Jordan Army Says it Detected Suspicious Aerial Movements near Syria Border

(FILES) This file photo taken on August 1, 2021 shows Jordanian troops guarding the closed Jaber/Nassib border post on Jordan's border with Syria. (Photo by Khalil MAZRAAWI / AFP)
(FILES) This file photo taken on August 1, 2021 shows Jordanian troops guarding the closed Jaber/Nassib border post on Jordan's border with Syria. (Photo by Khalil MAZRAAWI / AFP)
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Jordan Army Says it Detected Suspicious Aerial Movements near Syria Border

(FILES) This file photo taken on August 1, 2021 shows Jordanian troops guarding the closed Jaber/Nassib border post on Jordan's border with Syria. (Photo by Khalil MAZRAAWI / AFP)
(FILES) This file photo taken on August 1, 2021 shows Jordanian troops guarding the closed Jaber/Nassib border post on Jordan's border with Syria. (Photo by Khalil MAZRAAWI / AFP)

The Jordanian army said on Monday its air defense radar system had detected suspicious aerial movements from an unknown source along the border with Syria, which a regional security source said were most probably missiles fired by pro-Iranian militias from Iraq.
Jets believed to be Jordanian had been heard hovering over the Jordanian city of Irbid and areas near the border crossing with Syria, witnesses said.
The army said an air force squadron had flown to ensure the airspace was not under any threat. It did not say from where the movements came, Reuters reported.
"The airforce responded to an alert of radar systems that monitored aerial movements whose source is not known," the army statement said.
In January three US service members were killed and as many as 34 wounded after a drone attack on a US outpost in Jordan that Washington linked to Iranian-backed militants.
Jordan has requested Patriot air defense systems from Washington, saying it fears being caught in the crossfire if the war in Gaza pulls in Iran and its well-armed regional militias on the kingdom's borders.
Another regional security source said two missiles that came from the direction of the Iraqi border in an area where pro-Iranian Shi'ite militias have a presence were intercepted.
"Regardless whether there were drones or missiles that were intercepted or fired or not, the risk of Jordan being caught in the crossfire can only increase if the war continues and expands," Saud Al Sharafat, former brigadier-general in Jordan's General Intelligence Directorate, said.
"The kingdom is located in an explosive region at the center of an exchange of drones and missiles fired by Iran's proxies in the region," Sharafat added.
Since the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza began in October, Iraq and Syria have witnessed tit-for-tat attacks between hardline Iran-backed armed groups and US forces stationed in the region.
Officials say Jordan's government, which signed a defense deal with the United States in January 2021, wants to bolster its defenses against Iranian-backed militias building up their strength on Jordan's borders with Iraq and Syria.
There have been several missiles fired by Yemen's Iran-backed Houthi group at Israel that were downed in the area of the Red Sea city of Eilat, which is located next to Jordan's border and its city of Aqaba.
The staunch US ally also says Iran is piling pressure with a relentless multi billion-dollar drug war along the border with Syria which it blames on Iranian-backed militias that hold sway in southern Syria.
Jordan has waged aerial strikes against Iranian-backed drug dealers' hideouts inside Syria, saying their border incursions posed a direct threat to its national security.
Iran says the allegations are part of Western plots against the country.



Iraq's Kurdish Authorities Say 'Attack' Shuts US-run Oil Field

A flame rises from a chimney at Taq Taq oil field in Arbil, in Iraq's Kurdistan region, August 16, 2014. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari/File Photo
A flame rises from a chimney at Taq Taq oil field in Arbil, in Iraq's Kurdistan region, August 16, 2014. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari/File Photo
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Iraq's Kurdish Authorities Say 'Attack' Shuts US-run Oil Field

A flame rises from a chimney at Taq Taq oil field in Arbil, in Iraq's Kurdistan region, August 16, 2014. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari/File Photo
A flame rises from a chimney at Taq Taq oil field in Arbil, in Iraq's Kurdistan region, August 16, 2014. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari/File Photo

Iraqi Kurdish authorities said on Friday that oil production at an oil field operated by US firm HKN Energy has been halted following an attack.

A security source told AFP the attack was carried out with two drones the previous day.

The natural resources ministry in the northern Kurdistan region said in a statement "yesterday, an outlaw group in Iraq launched a terrorist attack on the HKN oil field in the Sarsang area" in Dohuk province, damaging the field and "halting production".

The autonomous Kurdistan region has been pulled into the war engulfing the Middle East, suffering mostly from drone attacks on US bases and interests there.

Several Iran-backed armed groups -- known as the Islamic Resistance in Iraq -- claim daily drone attacks on US bases.

Drones have repeatedly been intercepted over Erbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdistan region, which hosts US-led coalition troops and a major US consulate complex.

On Tuesday, a source at an oil company in Kurdistan told AFP that most foreign oil companies had temporarily halted production as a precautionary measure.


Israel’s Hezbollah Attacks Are Likely to Continue Beyond Iran War, Source Says

 Smoke rises after an Israeli strike on Beirut's southern suburbs, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Reuters)
Smoke rises after an Israeli strike on Beirut's southern suburbs, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Reuters)
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Israel’s Hezbollah Attacks Are Likely to Continue Beyond Iran War, Source Says

 Smoke rises after an Israeli strike on Beirut's southern suburbs, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Reuters)
Smoke rises after an Israeli strike on Beirut's southern suburbs, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Reuters)

Israeli attacks against Lebanon's Iranian-backed Hezbollah group will likely continue after its joint air war with the US against Iran ends, a source briefed on Israel's military strategy told Reuters, describing the two fronts as unconnected.

Israel warned Lebanon before the war that it would strike the country hard if Hezbollah, the most powerful of Iran's regional proxies, gets involved. On Monday, Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel, sparking Israeli strikes on Beirut's southern suburbs and Lebanon's east and south.

The military on Thursday warned Lebanese to ‌leave Beirut's southern ‌suburbs after ordering them to clear a broad ‌swathe ⁠of the south as ⁠it carries out air strikes that a military source said are aimed at "removing the threat" posed by Hezbollah.

Early on Friday, Hezbollah warned Israelis to leave towns near the border.

The source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe Israel's assessment of fighting with Hezbollah, said Israel would not tolerate residents of northern Israel, who have not evacuated their towns and villages, to be under ⁠fire. The source did not refer to the Hezbollah ‌warning.

That meant that Israeli operations in Lebanon ‌would likely continue even when the Iran strikes draw to a close, the ‌source said. Israel's military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Two ‌senior Lebanese security officials and a foreign security official based in Lebanon said they also expected Israel to pursue military operations in Lebanon even once the broader conflict with Iran came to a close.

"This is about ending Hezbollah once and for all," ‌one of the Lebanese security officials said, of the group, which held major sway over the Lebanese state before ⁠Israeli attacks ⁠in 2024 killed its leader and many of its fighters.

All three officials said a long-term Israeli military occupation of the entire border strip of southern Lebanon was likely.

Israel has said it will not evacuate its border towns and has sent more soldiers into Lebanon, saying this was a defensive measure meant to protect its citizens who live nearby.

The Lebanese health ministry has reported that 123 people have been killed and another 683 wounded as a result of Israeli attacks this week. Its figures do not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

Trump said on Tuesday the US and Israeli air attacks that began on Saturday had been projected to last four to five weeks but could go on longer.


Middle East Situation Is ‘Major Humanitarian Emergency’, UN Refugee Agency Says

Children displaced from the southern suburbs of Beirut after the Israeli army's warning prompted residents to evacuate, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, rest at Martyrs' Square in Beirut, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Reuters)
Children displaced from the southern suburbs of Beirut after the Israeli army's warning prompted residents to evacuate, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, rest at Martyrs' Square in Beirut, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Reuters)
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Middle East Situation Is ‘Major Humanitarian Emergency’, UN Refugee Agency Says

Children displaced from the southern suburbs of Beirut after the Israeli army's warning prompted residents to evacuate, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, rest at Martyrs' Square in Beirut, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Reuters)
Children displaced from the southern suburbs of Beirut after the Israeli army's warning prompted residents to evacuate, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, rest at Martyrs' Square in Beirut, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Reuters)

The UN refugee agency said on Friday that nearly 100,000 people have been displaced within Lebanon and tens of thousands of Syrian refugees there have fled back over the border, calling the situation in the region a "major humanitarian emergency".

Israel has issued large-scale evacuation orders for southern Lebanon and ‌parts of ‌Beirut amid hostilities with ‌the Iran-backed ⁠Lebanese group Hezbollah ⁠since a US-Israeli air campaign against Iran began on February 28.

"UNHCR has declared the escalating crisis in the Middle East as a major humanitarian emergency requiring an immediate response across ⁠the region and into Southeast ‌Asia," Ayaki Ito, the ‌UN refugee agency's Director of Emergency ‌and Program Support, told a Geneva press ‌briefing.

Ito added that the figures given for the scale of displacement so far are likely an underestimate.

He said that some ‌100,000 people have been displaced within Iran in the first days ⁠of ⁠the conflict and that UNHCR staff there are receiving hundreds of calls daily from Iranians seeking assistance.

The World Health Organization is stepping up disease surveillance in Lebanon due to the mass displacement, said regional director Hanan Balkhy.

"It worries us very much, the numbers of the displaced populations and the lack of adequate water and sanitation," she said.