISR support indicate a deeper, geographically distributed basing network directed at Iran, potentially for:
- Long-range ISR and strike against Iranian targets from Iraqi territory.
- Staging of special operations, electronic warfare, and drone operations into western Iran.
- Redundancy in case Gulf-based facilities come under Iranian missile or drone attack.

Trump’s reference to a renewed “Project Freedom” as a broader operation around Hormuz signals that US activity could evolve from a mostly declared blockade and escort posture to a more offensive or systemic campaign (e.g., wider interdictions, strikes on Iranian naval/logistics infrastructure, or expanded air presence). This raises the probability of:
- Direct clashes between US naval assets and Iranian Revolutionary Guard naval forces.
- Iranian responses via missile/drone attacks on Gulf oil infrastructure, shipping, and US bases.
- Expanded proxy activity in Iraq targeting the Najaf FOB and other US-linked sites.

The combined effect is a higher likelihood of miscalculation and further regionalization of the conflict, especially on Iraqi soil and in the Gulf’s chokepoints.

4. Market and economic impact

The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly a fifth of global oil trade; any indication that US operations there are shifting from defensive escort to a broader campaign increases perceived risk of partial or temporary flow disruption, even if no new kinetic event occurs immediately. The revelation and active use of an Israeli FOB in Iraq, backed by US ISR, underscore that the conflict has a deeper land-based dimension with the potential for:
- Elevated crude benchmarks (Brent, WTI) via increased geopolitical risk premia and insurance costs.
- Higher tanker day rates and war-risk premiums due to greater perceived threat to vessels.
- Emerging downside risk to global equities, particularly energy-importing economies in Europe and Asia that are already sensitive to the existing energy shock, as cited by Germany’s Vice Chancellor (Report 33).
- Support for safe-haven assets such as gold and, to a lesser extent, the US dollar and Swiss franc, as investors hedge against a wider Middle East war.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

Expect:
- Increased OSINT signatures (flight tracking, satellite imagery) of US ISR and possibly strike-capable aircraft patterns around western Iran, the Gulf, and Iraqi airspace near Najaf.
- Iranian political and military responses to the reports of an Israeli base on Iraqi territory; Tehran and aligned Iraqi factions may publicly denounce Baghdad and threaten or attempt attacks on the FOB or US-assisted assets.
- Clarifications or trial-balloon messaging from US officials about the scope and timing of any renewed “Project Freedom” concept, potentially framed as escalated escorts, expanded sanctions enforcement, or targeted strikes.
- Market sensitivity to any confirmation of operational changes in Hormuz, including shipping advisories, insurance adjustments, or visible rerouting of tankers.

If Iran responds with direct action against US or Israeli-linked facilities in Iraq or at sea, or if the US formally announces a broadened campaign in Hormuz, both the military risk and energy-market impact will escalate to Tier 1 (FLASH) territory.


**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Rising risk of further escalation around Hormuz and within Iraq supports a sustained geopolitical risk premium in crude prices and tanker rates, while increasing downside pressure on global risk assets if shipping or infrastructure is targeted. Heightened Iran war uncertainty also adds safe-haven support to gold and could weigh on currencies of major energy importers in Europe and Asia.
