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Haifa Was Hit, Missiles Rained on Saudi Arabia, Kuwait's Oil Burned — The Gulf War Spreading

| 3 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
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EuroBulletin24 editorial graphic

Iran's April 6-7 strikes hit a Haifa residential building killing four, damaged Kuwait's oil infrastructure, and fired seven ballistic missiles at Saudi Arabia. Here is the Gulf war nobody expected.

The Weekend That Expanded the War

Between Sunday April 5 and Monday April 7, 2026, the Iran war's geographic footprint expanded in ways that underscore the specific difficulty of containing a regional conflict whose specific parties have multiple distinct grievances and multiple distinct capabilities for acting on them.

In Haifa, Israel — a coastal city of approximately 280,000 people, Israel's third-largest — an Iranian missile struck a six-story residential building, killing four people. Israeli emergency responders were filmed working through rubble. Iranian missiles also struck multiple other sites across northern Israel, injuring multiple people. Iran separately used cluster munitions in an attack on the Tel Aviv area — with approximately 20 impact sites reported, including one at a school — a specific weapons type whose civilian harm potential is the subject of specific international prohibitions that Israel itself has used in past conflicts.

In Kuwait's Shuwaikh oil sector complex, Iranian drones struck multiple facilities including the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation headquarters and the Ministry of Oil complex. Fires erupted at multiple specific locations. The Kuwait Petroleum Corporation confirmed "substantial material damage" — a specific corporate communications phrase whose particular legal and financial dimensions affect specific contracts, insurance claims, and operational timelines.

Seven Iranian ballistic missiles targeted Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province energy infrastructure. Saudi air defenses intercepted all seven, but debris from the interceptions fell near specific energy facilities. Saudi Arabia closed the King Fahd Causeway linking it to Bahrain for several hours — the particular closing of a 15.5-mile bridge whose specific significance involves both the civilian traffic it carries and the specific military logistics it enables for US forces at the Bahrain-based 5th Fleet.

Why the Gulf States Are Targets

Iran's specific targeting of Gulf states whose governments host US military forces — UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia — follows a specific strategic logic whose multiple dimensions include: creating the particular fear-driven economic and political pressure that may influence those governments' specific positions on the war; imposing specific costs on the US military's regional logistics infrastructure; and demonstrating to the specific Gulf populations that hosting US forces creates specific risks for their specific cities and specific economies.

Kuwait's specific vulnerability is particularly relevant. Kuwait has hosted US forces since Operation Desert Storm in 1990-91, and specific US military bases in Kuwait have been targets of Iranian drone and missile attacks throughout the war. The specific Shuwaikh oil infrastructure attack takes the targeting beyond military bases to the civilian economic infrastructure whose particular damage creates the specific Kuwaiti domestic political pressure that is distinct from the military pressure on US forces.

Saudi Arabia's specific position is the most diplomatically complex. The kingdom has been pursuing a specific diplomatic opening with Iran since their 2023 normalization agreement — a specific rapprochement whose continuation Iran's attacks on Saudi territory directly undermine. Whether Saudi Arabia maintains its specific non-belligerent position despite the ongoing attacks or whether the specific accumulation of Iranian missile attacks on Saudi territory eventually produces a Saudi military response is the particular threshold question whose answer would significantly change the conflict's specific dynamics.

The IAEA Warning About Bushehr

Separately from the Gulf-state attacks, IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi issued a specific formal warning about the ongoing military activity near Iran's Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant: "Strikes near Iran's Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant could cause a severe radiological accident with harmful consequences for people and the environment in Iran and beyond."

Satellite imagery analysis indicated a recent strike approximately 250 feet from the operating reactor — a specific distance whose proximity to a functioning nuclear reactor creates the particular catastrophic risk whose articulation in formal IAEA language adds specific institutional weight to the warnings that civilians and governments around the Persian Gulf have been expressing throughout the war.

#Haifa#Saudi-Arabia#Kuwait#Iran#missiles#Gulf#war#spreading
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