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Iran Conflict 2026
8JUN

Bahrain runs low on Patriot interceptors

2 min read
09:58UTC

Bahrain's stock of PAC-3 interceptors is an estimated 87% depleted, leaving roughly eight rounds, and its 50-round resupply runs on an 18-month timeline that leaves the gap open now.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

Bahrain's air-defence shield is nearly out of interceptors with replacements 18 months off, so Iranian strikes keep landing.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Bahrain is a small Gulf island state that hosts the US Navy's Fifth Fleet headquarters. Iran has been attacking it regularly throughout the 2026 conflict. Bahrain's main defence against incoming missiles is the Patriot PAC-3 system, American-made interceptors that shoot down attacking rockets. Based on analysis of publicly available US government procurement documents, Bahrain had used up about 87% of its PAC-3 interceptors before the 3 June Iranian barrage, leaving only around eight rounds. The problem is that replacement missiles take about 18 months to produce and deliver through normal channels, and Bahrain was left out of an emergency resupply package the US Secretary of State approved in May for Qatar, Kuwait, UAE, and Israel. A 1 June notice shows 50 replacement rounds were ordered for Bahrain, but at standard timelines they would not arrive until late 2027. With just eight rounds left and Iran probing with repeated strikes, Bahrain's air defences are running on fumes.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Bahrain's PAC-3 gap has two structural causes. First, Bahrain was specifically excluded from Rubio's 2 May emergency resupply authorisation, which covered Qatar, Kuwait, UAE, and Israel. No public explanation was given for the exclusion; the most plausible operational reading is that CENTCOM assessed Bahrain's Fifth Fleet headquarters as covered by carrier-based defence rather than ground-based PAC-3. That assessment predated the 3 June barrage tempo.

Second, the 18-month standard procurement pipeline reflects a production-capacity constraint at Lockheed Martin's facility in Lufkin, Texas, which produces PAC-3 and PAC-3 MSE at approximately 240 rounds per year across all customers. That facility was already backlogged by Ukrainian HIMARS-adjacent component orders and South Korean PAC-3 upgrades. Emergency production surge would require Congressional authorisation of an accelerated multi-year contract, which has not been requested.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    With approximately eight PAC-3 rounds remaining, a sustained IRGC barrage on NSA Bahrain over two days could exhaust Bahrain's terminal-phase ground-based intercept capacity entirely, leaving the Fifth Fleet headquarters reliant on carrier-based AEGIS or undefended.

  • Consequence

    Bahrain's exclusion from the 2 May emergency resupply creates a public accountability record: if Fifth Fleet sustains damage from a missile that PAC-3 would have intercepted, the exclusion decision is on record as the proximate cause.

First Reported In

Update #117 · Iran's drone finds Kuwait's arrivals hall

Fortune· 4 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Bahrain / Gulf partners
Bahrain / Gulf partners
Bahrain's PAC-3 interceptor magazine sits at 87% depletion after absorbing IRGC salvos aimed at US bases; no resupply is scheduled before 2027, concentrating the intercept burden on US assets and Israeli Iron Dome and Arrow-3.
IAEA / Vienna process
IAEA / Vienna process
IAEA officials cited proliferation concerns over 440.9 kg of HEU unaccounted for after 97 days without inspector access; the Board session that opened 8 June cannot retroactively close the evidentiary gap its own resolution documents.
China
China
China absorbed the Shanghai Qianye designation by OFAC and opposes censure at the IAEA Board, arguing the verification gap was created by strikes rather than Iranian non-compliance, a framing it shares with Russia to protect the non-Western bloc's Board votes.
Russia
Russia
Putin reaffirmed at SPIEF on 6 June his offer to hold Iran's uranium stockpile as custodian, a proposal the IAEA's 97-day verification gap now renders undeliverable: no one can transfer or confirm a stockpile that has not been inspected.
United States / Trump administration
United States / Trump administration
Trump publicly asked Netanyahu not to retaliate and described a deal as 95% done; Rubio then acknowledged enrichment terms could take months. The 24-hour gap between the request and the Mahshahr strike removes the credible-restraint argument from US diplomatic leverage with Tehran.
Israel / Netanyahu government
Israel / Netanyahu government
Netanyahu struck the Mahshahr complex and missile sites inside Iran within 24 hours of Trump's public no-retaliation request, a second kinetic override of US counsel that confirms Israel will not allow Tehran to dictate the terms of the exchange.