# [FLASH] Reports: Iranian Missiles Pierce Patriot Shield, Hit U.S.-Linked Jordan Airbase

*Thursday, June 11, 2026 at 5:16 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-11T05:16:32.230Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, United States, Jordan, Missiles, Patriot, MiddleEast, Oil, Defense
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/9959.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: New footage timestamped around 05:00 UTC shows at least two Iranian ballistic missiles bypassing Patriot interceptors and striking Muwaffaq Salti Airbase in eastern Jordan. Visual confirmation of successful impacts on a U.S.-linked facility turns a contested strike narrative into a hard military and political fact, increasing pressure on Washington and Amman to respond and deepening oil-market anxiety over an uncontrolled U.S.–Iran escalation.

## Detail

Visual evidence emerging around 05:00 UTC indicates Iran’s overnight missile salvo achieved direct hits on Muwaffaq Salti Airbase in eastern Jordan, despite active Patriot air-defense engagements. Multiple clips from regional OSINT channels show at least two ballistic missiles evading interceptor trails and detonating on or near the base, with separate footage confirming distinct impact flashes. This significantly hardens the assessment that Iranian medium‑range ballistic missiles not only reached Jordanian airspace but penetrated U.S.-supplied defenses at a critical U.S.-linked facility.

The new material, posted by @Middle_East_Spectator at 05:00 UTC, depicts live intercept attempts followed by unmistakable impact signatures at Muwaffaq Salti. While casualty and damage figures are not yet independently verified, the videos contradict earlier optimistic narratives of clean interceptions and suggest at least partial failure of the Patriot shield. Confidence in the location and nature of the impacts is moderate-to-high given the consistency across multiple clips and timing aligned with previously reported Iranian strikes on Jordan and Gulf bases. Official U.S. or Jordanian confirmation remains pending, but silence or minimization will now compete with widely-circulated imagery in shaping global perception.

For people on the ground in Jordan, successful missile impacts turn an already tense night into a tangible security shock. Communities near the base, Jordanian military families, and U.S. personnel are now living under proof—not theory—that Iranian missiles can arrive with limited warning and that high-end Western defenses are not impermeable. Domestic pressure on the Jordanian monarchy to balance alliance commitments against homeland risk will increase. In the U.S., any U.S. casualties or visible damage could quickly become a political inflection point, with demands for stronger retaliation from hawks and urgent de-escalation appeals from those fearing a region-wide war.

Militarily, this is a critical data point in Iran’s contest with U.S. and allied air defenses. A demonstrated ability to land ballistic missiles on a fortified U.S.-linked base in Jordan, after also targeting facilities in Kuwait and Bahrain, broadens the geographic envelope of credible Iranian strike reach across the U.S. basing network. Commanders will reassess force protection, dispersal, and redundancy across CENTCOM’s footprint. Regional states hosting U.S. assets—especially those with Patriot-based shields—will quietly question how many salvos their networks can absorb, and at what political cost.

Market participants now face a more durable risk premium in energy and regional assets. Crude prices, already elevated on the initial Iran–U.S. exchange and earlier reports of MRBM strikes, are likely to see additional upside as traders price the greater probability of repeated tit‑for‑tat strikes, potential threats to Gulf export terminals, and higher insurance premia for shipping near Iran and the Strait of Hormuz. Gold and other safe havens should benefit from rising war‑tail probability, while regional equities—in Jordan and in Gulf hubs like Kuwait and Bahrain—face headline-driven volatility and possible fund outflows. Defense contractors tied to missile defense, ISR, and hardening of bases may see renewed bid as governments digest Patriot’s visible performance under stress.

Over the next 24–48 hours, the primary watch points are: (1) official U.S. and Jordanian damage and casualty statements, which will determine the scale of political response; (2) any follow‑on U.S. strikes inside Iran beyond Karaj and Varamin or new target sets such as IRGC bases or missile infrastructure; (3) Iran’s signaling—whether it frames this as a completed reprisal or threatens further barrages; and (4) explicit moves by regional states to restrict airspace, reposition U.S. forces, or quietly seek mediation. Markets will be especially sensitive to any indication that Iranian missiles might next be directed closer to major oil infrastructure, key shipping lanes, or high‑visibility U.S. carrier groups.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Confirms higher probability of sustained U.S.–Iran kinetic exchange and Jordanian exposure, supporting risk-off flows into gold and safe havens, upward pressure on crude benchmarks and shipping risk premia, and potential downside for regional equities and airlines while boosting defense sector names.
