Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
War in the Middle East: casualty figures from across the region
Dubai, March 11 (AFP) Mar 11, 2026
Since the US and Israel unleashed strikes on Iran on February 28, war has spread across the region and casualties have been reported in countries around the Middle East.

AFP has not been able to independently verify all of the following tolls.

The figures are based on numbers released by governments, militaries, health authorities and rescue organisations in the affected countries.


- Iran -


Iran's health ministry said on March 8 that more than 1,200 people had been killed, including around 200 women and 200 children under the age of 12, with more than 10,000 civilians injured.

The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) said on March 10 that at least 1,787 people had been killed, including 1,262 civilians -- among them at least 200 children -- as well as 190 military personnel and 335 people whose status had not been classified.

Due to reporting restrictions, AFP is not able to access the sites of strikes or independently verify tolls in Iran.


- Israel -


Israel's first responders and the country's authorities have reported 14 people in total killed.

First responders and local authorities say Iranian missile fire has killed 12 people inside the country, including four minors, since the start of the war, according to an AFP tally based on their announcements.

The Israeli military has separately announced the deaths of two soldiers in combat in southern Lebanon.


- Lebanon -


Health minister Rakan Nassereddine said on Wednesday that 634 people, including 91 children, had been killed in 10 days of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah on the Lebanon front of the Middle East war, while more than 1,500 people had been wounded.

The Lebanese army has said three of its soldiers have been killed.

Hezbollah has not announced its losses.


- The Gulf -


Authorities in Gulf states and the US Central Command (CENTCOM) have reported 24 people killed -- 11 of them civilians -- since the start of the Iranian attacks.

The rest of those killed were military or security personnel, including seven US service members.

Kuwait's military and health ministry have reported six deaths -- two soldiers, two border guards and two civilians, one of them an 11-year-old girl.

The United Arab Emirates' defence ministry has reported six deaths -- four civilians and two military personnel who died as a result of a helicopter crash blamed on a technical malfunction.

Saudi Arabia's civil defence agency has reported two civilian deaths.

Bahrain's interior ministry has also logged two deaths.

Oman's maritime security centre reported the death of a mariner at sea.

Qatar's ministry of interior, meanwhile, has reported 16 injuries and no fatalities.

CENTCOM has confirmed six US service personnel killed in Kuwait and one killed in Saudi Arabia.


- Iraq -


Armed groups and officials have said at least 26 people have been killed in Iraq since the start of the conflict, according to an AFP tally based on their announcements.

Pro-Iran armed factions say 21 of their fighters have been killed in strikes they blame on the United States and Israel.

Kurdish rebel groups said at least three Iranian Kurdish militants were killed in strikes attributed to Iran on their positions in the north.

Kurdish security sources said one airport guard was killed in a drone attack on Erbil airport.

Officials said one civilian was killed by rocket shrapnel following a strike southeast of Baghdad.


- Jordan -


Jordan's military spokesman Brigadier General Mustafa al-Hiyari said 14 people have been injured in various parts of the country due to falling debris from Iranian missiles and drones.

No deaths have been reported.


- Syria -


Syrian state media reported eight people injured by falling debris from exchanges of fire between Iran and Israel on Monday.


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