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Home » Iran war in numbers: Growing toll of US-Israel war on Tehran after one month – UK Times
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Iran war in numbers: Growing toll of US-Israel war on Tehran after one month – UK Times

By uk-times.com27 March 2026No Comments9 Mins Read
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Iran war in numbers: Growing toll of US-Israel war on Tehran after one month – UK Times
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On The Ground newsletter: Get a weekly dispatch from our international correspondents

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On The Ground

The US-Israel war with Iran has thrown the region into chaos, killing thousands of people, costing billions of dollars and sending energy prices to their highest rates since the invasion of Ukraine.

As the conflict enters its second month, more than 4,500 people have lost their lives according to reports from more than a dozen countries dragged into the war since 28 February.

Still, there are no signs of the war winding down as Tehran continues to choke global trade with its grip on the Strait of Hormuz and the US reportedly prepares to send an additional 10,000 troops to the region.

Donald Trump tried to force Iran’s hand with a threat to “obliterate” Iran’s power plants if it did not reopen the strait within 48 hours. That deadline was extended to five days on Monday, and then by another 10 days on Thursday.

“Talks are ongoing and, despite erroneous statements to the contrary by the Fake News Media, and others, they are going very well,” he said, as Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said the strait was closed and threatened “harsh measures” for attempts to pass it.

An explosion erupts following strikes near Azadi Tower in Tehran on 7 March
An explosion erupts following strikes near Azadi Tower in Tehran on 7 March (AFP/Getty)

British foreign secretary Yvette Cooper warned on Friday that Iran “cannot hold the global economy hostage” with its selective blockade of the strait, and echoed concerns that Russia is supporting Iran against the US and Israel.

With the war still rapidly escalating after a month, The Independent tallies the ballooning costs of the war in the Middle East.

The growing scale of the conflict

In the first 24 hours of the conflict, US forces struck over 1,000 targets in Iran, according to US Central Command, while the Israeli Air Force struck a further 750. After two weeks, the coalition forces claimed attacks on 15,000 targets between them.

The rate of fire has settled to around 300-500 targets per day since Day 10, according to analysis by the Center for Strategic & International Studies. The US was averaging 375 hits each day by the start of this week, but there is still no sign of stopping.

In the latest briefing on Thursday, US defence secretary Pete Hegseth said the military had sunk more than 150 Iranian naval vessels and destroyed more than 10,000 targets, including underground facilities and buildings vital to the regime’s defence industrial base.

The Washington Post reported on Friday the US had fired over 850 Tomahawk missiles each costing $3.5m in the last four weeks, concerning some Pentagon officials.

82nd Airborne (pictured in Afghanistan, 2009) will be deployed to the region as the war continues to escalate
82nd Airborne (pictured in Afghanistan, 2009) will be deployed to the region as the war continues to escalate (Getty)

Eliane McCusker, a former Pentagon budget official, estimates that battle damage and replacement of losses over the first three weeks of the war will cost the US $1.4-2.9bn.

Kuwait mistakenly shot down three F-15E Strike Eagles worth $100m new on 1 March, and a F-35A worth $82.5m had to make an emergency landing on 19 March. The $13bn Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier suffered a fire on 12 March and had to return to Greece for repairs.

The Pentagon toldThe Independent this week that it was sending paratroopers to Centcom’s area of responsibility.

US media reported that between 1,000 and 2,000 troops could deploy. The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that Trump was considering sending up to 10,000 additional ground troops to the region, citing defence department officials.

An excavator clears rubble from destroyed residential buildings in northern Tehran on 23 March
An excavator clears rubble from destroyed residential buildings in northern Tehran on 23 March (AFP/Getty)

Iran has pounded its neighbours hosting US bases with missiles and drones since the conflict erupted. The US says Tehran launched more than 500 missiles and over 2,000 uncrewed aircraft in the first 100 hours of the war before cutting back.

Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the UAE together detected or intercepted 232 unmanned aircraft and 194 missiles on Day 1, versus just 52 aircraft and eight missiles on Day 23.

A month on, 16 countries have been dragged into the clashes – Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Cyprus, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, the UAE and the US – although many more have been affected by strikes on international shipping or forced to defend against attacks on foreign bases.

Iran’s military has vowed to fight on “until complete victory”, despite its losses. A spokesperson said this week: “Iran’s powerful armed forces are proud, victorious and steadfast in defending Iran’s integrity, and this path will continue until complete victory.”

Defence secretary Pete Hegseth (pictured with Donald Trump on 26 March) says the US is delivering unprecedented damage to the Iranian regime. But the cost of the was is quickly ballooning
Defence secretary Pete Hegseth (pictured with Donald Trump on 26 March) says the US is delivering unprecedented damage to the Iranian regime. But the cost of the was is quickly ballooning (Getty)

The human cost of the war

Some 3,300 people have already been killed in Iran, rights group HRANA reported this week.

Among them were 1,464 civilians, including at least 217 children. Maria Martinez, IFRC Head of Delegation for Iran, said that three per cent of the population of Iran is internally displaced.

Iranians are still grieving the deaths of some 175 people, mostly schoolgirls, killed in a missile attack on an elementary school in southern Iran on the first day of the war. A preliminary investigation is said to have blamed a ‘mistake’ by the US military, though a full explanation is still pending.

A displaced girl feeds a baby as other children stand at tents sheltering people who fled Israeli airstrikes in Dahiyeh, Lebanon
A displaced girl feeds a baby as other children stand at tents sheltering people who fled Israeli airstrikes in Dahiyeh, Lebanon (Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

The conflict has also seen a spike in arrests in Iran, according to monitors. Norway-based rights group Hengaw reported on Thursday that at least 1,700 people have been arrested in a wartime crackdown. Three people were executed in mid March for their alleged roles in recent demonstrations.

The war has also reopened clashes between Israel and Hezbollah, displacing hundreds of thousands of people in Lebanon. 1,094 people have been killed in Israeli strikes since 2 March, including at least 121 children, according to the Lebanese authorities.

Gabriel Karlsson, the British Red Cross’s Middle East country cluster manager, told The Independent that more than one million people have been displaced by the conflict so far, up from 700,000 reported on 11 March.

“We are looking at hundreds of thousands of people who have no means to go back to see what happened to their houses, to their homes, to their livelihoods, living in shelters … This is not only about specific group or community. They come from all walks of life and all kind of backgrounds.”

In the first week alone, the Lebanese Red Cross delivered 19,888 blankets, 7,533 mattresses, 2,920 hygiene kits and 75,766 food and water parcels to those in need. Mr Karlsson said the situation had seen the mobilisation of all available resources, as the scale of the humanitarian catastrophe was eclipsing what they had seen in past crises, such as the Iraq War and Syria.

UN officials revealed on Friday that more than 370,000 children have been forced from their homes in Lebanon in just three weeks. Israeli forces have told people to leave their homes across around 15 per cent of the country including the entire south.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) reported on 11 march that a Red Cross volunteer paramedic, Youssef Assaf, died from wounds sustained while doing humanitarian work in Lebanon.

A plume of smoke and a fragment of concrete rise from the site of an Israeli airstrike on the eastern outskirts of Tyre, in southern Lebanon, on 24 March
A plume of smoke and a fragment of concrete rise from the site of an Israeli airstrike on the eastern outskirts of Tyre, in southern Lebanon, on 24 March (AFP/Getty)

Global impact on oil and gas

Iran has sought to pressure the US and Israel to end the conflict with an effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway that normally facilitates the transport of about one-fifth of global oil and liquified natural gas supplies.

Iran has now made deals with a few countries to allow safe transit, but the pinch continues to force up global oil prices.

A barrel of oil that cost $72 on 27 February now costs between $90 and $100. Brent Crude was trading at $107/barrel on Thursday, up 50 per cent from 28 February. Prices peaked at $120/b on 9 March.

Analysis by the RAC Foundation published this week found that motorists in the UK have paid an additional £307m for petrol and diesel since the conflict erupted.

Trump has argued that when the price of oil goes up, the US “makes a lot of money”. But US producers operating in the Middle East will also be exposed to disruption from the war.

Impact on the economy

Pentagon officials told lawmakers that the first six days of conflict had cost the US $11.3bn, as the opening hours of the war saw the US blitz Iran with expensive long-range missiles, interceptors and radar systems.

The Center for American Progress, a liberal advocacy group based in the US, forecast that by the end of this week, the war could have cost $25bn in total. The UN estimates that the US is spending around $1bn per day on the war.

Global growth could be dragged below 2 per cent this year as headline inflation rises past 4 per cent, according to projections of more severe scenarios by Citi analysts.

The Independent reported as flights to and from the Middle East were disrupted that the conflict was costing the travel industry £450m per day – around £20m every hour.

In the US, Goldman Sachs estimates the oil price shock will cost the economy 10,000 jobs per month through to the end of the year, mostly hurting restaurants, hotels and retail stores.

Who is benefiting from the war?

Since the war began, Russia has benefited from an extra $150m a day thanks to the rise in oil prices, according to the Financial Times.

Moscow could be on track for its biggest year of fuel revenues since 2022. Norway and Canada, which also have huge deposits of oil, could gain from the price spike.

Iran has warned of further attacks on ships passing through the key Strait of Hormuz
Iran has warned of further attacks on ships passing through the key Strait of Hormuz (Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Defence firms will also benefit from large orders of weapons. The Pentagon announced that Lockheed will quadruple production of the Precision Strike Missile for the US.

Market analysts observed this week that traders had bet hundreds of millions of dollars on oil contracts just minutes before Trump said the US would postpone strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure, sparking questions about whether bets may have been placed with prior knowledge of the sensitive policy decision.

According to Bloomberg, at least 6 million barrels of Brent and West Texas Intermediate were suddenly sold in a two minute window on Monday, some 10 minutes before Trump’s announcement. The White House denied that any profiteering took place.

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