# [FLASH] Reports: U.S. Strikes Deep Inside Iran as Tehran Claims Hits on U.S. Bases

*Thursday, June 11, 2026 at 1:26 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-11T01:26:38.173Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: US-Iran, Airstrikes, Gulf, Hormuz, Energy, MiddleEast
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/9933.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: U.S. airstrikes between 00:25–01:02 UTC have expanded from Iran’s south coast to major targets around Karaj and Varamin near Tehran, while Iranian state media claims drone and missile attacks on U.S. bases in Bahrain and Kuwait and on the Fifth Fleet. The exchange drags core population centers and critical energy–shipping nodes into a live U.S.–Iran confrontation, raising immediate risk for Hormuz traffic, regional militaries, and global oil markets.

## Detail

Between 00:25 and 01:02 UTC on 11 June, open sources report a sharp widening of U.S.–Iran hostilities, with U.S. airstrikes hitting a string of Iranian military and strategic locations well beyond earlier coastal targets, and Tehran claiming retaliatory attacks on U.S. bases in the Gulf.

**What we know so far (time-ordered):**
- Around 00:25–00:27 UTC, multiple reports indicated U.S. airstrikes on Karaj in northern Iran, with explosions near Payam International Airport. Additional strikes were reported on the Sirik area and coastal vicinity of Bushehr in southern Iran, likely targeting IRGC naval infrastructure (Reports 40, 41, 57).
- By 00:28–00:35 UTC, sources described repeated U.S. strikes on Karaj, with at least 10 explosions initially, later rising to 15+ (Reports 35, 34, 12). Explosions were also reported in Nazarabad and across western Alborz and eastern Qazvin provinces (Report 15).
- Around 00:32–00:39 UTC, new explosions were reported in Bandar Abbas and unconfirmed reports suggested strikes near Kharg Island (Reports 32, 36, 59). Separately, five explosions were reported in Bandar Abbas (Report 9).
- At 00:39–00:44 UTC, posts stated that U.S. airstrikes hit the city of Varamin, just south of Tehran (Report 29), indicating extension of the air campaign into the capital’s immediate hinterland.
- By 00:49–01:02 UTC, reports specified that the Bidganeh missile facility in Karaj had been bombed (Report 6) and that USAF bombed IRGC barracks in Hesarak, western Karaj (Report 2). Electricity and telecommunications were reportedly cut in parts of Karaj (Report 1), suggesting infrastructure or grid damage. Videos circulating online purport to show U.S. strikes in Karaj and at Kangan port (Reports 17, 18, 31, 33).

On the Iranian side:
- From 00:12–00:20 UTC, Iranian state media and aligned channels claimed that Iranian army drones targeted the U.S. Fifth Fleet in Bahrain and that IRGC forces destroyed 18 targets at U.S. airbases in Kuwait and Bahrain in two waves (Reports 20, 19). IRIB also claimed a retaliatory strike on the Fifth Fleet (Report 16).
- Local sources in Bahrain at 00:28–00:46 UTC confirmed air-raid sirens and reported a missile/drone threat but no explosions or interceptions heard so far (Reports 38, 28). This casts doubt on the scope of Iranian claims, but it confirms that U.S. installations and Gulf shipping hubs are on high alert.
- Iranian air-defense activity has been reported over Bushehr (Report 26), and a Shahed-131/136 drone was seen flying over Iran toward a U.S. base in the region (Report 27). An IRGC Aerospace Force commander threatened to “turn the region into hell” for U.S. forces (Reports 4, 5).

**Human and industry stakes:**
The strikes have moved beyond remote coastal batteries into dense urban and industrial areas around Karaj and Varamin, where civilian populations, airports, and key logistics corridors sit side-by-side with missile and IRGC sites. Power and telecom cuts in Karaj suggest immediate disruption to hospitals, transport, and command-and-control. Any mis‑targeting or collateral damage to Payam Airport or nearby infrastructure would complicate domestic air travel and emergency response.

For Gulf ports and shipping, repeated explosions in Bandar Abbas, reported strikes around Sirik (IRGC naval base), and air-defense activity near Bushehr put commercial tankers, LNG carriers, and insurers on edge along the main approaches to the Strait of Hormuz. Even without confirmed ship hits in this 30‑minute window, risk premiums and potential self-imposed slowdowns by shipowners are likely.

**Military and security implications:**
The U.S. appears to be prosecuting a broad strike package: missile facilities (Bidganeh), IRGC barracks, coastal and possibly island-linked sites (Sirik, Bandar Abbas, Kangan, unconfirmed Kharg). This suggests a campaign aimed at degrading Iran’s missile and naval strike capacity, including anti-ship assets tied to any attempt to close Hormuz.

Iran’s claimed drone and missile attacks on U.S. bases in Bahrain and Kuwait, even if partly exaggerated, cross a threshold: direct strikes (or credible attempts) against U.S. forces on allied territory. Shahed drones in flight and air-defense engagement near Bushehr show Iran is at least attempting to generate pressure across a wide arc. The risk of miscalculation with U.S. and allied forces on high alert in tight Gulf airspace is climbing.

**Market and economic pressure:**
This escalation directly threatens the world’s main oil chokepoint. Reports in the broader stream already show Iran claiming a closure of Hormuz and U.S. Central Command denying it. Today’s reported hits and near‑hits around Bandar Abbas, Sirik, Bushehr and possibly Kharg amplify trader fears that even a partially contested strait will curtail crude, condensate, and LNG flows from Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, and Iran itself.

Oil prices are likely to spike beyond the initial move on earlier strikes, with Brent and Dubai benchmarks at risk of a multi‑dollar gap. Tanker day rates and war‑risk premiums will likely widen; insurers may tighten cover or demand surcharges for transits near Iran’s coast. Gold and U.S. Treasuries should see safe‑haven demand, while Gulf equity markets and EM FX tied to energy importers could come under pressure.

**What to watch in the next 24–48 hours:**
- **Shipping behavior:** AIS tracks and any diversion, slowdown, or loitering patterns for tankers/LNG carriers near Bandar Abbas, Sirik, and Hormuz approaches.
- **Verified damage:** Independent imagery or official confirmation of the status of Bidganeh missile site, IRGC barracks in Karaj, Kangan and potential Kharg facilities, and any collateral damage to airports or civilian infrastructure.
- **Iran’s follow‑through:** Evidence of actual impact on U.S. bases in Bahrain/Kuwait (satellite, on‑the‑ground footage, U.S. statements) vs. purely declaratory strikes.
- **U.S. decision cycle:** Whether Washington sustains, pauses, or escalates strikes overnight, especially if U.S. assets or Gulf allies suffer casualties.
- **Hormuz narrative:** Convergence or divergence between Iranian claims and commercial/Allied military reporting on navigational status; any formal navigation warnings or de facto closure by shippers themselves.

Together, these developments mark the most direct U.S.–Iran exchange in years, now touching both Iran’s urban heartland and the immediate vicinity of the world’s key energy artery.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Severe upward pressure on crude benchmarks, freight and war-risk insurance, with possible gaps in Brent and Dubai. Gold and safe havens (USD, JPY, CHF) bid; risk assets in Asia under pressure (Nikkei already sliding). Watch for immediate repricing of Gulf energy equities, widening EM credit spreads, and potential disruption premia in tanker and LNG routes.
