Military | Europe
All of Iran's Neighbours Are Being Hit — The Regional War Nobody Declared
The Iran war has hit targets in 8 countries. Here is the full map of the conflict's geographic spread and whether any of these countries are officially at war.
The Iran war has hit targets in 8 countries. Here is the full map of the conflict's geographic spread and whether any of these countries are officially at war.
- The Iran war has hit targets in 8 countries.
- The Iran war that began on February 28, 2026, between the United States, Israel, and Iran has, through the mechanism of Iranian retaliation across the region and the specific geography of US military basing, expanded its...
- The eight countries directly affected: Iran (primary theatre), Israel (direct Iranian missile and drone attacks), Saudi Arabia (Iranian attacks on oil infrastructure and military facilities), Kuwait (oil refinery strike,...
The Iran war has hit targets in 8 countries.
The Iran war that began on February 28, 2026, between the United States, Israel, and Iran has, through the mechanism of Iranian retaliation across the region and the specific geography of US military basing, expanded its physical footprint to strike or threaten territories in eight countries — none of which declared war, most of which are simultaneously victims of Iranian attack and hosts of US military operations.
The eight countries directly affected: Iran (primary theatre), Israel (direct Iranian missile and drone attacks), Saudi Arabia (Iranian attacks on oil infrastructure and military facilities), Kuwait (oil refinery strike, power and water facility damage), UAE (Habshan gas facility, Amazon server infrastructure), Bahrain (Batelco telecommunications, US Fifth Fleet headquarters attacked), Qatar (QatarEnergy tanker attacked at sea, Al Udeid Air Base targeted), and the Kurdish Region of Iraq (Erbil airport and US Consulate struck in February's initial Iranian retaliation).
The additional peripheral cases: Diego Garcia (British Indian Ocean Territory, ballistic missile attack), Cyprus (UK Akrotiri military base, British subsequently denied confirmed damage), and Azerbaijan (Iranian attacks denied by Iran as false-flag, Azerbaijani government lodging formal protests).
For the international legal landscape of this geographic spread: wars are typically defined by mutual declaration or at least by the formal acknowledgement of belligerent status. None of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, or Iraq have declared war on Iran; they are simultaneously being attacked by Iran and hosting the US forces whose strikes on Iran generate the Iranian retaliation. This creates a specific legal ambiguity about their status as belligerents versus war-zone bystanders.
For the NPR coverage that most clearly stated the regional scale: 'This is hitting the trading routes for Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the UAE, Saudi, Oman, Iraq, but that means liquid natural gas for Asia, fertilizer for Africa and jet fuel for the world.' The specific economic geography of the conflict — every major regional energy trading route passes through or near the affected area — is the reason the war's specific consequences extend to every economy that depends on Gulf energy exports.