Iran fired ten ballistic missiles at Jordan's Azraq Air Base, which hosts US troops and aircraft, on 9 July; Jordan reported eight intercepted and no casualties. 1 The same day the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) struck Bahrain's Fifth Fleet headquarters, Kuwait and Qatar with one-way attack drones and missiles, and targeted a Patriot interceptor battery, a mobile surface-to-air missile unit, on Qatari soil. 2
Jordan is the first non-Gulf, no-coastline partner drawn onto the strike map, extending a retaliation that through 8 July had run as a US-Iran and Gulf-coastal exchange . Bahrain's interior ministry ordered residents to shelter and sirens sounded, while Kuwait shut its Flight Information Region (FIR), the block of airspace it controls, to all but vetted arrivals. 3 The IRGC named the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as its next target if US strikes continue. 4
Two systems that normally price escalation stayed still. Across 8 to 10 July The White House signed only an aircraft-tariff proclamation, unrelated to the war it was prosecuting, and nothing on Iran. 5 Trump had already called the 16 June ceasefire memorandum over , but a Truth Social line is not a signed instrument.
One reading holds the flat signals correct: Jordan stopped eight of ten missiles, no one died, and the Doha channel is paused rather than dead. 6 Aviation authorities lean the same way, reopening Qatar's Doha FIR to near-normal within a day and leaving Kuwait's as the only Gulf airspace still shut. 7 The named Army dead and the strait's near-closure still show real cost accruing inside that bounded exchange, so "contained" reads as a market bet rather than a settled fact.
