# [FLASH] Reports: Israel Hammers Deep Into Iran as Kharg, Tehran Airport, Missile Sites Hit

*Monday, June 8, 2026 at 2:27 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-08T02:27:33.330Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: Israel, Iran, MiddleEast, Energy, Oil, Military, Airstrikes, Kharg
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/9487.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Israel’s air force and navy struck multiple targets across Iran between 01:21 and 01:55 UTC, including Tehran’s Mehrabad Airport, missile and air-defense sites in Tabriz, Kermanshah and Ilam, and a Kharg Island missile site near key oil export infrastructure. Brent spiked over 3% toward $97 as Iran closed airspace around Tehran and signaled potential missile retaliation, while U.S. officials reportedly told Israel they will not assist in any follow-on strike, reshaping military and diplomatic risk calculations overnight.

## Detail

Israeli forces have carried out the most extensive direct attack on Iranian territory in years, with confirmed and credible reports of coordinated air and naval strikes across central and western Iran from roughly 01:21 to 01:55 UTC on 8 June. The operation directly targets Iran’s power-projection tools—airbases, air defenses, ballistic missile sites, and drone facilities—while putting some of the country’s most critical transport and export nodes under threat. The move sharply elevates the risk of a sustained military exchange that could pull in Lebanon, Gulf states, and global energy markets.

**Confirmed details (timing, targets, sources)**
- Around 01:21–01:23 UTC, multiple OSINT accounts and regional channels reported explosions in Tehran and Karaj, with confirmations of Israeli airstrikes on Tehran by 01:21–01:27 UTC.
- At 01:26–01:27 UTC, the IDF issued an initial statement (Reports 17, 45, 64, 67) confirming that the Israeli Air Force struck “targets belonging to the Iranian terror regime in western and central Iran,” followed by reports of repeated strikes on western Tehran, Karaj, Kermanshah, Isfahan, and Urmia.
- Detailed target lists from multiple OSINT aggregators (Reports 12, 40, 66) indicate: Mehrabad Airport in Tehran; a drone assembly warehouse in Najafabad (Isfahan Province); a ballistic missile site near Tabriz; an air-defense position at Kahrizak near Tehran; and possible IRGC or leadership-linked facilities in Eslamabad‑e Gharb.
- Footage and imagery referenced in Reports 39, 51, 65 and 11 show smoke and damage at the Najafabad drone facility and sites around Isfahan. Separate posts cite “two significant columns of smoke” from Isfahan’s suburbs and heavy bombing of Karaj and Kermanshah.
- Naval involvement is reported: Israeli cruise or ballistic missiles were reportedly launched from the eastern Mediterranean (Reports 20, 49), implying a longer-range strike profile and layered attack.
- BossBot and KurdishFront reports (Reports 9, 24) state that a Kharg Island missile site was hit; earlier alerts already flagged damage to Kharg’s oil export terminal. Whether the latest strike compounds infrastructure damage or is limited to a nearby missile position is not yet clear.
- Iran has reportedly closed airspace around Imam Khomeini International Airport in Tehran (Report 4), indicating concern over further strikes or debris risk.
- By 01:55–01:58 UTC, multiple sources (Reports 3, 25) were claiming that the Israeli attack wave had concluded, though no formal ceasefire or de‑escalation statement is in place.
- A separate claim (Report 2) says the IRGC released footage of earlier ballistic missile strikes on northern Israel in defense of Hezbollah; this aligns with the broader ongoing tit‑for‑tat pattern but is not yet fully corroborated.

**Human, infrastructure, and state-level stakes**
Civilian and military personnel around Tehran, Karaj, Kermanshah, Isfahan and Tabriz have been under live fire for over half an hour, with strikes on or near major urban areas and an international airport. Any damage to Mehrabad or nearby neighborhoods threatens commercial aviation, domestic travel, and emergency response. If Kharg’s oil export systems sustain further hits, Iran’s ability to generate hard currency and fund state functions and proxies will be impaired, with spillovers for public finances and basic imports.

For regional governments, this is a qualitative shift: Israel is openly conducting large-scale combined-arms strikes deep in Iran proper, and Iran has both political and doctrinal pressure to respond with more than proxy fire. Lebanese, Iraqi, and Gulf civilians could see follow‑on missile, drone, or air defense activity; explosions have already been reported in Baghdad and Beirut (Reports 30, 57), though attribution remains unclear.

**Military and security implications**
Operationally, Israel is demonstrating capability to penetrate or saturate Iranian air defenses over multiple cities at once, while coordinating long-range naval fires. Target sets—ballistic missile bases, drone production, air defenses and possibly IRGC nodes—aim to degrade Iran’s strike capacity against Israel and its allies. If damage is significant, Iran’s near‑term ability to launch massed precision attacks could be blunted, but at the cost of a strong incentive to prove residual capabilities.

Iran’s closure of airspace around a major capital‑area airport, the reported waves of Iranian missile launches from Kermanshah/Urmia earlier in the night, and rhetoric from pro‑Iran voices calling for retaliation on Gulf states (Report 61) all point to an elevated risk of a second, larger Iranian strike package—possibly involving Gulf infrastructure or U.S. regional bases.

Compounding the risk, some reports claim Washington has told Israel it will not assist if Israel carries out another round of retaliation (Report 2). If accurate, this may restrain Israel but could also encourage Iran to test perceived gaps in U.S. backing, particularly against Gulf partners.

**Market and economic pressure**
Energy markets are already reacting. Brent has surged over $3 to around $96–97 (Reports 23, 28), with trades and algorithms now pricing in the possibility of sustained disruption to Iranian exports and, in a worst‑case scenario, to Gulf shipping if Iran chooses to escalate beyond Israel.

A confirmed, prolonged impairment at Kharg—handling a large share of Iran’s seaborne crude—would tighten the Atlantic and Asian crude balance, especially for buyers of medium and heavy grades. Insurers and shippers may start repricing voyages near Iranian waters and the Strait of Hormuz, and risk premia on tanker rates could rise quickly.

Cross‑asset signals show stress: South Korea has already halted trading after an 8% plunge in earlier sessions; China’s STAR 50 is set to open nearly 5% lower (Report 29), and a deepening Iran‑Israel exchange will add to global risk‑off, particularly in semiconductors, airlines, tourism, and EM equities. Gold and the dollar/yen safe‑haven pair are likely to catch flows; high‑yield credit and frontier sovereigns with oil‑import exposure may come under pressure.

**What to watch in the next 24–48 hours**
- **Iran’s kinetic response envelope:** Evidence of new missile or drone salvos from Kermanshah, Urmia, or coastal regions toward Israel or Gulf assets; any announcement of targeting “Gulf regimes” would be a red line for tanker traffic and energy prices.
- **Status of Kharg and export flows:** Satellite imagery, AIS data, and port operator statements indicating whether loading operations are slowed, halted, or re‑routed; watch for sudden drops in Iranian tanker departures.
- **Airspace and aviation disruption:** Expanded Iranian or regional airspace closures beyond Tehran; schedule changes for major carriers overflying Iran, Iraq, and the Gulf.
- **U.S. and Russian postures:** Changes in U.S. regional basing alert levels or naval deployments, and any Russian diplomatic or military moves in Syria or the Caspian that signal intent to shape escalation.
- **Domestic political pressure:** Israeli and Iranian internal narratives—calls for ‘decisive’ victory versus de‑escalation—will heavily influence whether this exchange pauses here or moves toward a more sustained regional conflict.

Traders, governments, and corporate risk managers should assume elevated volatility in energy, airlines, defense, and EM assets until there is clear evidence either of a negotiated pause or of escalation options being deliberately left on the table.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Brent is already up over $3 to roughly $96–97 on the Kharg strike and broader Iran-Israel exchange; sustained or follow-on damage to Kharg or other Iranian export infrastructure would threaten several hundred thousand to >1 mb/d of exports. Gold and safe havens likely bid, EM FX and high-beta equities under pressure, with outsized risk to energy-importing Asia and European inflation expectations; defense, cyber, and energy names likely see rotation in.
