# [FLASH] Iranian Missile Strikes Hit US Bases Including Fifth Fleet in Bahrain

*Wednesday, June 10, 2026 at 6:57 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-10T06:57:37.082Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, energy, oil, LNG, MiddleEast, geopolitics, riskPremium
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/9785.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Iranian sources report missile/drone strikes on US bases in Bahrain, Jordan and Kuwait, including the US Fifth Fleet HQ, in retaliation for US strikes near Hormuz. This represents a sharp escalation in direct US–Iran confrontation around the Gulf and materially increases the risk of disruption to traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, lifting crude and LNG risk premia.

## Detail

1) What happened:
Multiple reports in the last hour state that Iran’s Revolutionary Guards launched missile and/or drone attacks on US bases in Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait, explicitly including a strike on the US Fifth Fleet base in Bahrain and the Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan. These attacks follow US Central Command’s acknowledgment of strikes last night on Iranian air defenses, UAV control stations, and radar sites in the Hormuz area, in response to a downed US Apache helicopter. This is a direct, overt exchange of strikes between US and Iranian forces in and around the Gulf.

2) Supply/demand impact:
No confirmed disruption to oil or gas infrastructure or shipping has been reported yet, but the location and actors involved massively elevate tail‑risk around the Strait of Hormuz, through which ~20% of global crude and ~20–25% of LNG trade flow. Markets will rapidly price:
- Higher probability of harassment or attacks on tankers, mines, or missile fire near shipping lanes.
- Risk of temporary closure or self‑sanctioning (shipowners/insurers reducing liftings) if escalation continues.
Even a modest perceived increase in probability of a Hormuz impairment has historically been enough to move Brent and Oman/Dubai benchmarks several percent.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- Bullish: Brent, WTI, Dubai/Oman crude benchmarks; time spreads (backwardation) as near‑term supply risk rises; LNG spot benchmarks (TTF, JKM) on export-route risk from Qatar.
- Risk‑off flows: Higher gold prices, stronger USD and JPY, wider EM credit spreads, especially for Gulf sovereigns.
- Regional equities (GCC, airlines, shipping) face downside; energy equities upside.

4) Historical precedent and duration:
Analogues include the 2019 tanker attacks and the US killing of Qassem Soleimani, both of which generated 3–8% spikes in crude and a persistent geopolitical risk premium for weeks. Direct Iranian strikes on US bases are a further escalation step, closer to the January 2020 Iranian missile attacks on US forces in Iraq, which moved oil and safe‑haven assets meaningfully. Unless there is rapid de‑escalation, a sustained risk premium of several dollars per barrel is likely, with intraday volatility elevated.

This is a high‑impact, cross‑asset event with immediate implications for energy markets and broader risk sentiment.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Dubai Crude, JKM LNG, TTF Gas, Gold, USD Index, GCC Equities, US Defense Stocks
