Day 14 Casualty Tracker: The Human Toll Across 12 Countries
A comprehensive accounting of casualties from the US-Israeli war on Iran as of March 13, spanning 12 countries from the Gulf to Lebanon to Cyprus
As the US-Israeli war on Iran enters its fourteenth day, the human cost spans at least 12 countries, with casualties ranging from military personnel to children in schools. This tracker compiles confirmed casualty figures from all parties and affected nations as of March 13, 2026, based on official statements and verified reporting.
Iran
Killed: 1,444 | Injured: 18,551
Iran has sustained by far the heaviest losses. The dead include:
- 168 children, with the majority killed in the Minab girls’ school massacre on Day 1 (51 children)
- 200 women
- 11 healthcare workers: 4 physicians, 2 nurses, 3 emergency responders, 2 others
- 55 healthcare workers wounded
- Victims ranged in age from 8 months to 88 years
Over 5,000 targets have been struck across the country since February 28, affecting at least 14 cities. Hospitals and civilian infrastructure have been reported damaged. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed on Day 1 along with his mother, wife, and one sister.
Israel
Killed: 15 | Injured: 2,000+
Israeli casualties resulted primarily from Iranian ballistic missile and drone attacks. The deadliest single incident occurred on Day 1 when a ballistic missile struck Beit Shemesh, killing 9 and injuring more than 20. Israel declared a “special state of emergency” on February 28, with explosions reported in Tel Aviv and Haifa areas.
The high ratio of injured to killed reflected the effectiveness of Israel’s civil defense infrastructure, including the Iron Dome system and an extensive shelter network.
United States
Killed: 11 | Injured: 140-150
US casualties included 6 service members killed when a refueling jet crashed in western Iraq. The crash was attributed to an accident, not hostile fire, though it occurred in the context of intense operational tempo related to the Iran campaign.
The remaining US deaths and the 140-150 injuries were sustained at military installations across the Middle East targeted by Iranian retaliatory strikes.
Lebanon
Killed: 52+ (March 2 alone) | Injured: 154+ (March 2 alone)
Lebanon’s casualties surged when Israel opened a second front on March 2 in response to Hezbollah attacks. On that single day, 52 people were killed and 154 wounded in Israeli strikes targeting Dahiyeh (Beirut’s southern suburbs) and other areas. Senior Hezbollah leaders were among the dead.
Israel issued evacuation orders for more than 50 towns in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley, triggering mass displacement. Cumulative casualty figures from Lebanon since March 2 were not fully compiled as of this writing.
Iraq
Killed: 27 | Injured: Not fully reported
Iraqi casualties included:
- 21 pro-Iran militia fighters killed in US strikes
- 3 Kurdish fighters killed
- 1 airport guard killed
- 1 civilian killed
- 1 US service member (included in US total) died in the refueling jet crash in western Iraq
Iraq’s position — hosting both US military bases and Iranian-aligned militia groups — made it an inevitable casualty of the conflict.
Bahrain
Killed: 2+ | Injured: 8+
Bahrain intercepted 114 missiles and 190 drones since February 28 — an extraordinary defensive effort for a nation of 1.5 million people. Despite these interceptions:
- An Asian worker was killed by intercepted missile debris at Salman Industrial City (March 2)
- A 29-year-old woman was killed and 8 injured when a residential building in Manama was struck (March 10)
Kuwait
Killed: 6 | Injured: Not fully reported
Kuwait’s toll included:
- A girl killed from shrapnel injuries (March 4)
- 2 Kuwait Fire Force officers killed “while performing their duties” (March 10)
- 3 additional deaths from conflict-related incidents
Jordan
Killed: 0 (confirmed) | Injured: 14
Jordan was targeted by 119 Iranian missiles and drones, with 14 people injured. Jordan’s military and the US forces based there intercepted the majority of incoming ordnance.
UAE
Killed: 1 | Injured: Not fully reported
A Pakistani national was killed by falling debris from intercepted ordnance on Day 1. The UAE closed its stock exchanges and Australia ordered the evacuation of its citizens.
Saudi Arabia
Killed: Not confirmed | Intercepted: 10 drones + 28 destroyed
Saudi Arabia activated extensive air defense systems and reported intercepting or destroying 38 drones total. Detailed casualty figures from Saudi Arabia were not publicly released as of March 13.
Qatar
Killed: 0 (confirmed) | Infrastructure damaged
Smoke was observed over Doha from intercepted missile debris. QatarEnergy halted LNG production after a drone attack. Qatar’s airspace was closed, with 140+ evacuation flights organized.
Cyprus
Killed: 0 (confirmed) | Infrastructure damaged
An Iranian drone struck the runway at a UK military base on the island. No casualties were publicly reported, but the strike represented an attack on sovereign British territory and raised NATO-related questions.
Summary Table
| Country | Killed | Injured |
|---|---|---|
| Iran | 1,444 | 18,551 |
| Lebanon | 52+ | 154+ |
| Iraq | 27 | Not reported |
| Israel | 15 | 2,000+ |
| United States | 11 | 140-150 |
| Kuwait | 6 | Not reported |
| Bahrain | 2+ | 8+ |
| UAE | 1 | Not reported |
| Jordan | 0 | 14 |
| Qatar | 0 | - |
| Saudi Arabia | Not confirmed | - |
| Cyprus | 0 | - |
Estimated Combined Total: 1,558+ killed, 20,867+ injured
Who Is Counting?
Casualty figures in active conflicts are inherently imprecise. Iran’s government has motivation to report higher civilian numbers; the US-Israeli coalition has motivation to minimize them. Independent verification is limited by war zone conditions.
The figures above are drawn from official government statements and verified reporting. They likely undercount the true toll, as casualties in remote areas, delayed deaths from injuries, and unreported incidents may not be captured in real-time reporting.
What the numbers make clear — even with their limitations — is that a conflict now spanning 12 countries has produced human suffering on a scale that grows with each passing day.