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Iran Conflict 2026
12JUN

Five salvos at Israel in eighteen hours

3 min read
09:18UTC

Iran sustained five missile salvos from Sunday night through Monday afternoon, forcing Israel's air defences into continuous operation while the IRGC claims its newer weapons have not yet been fired.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Five salvos in 18 hours targets Israeli interceptor reload cycles, not merely warhead stockpiles.

Iran fired five missile salvos at Israel across roughly 18 hours from Sunday night through Monday afternoon. Air defences intercepted most incoming missiles. Debris reached residential areas — fragments fell near the Knesset and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, and one person was burned by shrapnel in East Jerusalem.

The sustained tempo, rather than any single salvo, is the pressure. Arrow and David's Sling interceptors cost $2–3 million each. Israel's cabinet approved NIS 2.6 billion (~$826 million) in emergency defence procurement last week , days after Semafor reported the country was running critically low on ballistic missile interceptors . The IDF denied the shortage; Israel Hayom suggested the Semafor report was Iranian disinformation. But the procurement approval itself — the largest emergency defence spend since the war began — confirms the burn rate is a recognised problem at cabinet level, whatever the current inventory.

The warhead design compounds the cost. Since the IRGC announced its shift to payloads exceeding one tonne , Iran has paired heavy kinetic warheads with cluster submunitions — testing two failure modes simultaneously. Heavy warheads stress individual interceptors; cluster payloads ensure dispersed damage even when interception succeeds, as Friday's 11 confirmed impacts in central Israeli towns demonstrated . An IRGC spokesman stated Monday that most missiles fired so far were produced "a decade ago" and that weapons manufactured after the initial strikes remain unused 1. If older inventory is already achieving residential-area impacts and forcing emergency procurement, the Kheibarshekan and Fattah hypersonic systems the IRGC claims to hold in reserve represent a capability ceiling Israel has not yet been asked to defend against.

The trajectory since Friday is an escalation in effect rather than volume: from the first confirmed impacts in central Israeli towns, to debris on the seat of government and Christianity's holiest church, to sustained multi-day bombardment that treats each salvo less as an attack than as an entry on a ledger — each one subtracting interceptors that cannot be replaced at the rate they are expended.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran launched five separate waves of missiles at Israel over roughly 18 hours. Israel's missile defence network — a layered system including Arrow, David's Sling, and Patriot batteries — shot most of them down. However, there is a critical mechanical constraint that the raw intercept statistics obscure: every time a defensive interceptor fires, the launcher must reload before it can fire again. That reload takes time, crew effort, and logistics. If an adversary attacks in continuous waves, it can open windows during which defences are temporarily unable to respond. Iran appears to be deliberately probing whether those reload windows exist and how long they last. The cluster munitions that have already penetrated Israeli defences in previous days add a second pressure: some warheads are now getting through regardless of how quickly systems reload.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

Iran is pursuing two complementary pressures simultaneously: cluster munitions that penetrate defences regardless of intercept rate, and multi-wave timing that probes reload windows. These are not redundant strategies — one degrades confidence in the defensive shield while the other degrades the shield's physical availability. Together they create a layered exhaustion campaign that Israeli and US planners did not publicly model before this war began.

Root Causes

Iran's salvo pattern reflects a strategic calculation that Israeli air defence reload capacity — not warhead accuracy — is the primary vulnerability to exploit. The IRGC's concurrent claim that newer missile inventory remains unused suggests this operational tempo is sustainable using older stock, preserving modern systems for a potential second phase.

Escalation

The shift from episodic salvos to five waves in a single operational period marks a doctrinal change from signalling to active attrition. Sustained salvo pressure historically triggers offensive escalation by the defending party once intercept confidence drops below roughly 85% — a threshold not yet confirmed as breached but under systematic test.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Sustained five-salvo daily tempo risks exhausting Israeli interceptor stockpiles faster than US emergency resupply logistics can replace them.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Israeli air defence saturation events, however brief, will accelerate domestic and military pressure for deeper offensive strikes inside Iranian territory.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    Iran's shift from episodic strikes to sustained attrition salvos marks a doctrinal transition indicating strategic confidence in missile inventory depth.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Cluster munitions combined with reload-window timing could produce the first mass-casualty missile event inside Israel from this war.

    Immediate · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #38 · Israel enters Lebanon; Hormuz pact fails

AJ Day 17· 17 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Five salvos at Israel in eighteen hours
Sustained multi-salvo bombardment forces continuous interceptor expenditure against a finite and expensive stockpile, while the IRGC's stated policy of holding newer systems in reserve raises the question of whether current Israeli defence architecture can absorb this attrition rate indefinitely.
Different Perspectives
Oil markets / Lloyd's of London
Oil markets / Lloyd's of London
Brent fell to near $87.33 on 80 per cent deal-probability pricing, but Lloyd's has not de-listed Hormuz from its war-risk register and shipping diversions continue at 139 vessels. Insurance markets are lagging futures: physical risk remains while financial markets have spent the good news before the paper exists.
India
India
Modi is expected to raise the deaths of three Indian sailors in the 11 June CENTCOM strike on the MT Settebello with Trump at G7 sidelines, the first non-party leader to put the blockade's human cost into a formal bilateral. New Delhi is also a major Iranian oil buyer whose import volumes the sanctions-relief terms will govern.
Israel (Netanyahu)
Israel (Netanyahu)
Netanyahu stated Israel is not party to the deal on 12 June; Defence Minister Katz ruled out the Lebanon withdrawal Iran's draft demands, inserting a third blocker the US-Iran negotiating channel cannot resolve. Israel's position tethers Hormuz reopening to a Lebanon settlement Washington has not brokered.
Pakistan (mediator, Sharif/Naqvi)
Pakistan (mediator, Sharif/Naqvi)
Sharif declared a final agreed text on 12 June before either principal confirmed it, running two Tehran visits in under a week without securing a written IRGC or Khamenei response. Islamabad's incentive to claim a diplomatic win outpaces its standing to deliver either capital's signature.
Iran foreign ministry (Araghchi)
Iran foreign ministry (Araghchi)
Araghchi declared digital signing within days while setting dilute-in-Iran as a non-negotiable red line on the 440.9 kg HEU stockpile, a standing Tehran position he cannot override without authorisation from Khamenei, reachable only by courier. The FM track is sprinting to close before the IRGC reasserts control.
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Vance called the deal still TBD on 12 June while CENTCOM downed Iranian drones over Hormuz for a second consecutive night and the White House register stayed blank. Washington holds the ship-out position on HEU and has not signed an Iran instrument in over 100 days of conflict.