The 2026 Iran war: a strategic intelligence survey at Day 9

Operation Epic Fury — the joint US-Israeli military campaign launched against Iran on February 28, 2026 — has produced the most significant Middle East conflict since the 2003 Iraq invasion.** The assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in the opening strike triggered Iranian retaliation across a dozen countries, the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a second Israeli ground invasion of Lebanon, and oil prices breaching $100/barrel for the first time since 2022. As of March 8, 2026 (Day 9), Iran’s military capability is severely degraded — ballistic missile launches down 90% from Day 1 — but the conflict shows no signs of resolution. Trump’s demand for “unconditional surrender” and the absence of a clear exit strategy have raised alarm among military analysts that the war could settle into what the International Crisis Group calls “a grinding cycle of degradation, endurance, and reconstitution.” This report surveys all active theaters as of March 8.


The Strait of Hormuz is functionally closed for the first time in modern history

The world’s most critical energy chokepoint has experienced a near-total traffic collapse. Daily vessel transits plummeted from ~153 per day to just 3 on March 7 — a 98% reduction. Not a single oil tanker has made a normal daytime transit since March 1. The closure was achieved not through mines or a conventional naval blockade, but through a combination of IRGC drone and unmanned surface vehicle (USV) attacks on commercial shipping, the wholesale withdrawal of maritime insurance, and GPS/AIS electronic warfare affecting 1,650+ vessels.

The IRGC formally declared the strait closed on March 2, then modified on March 5 to target only Western-allied shipping. In practice, virtually no commercial traffic is moving. At least 12 commercial vessels have been struck since February 28, including the US-flagged tanker Stena Imperative at Bahrain port, the Malta-flagged container ship Safeen Prestige (the first containership casualty), and the Angolan-flagged supertanker Sonangol Namibe — hit by the first confirmed Iranian kamikaze USV attack. The UAE-flagged tugboat Musaffah 2 was sunk on March 6 while assisting a stricken vessel, killing 4 seafarers — prompting an IMO Secretary-General condemnation. IRGC claimed further drone strikes on the tankers Prima and Louise P on March 7.

The US has achieved total naval dominance in the Gulf. CENTCOM Admiral Brad Cooper confirmed the destruction of 30+ Iranian naval vessels by March 5, rendering Iran’s navy “combat ineffective.” Key losses include the 40,000-ton drone carrier IRIS Shahid Bagheri, the Soleimani-class catamaran IRGCN Shahid Sayad Shirazi, four of seven frigates, both Bayandor-class corvettes, and the Kilo-class submarine Tareq. In a historic engagement on March 4, the USS Charlotte (SSN-766) torpedoed the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena south of Sri Lanka — the first US submarine sinking of a warship since World War II — killing 87 crew with 61 still missing. Defense Secretary Hegseth called it “quiet death.”

Despite this dominance, the US Navy cannot reopen the strait. Iran achieved closure through asymmetric means — cheap drones and USVs — while the insurance market collapse has done the rest. Major P&I clubs issued 72-hour cancellation notices; Lloyd’s of London temporarily withdrew reinsurance. Major shipping lines — Maersk, CMA CGM, Hapag-Lloyd, MSC, NYK — have all suspended Hormuz transits. Approximately 147 container ships (~470,000 TEU) are trapped west of the strait, along with 55 Chinese-flagged vessels, 15,000 cruise passengers, and an estimated 20,000 stranded seafarers. Qatar has declared force majeure on LNG exports, potentially removing 20% of global supply. Kuwait followed suit on March 7. Iraq is shutting down Rumaila oil field operations.

The Houthis, critically, have not resumed Red Sea attacks despite rhetorical solidarity with Iran. Internal debate and the pragmatic memory of the 2025 US-Houthi ceasefire appear to be restraining the group. However, Bab el-Mandeb traffic surged to 34 crossings on March 7 — a 48% daily increase — as trade reroutes from the paralyzed Gulf. BIMCO and Intertanko have warned that Houthi resumption is expected. In a separate maritime escalation, Ukrainian naval drones sank the Russian-flagged LNG tanker Arctic Metagaz in the central Mediterranean on March 3, killing none but diverting at least three other sanctioned Russian LNG tankers from the sea.


Civilian casualties are mounting across every theater

The aggregate human toll of the first nine days is staggering and accelerating. Iran has absorbed the largest share, with the Iranian Red Crescent reporting 1,332+ killed as of March 7, while the independent Hengaw human rights group estimated 2,400+ dead including 310 confirmed civilians by March 4. Over 6,668 civilian sites have been targeted according to Iranian authorities, including 65 schools and 32 medical facilities. The most controversial incident is the February 28 strike on the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab, which killed approximately 175 people, mostly schoolgirls. On March 8, Bellingcat published geolocated video evidence showing a US Tomahawk missile striking an IRGC facility adjacent to the school — directly contradicting the Trump administration’s claim that the school was hit by an Iranian missile. Human Rights Watch has called for a war crimes investigation.

In Lebanon, the November 2024 ceasefire collapsed on March 2 when Hezbollah launched its first cross-border strikes since the agreement, targeting Haifa’s Mishmar al-Karmel missile defense facility. Israel responded with massive airstrikes — 600+ Hezbollah targets struck by March 6 — and a ground incursion launched March 3. The Lebanese Health Ministry reports 217+ killed and 798+ wounded since March 2. The IDF killed Hezbollah intelligence chief Hussein Makled, a Hamas commander in Tripoli, and at least five IRGC Quds Force commanders (three in a Beirut hotel strike on March 8). Three UNIFIL Ghanaian peacekeepers were wounded when an Israeli strike hit their base in Qouzah on March 6.

Gaza remains in prolonged agony. The cumulative death toll since October 2023 exceeds 75,000 (with independent epidemiological studies suggesting the true figure exceeds 100,000). An estimated 92% of housing stock has been destroyed, and water infrastructure is virtually nonfunctional — only 3 liters per person per day available versus the WHO emergency minimum of 15. The Phase 1 ceasefire expired March 1; Hamas rejected an Israeli extension proposal, and Israel blocked aid entry on March 2. The population is stockpiling food in fear of a repeat of the 2024 famine.

In the West Bank, settler violence surged: 6 Palestinians killed between March 2–8, including the shooting deaths of two brothers in Qaryut village, a 27-year-old in Masafer Yatta, and three men near Ramallah. Yesh Din tracked 50+ settler violence incidents in just the first four days of the Iran war. Israeli casualties from Iranian strikes stand at approximately 11–12 dead, with at least 40 buildings damaged in Tel Aviv. Gulf state casualties include fatalities in Bahrain, Kuwait (including 6 US soldiers from the 103rd Sustainment Command killed by an Iranian drone), the UAE (4 killed, 112 injured), and Saudi Arabia (2 killed March 8). Total US military deaths have reached 8.


Israel has re-invaded Lebanon with multiple divisions

The IDF ground incursion, launched March 3 from Metula toward Tal al-Nahas, has expanded rapidly. At least four major formations are deployed: the 91st “Galilee” Division (eastern sector), 210th “Bashan” Division (Mount Dov/Shebaa Farms), 146th Reserve Division (western sector), and the Givati Brigade (which has taken the most casualties — 14+ wounded including 8 in a single rocket strike at Zarit outpost on March 6, with Finance Minister Smotrich’s son among the lightly injured). On March 4, IDF Arabic spokesman Avichay Adraee issued evacuation orders for all civilians south of the Litani River — affecting 250–300 settlements including Tyre and Nabatieh.

The deepest incursion came on March 7 when Israeli helicopters conducted a landing operation along the Lebanon-Syria border in the Bekaa Valley, striking Nabi Chit — killing 41 people including three Lebanese Army soldiers. Hezbollah fighters engaged advancing troops. The IDF claims to have killed 200 Hezbollah fighters since March 2. The Lebanese government took the extraordinary step of outlawing Hezbollah’s military activities on March 2, ordering arrests and the repatriation of IRGC-connected individuals. The Lebanese Army withdrew from at least seven border positions.

UNIFIL’s 10,000+ peacekeepers remain on the ground but are increasingly caught in the crossfire. Before the escalation, Lebanon had documented 2,036 Israeli ceasefire violations in the last three months of 2025 alone. US officials told MTV Lebanon they consider the ceasefire “over” and “will not interfere to stop Israel’s attacks on Lebanon.”


Kurdish groups are mobilizing but have not crossed into Iran

Five major Iranian Kurdish opposition parties formed the Coalition of Political Forces of Iranian Kurdistan (CPFIK) on February 22, with a sixth joining March 3. The coalition includes KDPI, PAK, PJAK/YRK, Komala, and Khabat — collectively fielding several thousand fighters in the Qandil Mountains. PJAK’s armed wing YRK, assessed at 1,000–3,000 fighters (many women), is considered the most battle-hardened for mountain guerrilla warfare. The CIA has reportedly been arming Kurdish forces near the Iran-Iraq border for several months, while Israel has held talks with Kurdish insurgent groups for approximately a year, targeting the towns of Oshnavieh and Piranshahr for potential seizure.

Iran has responded preemptively and aggressively. The IRGC has conducted approximately 196 drone and missile attacks on Kurdistan Region positions since February 28, targeting PAK bases near Erbil, PDKI headquarters in Koya, and Komala camps in Zargwez, Sulaymaniyah. On March 7 alone, six attacks struck Erbil in a 40-minute span, and strikes expanded to the Sulaimani area. Two people were killed in overnight attacks. Iran’s Ali Akbar Ahmadian warned that Kurdistan Region facilities could be targeted on a “massive scale.” All Kurdish groups have denied that a ground offensive into Iran has begun, though PAK forces have moved to positions near the border “on standby,” and a Komala official said forces were ready to cross “within a week to 10 days.”

Turkey is monitoring anxiously. The PKK announced its intention to disarm and dissolve in May 2025, and Turkish intelligence (MIT) reportedly warned Iran about Kurdish fighters attempting to cross the border. Trump initially expressed support for a Kurdish offensive (“I think it’s wonderful”), then walked it back on March 7.


Ballistic missile warfare has reached unprecedented scale

The combined US-Israeli campaign struck over 1,700 targets in Iran in the first 72 hours. By March 5, Israel alone had conducted 2,500 strike sorties using 6,000+ munitions, while the US launched 2,000 munitions at 2,000 targets. B-2 stealth bombers hit hardened underground missile facilities, B-52s struck command posts, and the war saw the first operational use of the LUCAS one-way attack drone, the “Black Tomahawk” stealthy cruise missile variant, and the Precision Strike Missile. An Israeli F-35I achieved the first air-to-air kill in 40 years, downing an Iranian Yak-130 over Tehran. CENTCOM reports that 60%+ of Iran’s ballistic missile launchers and 80% of its air defenses have been destroyed.

Iran’s retaliation has been massive but rapidly diminishing. Tehran fired over 500 ballistic missiles and ~2,000 drones since February 28, with approximately 40% aimed at Israel and 60% at US regional targets. The deadliest single strike killed 8–9 people in Beit Shemesh on March 1. Iran used cluster-bomb warhead ballistic missiles over central Israel on March 5, and Kheibarshekan missiles struck Israel’s Haifa oil refinery on March 7 in retaliation for the Tehran oil facility strikes. The UAE reported 189 ballistic missiles and 941 drones launched against it, achieving a 92.5% intercept rate. Jordan intercepted 49 projectiles. Strikes also hit Qatar’s Al Udeid Air Base, Saudi Arabia’s Prince Sultan Air Base vicinity, Bahrain’s naval facilities, and even Azerbaijan and Cyprus.

A critical concern: Israel may be running low on Arrow interceptors. Some assessments suggest Israel can sustain defense for only 10–12 more days at the current consumption rate. Arrow-3 production has been tripled, but restocking takes time. Iran’s remaining ballistic missile stockpile is estimated at ~1,000 (from a pre-war 2,500), with launch rates declining sharply.


Oil infrastructure is now a deliberate target on both sides

On the night of March 7, Israel struck five Iranian oil facilities in and around Tehran for the first time in the war — the Aghdasieh oil warehouse, Tehran Refinery, Shahran oil depot, a Karaj oil depot, and an oil production transfer center. Massive fires produced toxic black smoke that blanketed Tehran (population ~10 million), with residents reporting “black rain” — oil-saturated precipitation. Four oil company employees were killed. Tehran’s governor imposed 20-liter fuel rationing with long queues forming at stations. Parliament Speaker Qalibaf warned: “If the war continues like this, there will be neither a way to sell oil nor the ability to produce it.”

Iran immediately retaliated by striking Haifa’s oil refinery with Kheibarshekan missiles. Tehran also expanded its targeting to desalination infrastructure — a potentially existential escalation for Gulf states. On March 8, an Iranian drone struck a desalination plant in Bahrain (services reportedly unaffected). The previous day, the US struck a freshwater desalination plant on Qeshm Island, cutting water supply to 30 villages. Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi accused Washington of setting the precedent. Chatham House analyst Neil Quilliam called the Bahrain desalination attack a “major escalation” — moving from economic to existential targeting. Gulf states depend overwhelmingly on desalination: 90% of Kuwait’s drinking water, 86% of Oman’s, and the majority of Bahrain’s comes from approximately 400–450 plants lining the Persian Gulf. Most have minimal strategic water reserves.

Brent crude reached $101.19/barrel on March 8 — up 28% over the week and above $100 for the first time since July 2022. WTI hit $107.06. VLCC freight rates reached an all-time record $423,736/day. Approximately 9 million barrels/day are off the market due to facility damage and precautionary shutdowns. US gasoline prices jumped to $3.45/gallon; European diesel prices doubled; Asian jet fuel prices rose ~200%.


Washington demands unconditional surrender with no exit strategy

The Trump administration’s stated objectives have expanded dramatically since February 28. Ambassador Mike Waltz told the UN Security Council the goals were to dismantle missile capabilities, degrade naval assets, disrupt proxy militia supply chains, and ensure Iran “never ever can threaten the world with a nuclear weapon.” By March 6, Trump was demanding “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER” and pledging to “Make Iran Great Again (MIGA!).” He told Axios he wanted to be “personally involved” in selecting Iran’s next supreme leader. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt estimated the war would last 4–6 more weeks.

Critically, the Pentagon’s own classified briefings to Congress revealed no intelligence suggesting Iran was planning to attack US forces first — directly undermining the administration’s “imminent threat” justification. Secretary Rubio told reporters the US “knew there was going to be an Israeli action” and that “this would precipitate an attack against American forces” — essentially acknowledging the US followed Israel into war. War Powers Resolutions failed in both chambers along near-party lines (Senate 47–53, House 212–219). Senator Tim Kaine stated: “Even in a classified setting, they could produce no evidence, none, that the US was under an imminent threat.”

The pre-war buildup was the largest US Middle East deployment since 2003: 50,000+ troops, two carrier strike groups (with a third en route), 12 F-22 fighters deployed to Israel (the first US offensive weaponry stationed there), and B-2/B-1/B-52 bomber operations. Six US soldiers were killed by an Iranian drone in Kuwait on March 1; total US deaths stand at 8 as of March 8. The State Department initially told American citizens it was “not in a position to evacuate or directly assist” — affecting up to one million US nationals in the region.


Russia shares intelligence with Iran while China hedges carefully

The Washington Post reported on March 6 that Russia is providing Iran with targeting information for attacks on American forces, including locations of US warships and aircraft — the first indication that a major US adversary is participating, even indirectly, in the war. The White House downplayed the intelligence, saying it is “clearly not making any difference.” Russia officially condemned the strikes as “premeditated and unprovoked aggression” but has conspicuously avoided any commitment to military support. The January 2025 Russia-Iran strategic partnership treaty lacks a mutual defense clause. Moscow’s calculus is straightforward: higher energy prices fund the Ukraine war, US attention and munitions are diverted from Europe, and preserving bargaining space with Washington on Ukraine takes priority over defending Tehran.

China “firmly opposes and strongly condemns” the strikes (MFA spokesperson Mao Ning, March 2) but is equally unwilling to intervene. Beijing’s priorities are protecting the US-China trade truce and Trump’s planned March 31 visit. However, China faces significant economic exposure: 87.2% of Iran’s crude exports go to China, and approximately 40–50% of Chinese oil imports transit the Strait of Hormuz. China has 1.39 billion barrels in strategic storage (~120 days of net imports), providing a buffer. Unconfirmed reports from niche defense blogs claim Iran received 50 CM-302 supersonic anti-ship missiles in a $5 billion oil-for-weapons deal — China’s MFA categorically denies this, and no mainstream source has verified the claim.

At the UN Security Council, Russia and China jointly requested an emergency session on February 28, but no resolution has been adopted — the US holds the presidency for March 2026 and would veto any binding measure. In a surreal juxtaposition, First Lady Melania Trump chaired a UNSC meeting on “Children, Technology, and Education in Conflict” on March 2 — days after the Minab school strike.


Breaking developments in the last 24 hours (March 7–8)

Iran’s Assembly of Experts elected Mojtaba Khamenei (age 56), son of the slain Supreme Leader, as Iran’s new Supreme Leader on March 8. Trump called him a “lightweight” who “would not last long without his approval.” The IRGC pledged allegiance. Israel launched “extensive” new waves of airstrikes on Tehran, including the oil infrastructure strikes described above. An Israeli strike on a Ramada hotel in Beirut’s Raouche area killed 5 people including 3 IRGC Quds Force commanders. Iranian President Pezeshkian apologized to regional countries hit by Iranian attacks, calling them “miscommunication in the ranks” — drawing hardliner criticism. Saudi Arabia reported 2 killed from a projectile strike on March 8. Brent crude breached $101/barrel.


What OSINT analysts and military experts are saying

The analytical community is producing unprecedented real-time output. CTP-ISW (Critical Threats Project/Institute for the Study of War) is publishing twice-daily special reports identifying a three-phase campaign: (1) suppress air defenses and decapitate command and control [largely achieved]; (2) destroy defense industrial assets, especially missile production [ongoing]; (3) expand to economic/oil targets [initiated March 7]. They assess Iranian ballistic missile attacks have decreased 86–90% while drone usage has increased as missile stocks deplete.

War on the Rocks has published multiple analyses. Nima Gerami’s “Twice Bombed, Still Nuclear” argues the campaign cannot achieve nuclear disarmament without ground forces capable of bomb damage assessment — Iran’s fissile material stockpile is sufficient for multiple weapons if processed at an undeclared facility. A separate piece argues Iran’s regime will “take a beating rather than capitulate,” drawing parallels to Iraq in 1991.

Bellingcat’s March 8 investigation on the Minab school attack represents the most consequential OSINT finding of the war to date, potentially undermining the US administration’s narrative. They have also identified a previously unknown incendiary bomb type consistent with the US-produced CrashPAD (containing white phosphorus), and documented strikes on at least 15 Iranian police stations — suggesting a regime-destabilization strategy.

Phillips O’Brien on Substack assessed the combined air campaign as “the greatest concentration of airpower since World War II” and, in conversation with historian Timothy Snyder, argued the war has “less to do with Iran than with Trump’s domestic troubles and his eye on the 2026 midterms.” The International Crisis Group published a comprehensive 20-minute analysis warning that “the fundamental question is what winning means for the United States” and that without a theory of victory, the conflict risks becoming open-ended. ACLED’s Middle East Special Issue notes that Iran’s first five days of retaliation already equaled 60% of all Iranian attacks during the entire June 2025 Twelve-Day War.


Key inflection points to watch in the next 24–48 hours

Five dynamics will determine whether the conflict escalates or stabilizes in the near term. First, Houthi activation: nine days of restraint may be ending — any Houthi Red Sea attack would open a second maritime front and could trigger US strikes on Yemen. Second, Kurdish border crossing: Komala’s “week to 10 days” timeline from March 5 means a potential incursion window opening March 12–15, which would dramatically expand the ground war. Third, Arrow interceptor depletion: if Israel’s missile defense begins failing, the calculus shifts toward either ceasefire or escalation to ground operations. Fourth, Mojtaba Khamenei’s first orders: the new Supreme Leader’s initial directives will signal whether Iran is preparing for prolonged resistance or exploring an off-ramp. Fifth, desalination infrastructure: any further attacks on Gulf water plants could trigger a humanitarian crisis orders of magnitude beyond current levels, potentially drawing Saudi Arabia and the UAE into direct military action against Iran.


Probability estimates for escalation scenarios

Scenario Probability (48hr) Probability (1 week) Historical parallel Key driver
Houthi resumes Red Sea attacks 35% 65% 2024 Red Sea crisis Internal pressure + patron loyalty
Kurdish ground incursion into Iran 10% 30% 1991 Kurdish uprising post-Desert Storm CIA support + coalition timing
Israel-Iran direct ceasefire talks 5% 10% None (unprecedented) Trump rejects talks absent surrender
Strait of Hormuz partially reopens 5% 15% 1988 Tanker War escorted convoys US Navy escort program + insurance
Oil exceeds $120/barrel 25% 45% 1973 embargo; 1979 revolution Sustained Hormuz closure + Gulf output cuts
Iran nuclear breakout attempt 5% 15% North Korea 2006 Regime survival calculus
Saudi Arabia enters war against Iran 10% 20% None (unprecedented) Desalination/infrastructure targeting
US ground forces enter Iran 2% 5% 2003 Iraq invasion Trump repeatedly ruled out
Conflict contained to current scope 30% 20% June 2025 Twelve-Day War Mutual exhaustion + diplomatic backchannel
Humanitarian catastrophe triggers intervention 15% 30% 1991 Kurdish safe havens Water infrastructure targeting + refugee flows

A note on sourcing and methods

This assessment synthesizes reporting from 40+ distinct sources across five categories: major wire services and newspapers (Reuters, AP, Al Jazeera, BBC, CNN, NPR, Washington Post, NYT, Times of Israel, Jerusalem Post, Haaretz); military and defense media (USNI News, Naval News, Janes, Stars and Stripes, Defense Update, Army Recognition); think tanks and research institutions (CTP-ISW, CSIS, Chatham House, International Crisis Group, ACLED, FDD, Atlantic Council, Soufan Center, Brookings, Oxford Economics); OSINT investigators and analysts (Bellingcat, Windward Maritime Intelligence, Phillips O’Brien Substack, War on the Rocks, Oryx, Alma Research Center); and official sources (CENTCOM statements, White House briefings, Chinese MFA transcripts, UNIFIL statements, UN Daily Press Briefings, IMO statements). Wikipedia articles on the 2026 Iran war are being edited in real time and were cross-referenced against primary sources where possible. Iranian casualty figures carry the widest uncertainty band, with the Red Crescent, state media, and Hengaw producing estimates ranging from 1,332 to 2,400+. All figures should be treated as provisional given active fog of war conditions. The Bellingcat Tomahawk evidence on the Minab school strike, the Washington Post report on Russian intelligence sharing, and the unverified Global Defense Corp claims of Chinese CM-302 missile deliveries each carry different confidence levels and are flagged accordingly throughout. Maritime traffic data relies primarily on Windward’s AIS tracking, with the caveat that “dark” transits (AIS off) mean actual vessel movements may exceed reported figures.