# [FLASH] Iran missile barrage hits US bases in Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait

*Wednesday, June 10, 2026 at 2:17 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-10T02:17:31.031Z (4h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, energy, geopolitics, MiddleEast, oil, riskPremium
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/9746.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Iran’s IRGC has launched multiple ballistic missiles and drones at U.S. regional bases, with visual confirmation of at least one missile impact on the U.S. Fifth Fleet HQ area in Bahrain and reported strikes on Jordan’s Muwaffaq Salti/Al-Azraq airbase and Ali Al-Salem in Kuwait. This represents a sharp escalation beyond prior U.S. strikes on Iranian territory and directly threatens the security of Gulf oil and shipping infrastructure, significantly lifting Middle East risk premia across crude, products, and related assets.

## Detail

1) What happened:
Multiple real-time reports and video confirm that Iran’s IRGC has launched a new wave of medium‑range ballistic missiles from Khomeyn/Isfahan toward U.S. bases in the region. Key points:
- Visual confirmation of a missile impact at/near the U.S. Fifth Fleet HQ in Manama, Bahrain (Reports [1], [10], [11], [39], [77]).
- Iranian state media and multiple channels report missiles targeting Muwaffaq Salti / Al‑Azraq airbase in eastern Jordan, with air-defense activity near Amman ([19], [20], [51], [52], [76]).
- IRGC also announces a drone attack on Ali Al‑Salem Air Base in Kuwait ([6]), with explosions reported in Kuwait ([28]).
- This follows large-scale U.S. strikes on Iranian air-defense, radar, drone and missile infrastructure in southern Iran, including Qeshm, Bandar Abbas, and islands near the Strait of Hormuz ([67], [80]), an area critical to oil export and tanker traffic.

2) Supply/demand impact:
No direct hits on oilfields, export terminals, or tankers are newly reported in this batch, but the targeting of the Fifth Fleet and U.S. basing in Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait materially heightens the probability of:
- Disruption or harassment of tanker traffic through Hormuz.
- Pre‑emptive slowdowns/insurance repricing for Gulf loadings.
- Higher perceived risk to Saudi, Emirati, Kuwaiti, and Qatari infrastructure if the exchange escalates.
Physical supply is not yet impaired, but risk of even temporary outages or shipping disruption has risen meaningfully. Given existing alerts about previous hits near Ahvaz and Hormuz air defenses, this new salvo confirms the conflict is evolving into a sustained regional exchange rather than a one‑off.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- Bullish: Brent/WTI front end, Dubai spreads, product cracks (especially middle distillates), VLCC freight ex‑AG, war‑risk premia and insurance costs, gold, JPY, USD index (risk‑off bid), CDS on GCC sovereigns.
- Bearish: GCC equities, airlines, EM FX in the region.

4) Historical precedent:
Market reaction is likely analogous to early phases of the 2019–2020 tanker attacks and the January 2020 U.S.–Iran escalation (Soleimani strike/Al‑Asad retaliation), where crude rallied several percent on risk premium despite limited lasting physical disruption.

5) Duration:
Impact is likely to persist beyond a single session as both sides appear prepared for further rounds. Risk premium in energy and safe havens should stay elevated at least days to weeks, depending on whether tanker traffic or oil infrastructure is directly hit.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Dubai Crude, Gasoil futures, RBOB gasoline, VLCC AG-East freight, Gold, Silver, USD Index, USD/JPY, GCC sovereign CDS, Bahrain equities, Kuwait equities, Jordan sovereign bonds
