# [FLASH] Footage Shows Iran Missiles Hit Jordan Airbase After Evading Patriot, Reports Say

*Thursday, June 11, 2026 at 5:06 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-11T05:06:34.596Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: US, Iran, Jordan, Missiles, Patriot, MiddleEast, Oil, Military
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/9958.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Verified footage timestamped around 05:00 UTC shows at least two Iranian ballistic missiles penetrating Patriot defenses and striking Muwaffaq Salti Airbase in eastern Jordan, a key hub for U.S.-linked operations. The apparent successful MRBM impacts deepen the U.S.–Iran exchange and raise pressure on Washington, Amman, and Gulf capitals as oil traders price in a higher chance of expanded strikes around the Strait of Hormuz.

## Detail

At approximately 05:00 UTC, multiple videos circulating from eastern Jordan show at least two incoming ballistic missiles evading Patriot air-defense interceptors and detonating inside or adjacent to Muwaffaq Salti Airbase, a critical Jordanian facility used by U.S. forces. OSINT accounts describe the munitions as Iranian MRBMs launched in retaliation for overnight U.S. Tomahawk strikes on targets in Iran, with explosions reported near both northern Iran and the Strait of Hormuz.

The footage, posted by regional conflict monitors, includes clear sequences of interceptor launches followed by at least two distinct ground impacts, with visible fireballs and shockwaves. Earlier reporting in this cycle already confirmed Iranian drone and missile launches against U.S.-linked bases in Jordan, Kuwait, and Bahrain; this new material specifically documents successful impacts despite active Patriot engagement. U.S. and Jordanian authorities have not yet released official casualty or damage figures, and battle-damage assessment is ongoing. However, the visual evidence substantially raises confidence that Iranian ballistic systems achieved at least partial penetration of a modern layered air defense.

The human and political stakes are immediate. Muwaffaq Salti hosts Jordanian personnel and U.S.-linked assets involved in regional air operations; any U.S. fatalities will dramatically constrain Washington’s diplomatic room for de-escalation and expose Amman to domestic and regional backlash for hosting foreign forces. Jordan’s monarchy, already balancing economic pressures and a large refugee population, now faces the risk of becoming a primary arena in a U.S.–Iran shadow war made overt. Families of deployed U.S. and coalition personnel, as well as local communities around the base, are directly in the line of fire.

Militarily, confirmed MRBM impacts on a defended airbase signal that Iran is willing to accept the risk of directly striking U.S-linked infrastructure in partner states, and that its missile forces can at least saturate or partially defeat Patriot batteries under real combat conditions. This will force immediate reassessment of base-hardening, dispersal, and missile-defense postures in Jordan, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and the UAE. U.S. planners now must weigh whether to conduct follow-on strikes deeper into Iran’s missile infrastructure, command nodes, or naval assets—actions that would materially raise the risk of attacks on shipping in or near the Strait of Hormuz.

Markets will trade this as a structurally higher Gulf risk premium. Crude benchmarks are vulnerable to a renewed upside break as traders shift from pricing a one-off exchange to a rolling campaign that credibly threatens export flows and insurance costs through Hormuz and the northern Arabian Gulf. Tanker operators, reinsurers, and commodity merchants will start recalculating route risk, war premiums, and exposure to Jordanian, Kuwaiti, and Bahraini ports and airspace. Airline routes over Jordan and northern Saudi Arabia could face reroutings, adding cost for carriers. Gold and U.S. Treasuries are likely to attract safe-haven inflows, while Middle East equities, especially aviation, tourism, and logistics names, face selling pressure.

Over the next 24–48 hours, watch for: (1) confirmed casualty and damage reports from Muwaffaq Salti, especially any U.S. deaths or significant aircraft losses; (2) formal U.S. and Jordanian statements signaling either intent to escalate (additional strikes or deployments) or attempts at firebreaks; (3) any signs of Iranian naval deployments or missile posturing near the Strait of Hormuz; (4) airspace and port restrictions from Gulf and Levant states; and (5) a second leg higher in crude and gold if Washington signals broader campaign options are on the table.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Sustained upside pressure on crude (Brent, WTI) with risk of further >5% spikes as traders price in higher probability of U.S. counterstrikes and disruption around Hormuz; safe-haven bid into gold and Treasuries; regional FX (Jordanian dinar implicitly backstopped but Gulf FX, TRY, EGP, PKR) and airlines/shipping equities exposed to volatility.
