Tel Aviv attacked. Bahrain bombed. Dhahran struck. You might think this refers to a modern conflict involving the United States, Israel, and Iran but it doesn’t. These same places were targets in a very different war: World War II.
Today, warfare in the region often involves ballistic missiles and drones. But in 1940, destruction came from the sky in the form of bomber aircraft. And while today threats are often described as coming from the east, in 1940 the attacks came from the west launched not by Germany, but by Fascist Italy.
Italy’s dictator, Benito Mussolini, was eager to expand his influence. Seeing Germany’s rapid success against France in the summer of 1940, he joined the war on June 10, hoping to claim a share of the victory. When France surrendered on June 22, Britain stood alone against Axis ambitions in the Mediterranean and North Africa.
At the time, Britain controlled vast territories across the Middle East. An Italian colonial plan proposed targeting British economic infrastructure especially oil facilities critical to the war effort. One key region was the British Mandate of Palestine, which included present-day Israel and Palestinian territories.
The port city of Haifa, home to major oil refineries and infrastructure, became an early target. Italian bombers, flying from bases in the Dodecanese Islands, launched long-range strikes across the eastern Mediterranean. On July 15, 1940, five Savoia-Marchetti SM.79 bombers hit oil installations in Haifa, igniting fires and damaging vital facilities.
A second raid on July 24 was far more devastating. Ten bombers dropped around 50 bombs, killing 43 civilians Arabs and Jews and a British police officer. Fires raged, and refinery operations were halted for weeks. The attacks exposed the vulnerability of British-controlled territory in the region.
More raids followed through August and early September, though with less impact. Then, on September 9, a formation of Italian bombers attempted another strike on Haifa. Intercepted by British fighters, they diverted to Tel Aviv. Aiming for port facilities, they instead struck residential neighborhoods. The result was catastrophic: 117 Jewish civilians, seven Arabs, and one Australian soldier were killed.
In response, Britain reinforced local defenses, recruiting Jewish residents into anti-aircraft units marking the beginning of larger-scale Jewish participation in the British Army, including what would become the Jewish Brigade.
The campaign expanded beyond Palestine. On October 19, 1940, Italian bombers carried out a remarkable long-range attack on Bahrain’s facilities, then under British protection. Flying over 4,000 kilometers, the aircraft struck oil installations, causing damage but no casualties.
Though often overlooked, these Italian air raids marked one of the first sustained bombing campaigns in the Middle East. Later, German and Vichy French forces would also conduct operations in the region. But Italy’s early strikes especially the daring mission to Bahrain remain a little-known chapter of World War II history.
Today, as some of these same locations again find themselves under threat, the echoes of that earlier conflict serve as a reminder: the Middle East has long been a strategic battleground, where control of resources and geography shapes the course of war.