Bahrain's stock of Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) interceptors is an estimated 87% depleted, leaving roughly eight rounds, according to inventory analysis drawn from US Federal Register notices 1. PAC-3 rounds are single-use missiles that destroy incoming ballistic and cruise missiles, and every interception spends one from that count.
Marco Rubio's 2 May emergency resupply authorisation covered Qatar, Kuwait, the UAE and Israel; Bahrain was excluded . A 1 June Federal Register notice added 50 PAC-3 Missile Segment Enhancement (MSE) rounds for the island, but on a standard procurement timeline of roughly 18 months. New missiles ordered now do not arrive in time to matter for this barrage.
The IRGC struck Bahrain on 3 June even as its sirens sounded, part of the same Gulf campaign that hit Sirik Island and Kuwait on 1 June . The IRGC is probing a magazine it knows is emptying. A defender rationing eight rounds against an 18-month wait has to let some inbound threats through, which is the quiet arithmetic behind why the Kuwait International Airport terminal and the wider Gulf barrages get through. Bahrain hosts the US Fifth Fleet headquarters, putting the most prized target in the region under the thinnest cover.
