Iran claims retaliatory strikes on US bases in Jordan, Kuwait and Bahrain
Iran said it carried out retaliatory strikes on US military targets in Jordan, Kuwait and Bahrain after recent American attacks on Iranian targets. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it launched two waves of operations and claimed to have hit 18 US military targets in Kuwait and Bahrain, including sites it identified as Ali and Ahmad Ahmad air force bases. It also said it struck and destroyed Sheikh Isa air base, while separately claiming it fired 12 ballistic missiles at the US command centre at Al-Azraq Air Base in Jordan.
Sponsored
The claims were made on Thursday, June 11, and were carried by Iranian state-linked outlets. In Jordan, the IRGC said the attack targeted Al-Azraq Air Base and its control centre, and said American fighter jets including F-15s, F-16s and F-35s were among the intended targets. In Bahrain, authorities reported damage to homes and vehicles in Hamad Town and Manama, and said an 11-year-old girl sustained minor injuries.
The Bahrain Ministry of Interior said the child was treated at the scene and that civil defence and ambulance teams had taken necessary measures. The latest exchange comes as US Central Command said American forces had carried out precision strikes in self-defence against Iranian military surveillance capabilities, communication systems and air-defence sites. CENTCOM said those targets posed a threat to US forces and international commercial ships transiting regional waters.
It said US Marine Corps, Air Force and Navy assets fired precision munitions on Iranian targets, and described the action as a response to what it called Iran's continued aggression. The Iranian claims and the US account together point to a widening confrontation involving military sites across several countries. The developments matter because they involve direct military action between Iran and the United States in a region that includes key bases and major shipping routes.
Sponsored
Bahrain and Kuwait host US military facilities, and the US statement linked its strikes to concerns about threats to commercial shipping in regional waters. Any further escalation could affect neighbouring states, military deployments and wider security calculations across the Gulf. The reported damage in Bahrain also shows how quickly such exchanges can spill beyond military installations and into civilian areas.
The incident sits within a broader pattern of rapid retaliation and counter-retaliation. The supplied material says the Iranian strikes were a response to the latest US attacks, while the US said its own strikes were aimed at reducing threats to personnel and shipping. The IRGC's claim of two waves of operations in Kuwait and Bahrain, together with the reported missile strike in Jordan, suggests a coordinated response across multiple fronts.
That raises the stakes for regional governments that host foreign forces or sit near key military infrastructure. What remains unclear is the extent of any damage at the claimed military targets in Kuwait, Bahrain and Jordan, and whether there were any casualties beyond the minor injury reported in Bahrain. The supplied material does not confirm whether all claimed targets were hit or how effective the strikes were.
#Iran #Claims #Retaliatory #Strikes #Bases
Sponsored

