# [WARNING] US–Israel Iran Strike Prep Surges as Pakistan Forces Deploy to Saudi

*Monday, May 18, 2026 at 1:22 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-18T13:22:14.242Z (4h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, Israel, UnitedStates, Pakistan, SaudiArabia, MiddleEast, Oil, EnergyMarkets
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7194.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 12:20–12:48 UTC, US and Israeli preparations for renewed strikes on Iran reached their highest tempo since last month’s ceasefire, with media citing potential action as early as this week. Simultaneously, Reuters-confirmed Pakistani deployments of thousands of troops, fighter jets, drones and air defenses to Saudi Arabia under a defense pact signal a more formalized regional bloc in the current Iran war. These moves sharply raise escalation risk and potential threats to Gulf oil infrastructure and shipping.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

At 12:20 UTC on 18 May 2026, Sky News–sourced reporting indicated that the US and Israel are undergoing their most intense preparations for renewed attacks on Iran since a ceasefire was agreed last month, following a weekend call between Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (Report 2). At 12:48 UTC, a New York Times–cited update reinforced that the US and Israel are conducting their most intensive preparations since the ceasefire for possible renewed strikes on Iran as early as this week (Report 3). At 12:39 UTC, Al Arabiya–cited reporting stated that Iran has agreed to a long-term nuclear freeze instead of full dismantlement in a revised proposal (Report 4), suggesting active nuclear and sanctions diplomacy intertwined with war planning.

Concurrently, Reuters-based reports at 12:27 and 12:55 UTC (Reports 25 and 52) confirm that Pakistan has deployed around 8,000 troops, an estimated 16 JF-17 fighter jets, drones and HQ-9–class air defense systems to Saudi Arabia under a mutual defense pact signed last year. The force is combat-ready and could expand to as many as 80,000 Pakistani troops if required. This is explicitly framed as occurring “during the Iran war,” indicating an operational rather than purely deterrent posture.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

On the Israeli side, preparation activity is being driven by the Netanyahu government and the IDF high command, in coordination with US Central Command and the Trump administration’s national security team. Any renewed large-scale strike campaign on Iran will ultimately be authorized by President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu.

On the opposing axis, Iran’s supreme leadership and IRGC command remain decisive actors. The reported nuclear freeze proposal, carried via Al Arabiya, implies involvement of Iran’s foreign policy and nuclear negotiating teams, likely under guidance from the Supreme National Security Council.

On the Saudi–Pakistani side, the deployment involves the Pakistani military chain of command and Saudi defense leadership, operating under a previously negotiated defense pact. JF-17s and Chinese-made HQ-9 air defense systems, reportedly financed by Riyadh, deepen Saudi dependence on Pakistani operators and Chinese-origin technology.

3) Immediate military and security implications (next 24–48 hours)

The combination of US–Israeli strike preparation and active Pakistani–Saudi force deployment materially raises the probability of a renewed, broader conflict phase:

- Iran will likely heighten readiness of its ballistic missiles, drones, and naval/IRGC units in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz to deter or respond to strikes.
- Gulf energy and desalination infrastructure, as well as US bases and Israeli assets, face heightened risk of Iranian or proxy retaliation if strikes commence.
- Pakistani forces in Saudi Arabia expand Saudi air-defense and combat aviation capacity, potentially freeing Saudi resources for offensive or extended defensive operations and deepening the war’s multinational character.
- Iranian proxies in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, and Yemen may accelerate contingency planning for multi-front pressure against Israel, US forces, and Gulf states.

4) Market and economic impact

Energy: The core risk is disruption to oil flows from the Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz and direct damage to Iranian and potentially Saudi or Emirati oil and gas infrastructure. Even in the absence of strikes, credible preparation and the visible Saudi–Pakistani military axis will support a geopolitical risk premium in Brent and WTI. Any confirmed kinetic action against Iranian export terminals, pipelines, or tankers could trigger a >5–10% spike.

Shipping: Insurance premia for vessels transiting Hormuz, the Gulf of Oman, and Red Sea approaches are likely to rise, increasing costs for crude and LNG shipping. Tankers with Iranian, Iraqi, and Saudi liftings will be closely watched.

FX and rates: Safe-haven demand for USD, JPY, CHF, and US Treasuries should increase on escalation risk. Regional currencies (Iranian rial, Pakistani rupee, some Gulf peg credibility) could face pressure; Pakistan’s alignment and potential entanglement may weigh on its sovereign risk spreads.

Equities and sectors: Energy majors, shale producers, oilfield services, and defense contractors stand to benefit from heightened tension, while airlines, logistics, and energy-intensive industries may underperform on cost and volatility concerns.

Crypto and gold: Gold should see safe-haven inflows; Bitcoin and other crypto could experience speculative buying as a perceived hedge, a dynamic underscored by Report 5 noting a major institutional purchase of 24,869 BTC between 11–17 May at an average ~$80,985.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Watch for concrete triggers: unusual US or Israeli air/naval movements into strike positions, public warnings to shipping, or evacuation advisories for non-essential personnel in the region.
- Diplomatic tracks may accelerate, with European and Gulf intermediaries attempting to lock in or publicize Iran’s reported long-term nuclear freeze to avert strikes.
- Iran will likely issue escalatory rhetoric and possibly conduct limited signaling actions (missile tests, naval harassment) short of full confrontation.
- Pakistani and Saudi authorities may formally brief the public or legislatures to frame the deployment as defensive, while Iran and its allies will portray it as encirclement.
- Markets will trade headlines; any confirmed strike or direct attack on oil infrastructure, tankers, or US/Israeli bases would warrant immediate further alerting.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
High risk of renewed strikes on Iran and visible regional alignment (Pakistan–Saudi, US–Israel vs Iran) increase probability of disruption to Gulf oil exports and Iranian production. Expect upside pressure on crude benchmarks, higher volatility in energy equities and tankers, safe-haven flows into gold and USD, and pressure on regional FX and sovereign spreads. Crypto may see bid as geopolitical hedge, amplified by large recent Bitcoin accumulation.
