US-Israel attacks on Iran: Death toll and injuries live tracker
Preliminary figures are 2,076 dead in Iran, at least 26 in Israel, 13 US soldiers and 28 killed in Gulf states.

Iran has accepted a two-week ceasefire, which began on Wednesday, followed by talks in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, after United States President Donald Trump agreed to suspend attacks on the condition that Tehran fully reopens the Strait of Hormuz.
The talks began on Saturday and failed to reach an agreement after 20 hours of negotiations. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the talks failed because of Washington’s “maximalism, shifting goalposts and blockade” while US Vice President JD Vance said: “The simple fact is that we need to see an affirmative commitment that they will not seek a nuclear weapon.”
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On Sunday, Trump ordered his own blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. The US military later said it will block all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports starting at 14:00 GMT on Monday.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Lebanon is not part of the ceasefire between the US and Iran and has continued to pound the country with air strikes for a 45th day.
Which countries have been attacked?
US and Israeli forces have struck Iran since February 28, hitting nuclear, military and civilian sites. In retaliation, Iranian forces have launched attacks on Middle Eastern countries where US troops are deployed as well as Israel.
So far, Iran has launched strikes across nine countries in the region: Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. An Iranian drone also hit a runway at a United Kingdom military base in Cyprus.
On March 28, Yemen’s Houthi rebels attacked Israel with a barrage of ballistic missiles – their first such strikes since the US-Israel war on Iran began.
Most of these attacks have been intercepted.
How many people have been killed or injured?
Below are the confirmed casualties across countries that have been subject to attacks as of Monday at 13:00 GMT.
Due to the rapidly evolving situation, all figures may change as more information becomes available.
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Iran – killed: 2,076, injured: 26,500
At least 2,076 people have been killed by US-Israeli attacks on Iran since February 28, Iran’s Ministry of Health says:
- The victims’ ages ranged from eight months to 88 years.
- At least 240 women and 212 children are among those killed.
More than 26,500 people have been injured, including at least 4,000 women and 1,621 children.
Israel – killed: 26, injured: 7,693
At least 26 Israelis have been killed and 7,693 wounded.
Israel’s Ministry of Health urged Israelis to rush to bomb shelters “with caution” when alerts are sounded, noting that people have been injured while running to shelters.
At least 180 people were wounded in Iranian missile attacks on the southern city of Dimona, home to Israel’s main nuclear facility, and nearby Arad in one of the most dramatic escalations since the US-Israel war on Iran began.
Iranian state television framed the March 21 strikes as a “response” to an attack on Iran’s Natanz uranium enrichment complex earlier in the day, marking a stark new phase of tit-for-tat attacks in the conflict.

US soldiers – killed: 13, injured: 200
The US military has confirmed 13 combat-related deaths across the region.
Additionally, one service member died of a “health-related incident” in Kuwait.
On March 13, Central Command (CENTCOM), the US military’s command responsible for operations in the Middle East, announced all six crew members were killed when a US refuelling aircraft crashed in western Iraq.
Bahrain – killed: 3, injured: dozens
Iranian missiles have targeted the headquarters of the US Navy’s 5th Fleet in Bahrain’s Juffair area multiple times.
The Ministry of Interior confirmed that an Asian worker was killed on March 2 when debris from an intercepted missile fell onto a foreign vessel undergoing maintenance in Salman Industrial City.
On March 10, a 29-year-old woman was killed and eight people were injured when a residential building in Bahrain’s capital, Manama, was hit, the Interior Ministry said.
The UAE’s Ministry of Defence said on March 24 that one of its civilian contractors was killed in an Iranian attack on Bahrain. It identified the contractor as a Moroccan national.

Iraq – killed: 118, injured: dozens
At least 118 people have been killed in Iraq, according to its health authorities. Most of them were members of the Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF) paramilitary group, some of whose units are aligned with Iran.
A chief warrant officer died during an attack in the Erbil area of the semiautonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq. “Several” other French soldiers were injured.
A raid on PMF headquarters in the town of Jurf al-Sakhar (now renamed Jurf al-Nasr) southwest of Baghdad killed at least two people.

Jordan – killed: 0, injured: 29
In Jordan, 29 injuries and no deaths have been reported.
On March 30, a woman was injured due to falling debris.
Kuwait – killed: 7, injured: dozens
On March 2, Kuwait’s Ministry of Defence said “several” US warplanes had crashed in the country, and all the crews survived. CENTCOM said the planes were three F-15 fighter jets that were downed by friendly fire from Kuwaiti air defences.
On March 4, the Kuwaiti Ministry of Health reported the death of a girl from shrapnel injuries.
On March 8, Kuwait’s Fire Force said two of its officers had been killed “while performing duties”. The statement published on X did not provide details on the circumstances of their deaths.
An Indian worker was killed in an Iranian attack on a power and desalination plant on March 30.
Lebanon – killed: 2,089, injured: 6,792
The number of people killed in Lebanon since Israel renewed widespread attacks on the country on March 2 now stands at 2,089, according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health. Among those killed are at least 130 children.
At least 6,792 people have been wounded.
More than one million people have been registered as displaced since the outbreak of the war.
Israel continues to bombard Lebanon after killing more than 300 people and injuring at least 1,150 in a single day of attacks across the country on Wednesday, the day the US-Iran ceasefire was announced.
Oman – killed: 3, injured: 15
On March 1, the Oman News Agency, quoting a security source, reported two drones had hit the Port of Duqm, injuring one foreign worker.
Later, Oman’s Maritime Security Centre said a Palau-flagged oil tanker was attacked about 5 nautical miles (about 9km) off Oman’s Musandam governorate, injuring four people.
Two people were killed in Oman after the downing of a drone in Sohar in the north.
Qatar – killed: 0, injured: 20
The Qatari Ministry of Interior confirmed that 16 people were injured in the Gulf country on the first day of the war. Most injuries were reported to be from falling shrapnel and debris with one person seriously hurt.
The Qatari Ministry of Defence confirmed that two ballistic missiles struck the Al Udeid airbase, where US forces are stationed, while a drone hit an early warning radar installation.
On Wednesday, shrapnel fell on a house in the Muraikh area of Doha, injuring four people, including a Qatari child.
Saudi Arabia – killed: 3, injured: 29
On March 8, two people were killed and 22 injured, including 12 in the central governorate of Al-Kharj, when a projectile fell on a residential area.
Attacks on energy facilities also killed a Saudi citizen working in industrial security and injured seven.
United Arab Emirates – killed: 12, injured: 224
At least 10 people in the UAE – including citizens of Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Palestine, India and Egypt – were confirmed killed and 224 wounded.
Two UAE servicemen were also killed on March 9 after their helicopter crashed because of a “technical malfunction”, the Ministry of Defence said.
US military presence in the Middle East
The US has operated military bases in the Middle East for decades.
According to the Council on Foreign Relations, the US operates a broad network of military sites, both permanent and temporary, across at least 19 locations in the region.
Of these, eight are permanent bases in Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
As of mid-2025, there were 40,000 to 50,000 US soldiers in the Middle East, stationed in both large, permanent bases and smaller forward sites.
The countries with the most US soldiers are Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, the UAE and Saudi Arabia. These installations serve as critical hubs for US air and naval operations, regional logistics, intelligence gathering and force projection.
