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Persian Gulf Arab states intercept Iran missiles and drones

Mar 11, 2026, 05:17 GMT

Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates said they intercepted missiles and drones fired from Iran on Tuesday night and early Wednesday.

In separate statements, the four countries said their forces tracked and brought down the incoming projectiles.

Kuwait said its forces shot down eight drones after Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said at least two missiles targeted the Camp Arifjan base south of Kuwait City.

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Hormuz disruption tests limits of global energy markets

Mar 11, 2026, 03:05 GMT
•
Dalga Khatinoglu

Failure to restore shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is beginning to show what prolonged disruption could mean for global energy markets.

Early volatility has been sharp but manageable, yet the longer the disruption lasts, the greater the risk that physical shortages—rather than price swings—will drive the crisis.

In recent days, Iranian attacks have expanded to energy infrastructure across Arab Gulf states alongside the continued closure of Hormuz.

On March 9, an oil refinery in the United Arab Emirates was targeted. Qatar has halted liquefied natural gas production, while Iraq and Kuwait have each reduced oil output by roughly 70 percent.

Brent crude briefly surged more than 25 percent to $115 a barrel as markets opened Monday before retreating after the Group of Seven said it was considering releasing 300–400 million barrels from strategic reserves.

Prices later eased to about $98—still roughly 30 percent above prewar levels—suggesting markets are bracing less for an immediate collapse than for a sustained disruption.

Before traffic through Hormuz was disrupted, roughly 20 million barrels per day of oil and petroleum products passed through the corridor, most of it bound for Asia. In addition, about 330 million cubic meters of liquefied gas moved through the same route daily.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have diverted part of their exports through alternative pipeline routes, but those volumes remain well below what previously moved through the strait.

Energy consultancies including Wood Mackenzie and Kpler warned early that global markets could withstand severe volatility for only three to four weeks without a reopening of the waterway.

Strategic reserve releases could cushion the shock temporarily, but even a 300–400 million barrel release would offer only limited relief—particularly if attacks continue to damage infrastructure or delay the restoration of export capacity.

Released reserves would also need to be replenished relatively quickly, limiting their long-term utility as a buffer.

The gas market is even more exposed. About one-fifth of global LNG trade previously passed through Hormuz, and there are few viable substitutes for QatarEnergy’s supplies. Global gas prices have nearly doubled at a moment when European storage levels are at their lowest since 2022, with facilities less than 30 percent full.

Hormuz also carries a substantial share of global trade in sulfur and chemical fertilizers—a reminder that prolonged disruption could have broader consequences for food prices and inflation beyond the immediate energy shock.

The strategic stakes are becoming increasingly explicit. On Monday night, President Donald Trump warned that the United States would respond “20 times harder” if shipping through Hormuz were not restored.

On Tuesday, Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani responded on X with a defiant message: “The Strait of Hormuz will either be a strait of peace and prosperity for all or will be a strait of defeat and suffering for warmongers,” adding, “beware lest you be the ones to vanish.”

For now, markets are absorbing the shock. But the longer disruption persists, the less the outcome will depend on price volatility and the more it will hinge on physical supply—a shift that strategic reserves and alternative routes alone cannot offset.

Airstrikes reported across southern, central Iran overnight

Mar 11, 2026, 02:20 GMT

Several areas in southern and central Iran were targeted by US and Israeli airstrikes late Tuesday and early Wednesday.

Messages sent to Iran International reported strikes on an air defense site in Masjed Soleyman in Khuzestan province and the Shahid Rajaee port in Bandar Abbas.

Residents also reported repeated explosions on Kish Island and a strike on a military aircraft at Shiraz airport. Iranian domestic media said Shahrekord airport, Dashtestan in Bushehr province, and areas in Qeshm and Isfahan were also hit.

Israel ambassador details fresh strikes on IRGC targets, rejects oil price blame

Mar 11, 2026, 02:11 GMT

Israel’s ambassador to the US said on Tuesday Israel destroyed a ballistic missile launcher that fired cluster munitions into Israel, an IRGC underground complex for weapons of mass destruction, and Basij forces near Ilam.

"Back to something we reported two days ago, the oil depot that we hit into Iran. Some media outlets have reported that that's the reason for the spike in oil prices. Well, it's not the case. The oil depot belonged to the IRGC. It wasn't oil that's on the international markets. This was an IRGC source of funding, which we took out after the president's statements yesterday, we saw the price drop," Ambassador Yechiel (Michael) Leiter posted on X.

"And as soon as the Straits of Hormuz can be opened and guaranteed, we're going to see the prices drop back further. The main issue here is that we have to collapse this regime. Otherwise the issue of oil prices is going to be far more acute, because this country will have nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, which they can use to hold the entire world hostage. That isn't going to be going to defeat this regime. We're going to stop the proliferation of ballistic missiles, nuclear weapons and the exportation of terrorism," he added.

US must plan for Iran power vacuum, Mark Levin says

Mar 11, 2026, 01:37 GMT

Conservative commentator Mark Levin said on Tuesday the United States must carefully consider what happens after Iran’s navy, air force, missiles, and top leadership are destroyed.

"After we destroyed the Japanese regime in WW II, WE wrote their constitution and installed a government that would be aligned with us. We must give very focused thought to what comes after the Iranian regime's navy, air force, missiles, and top leadership are destroyed," Levin posted on X.

Levin warned that if a power vacuum is left, remaining forces in Iran, backed by China and Russia, could reclaim control.

White House does not rule out sending US troops to Iran

Mar 10, 2026, 23:07 GMT

The White House said on Tuesday President Donald Trump "does not rule options out” when asked about deploying American ground forces to Iran.

"As for boots on the ground, wisely the president does not rule options out as Commander in Chief," Karoline Leavitt said during a press conference at the White House.