Iran attacks US bases in Qatar, UAE, Bahrain and Kuwait: the widest retaliation yet
Iran launched simultaneous missile and drone waves at American bases across the Gulf on Sunday after fresh US strikes. Qatar says it intercepted everything.
Iran launched simultaneous waves of missiles and drones at targets in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Kuwait on Sunday morning, and claimed further strikes in Jordan and Oman. It is Tehran’s broadest retaliation since its confrontation with the United States turned direct — and the targets are the American bases dotted across the Gulf.
What did Iran hit on Sunday?
The Revolutionary Guard says it struck Al-Udeid air base in Qatar — the largest US military installation in the region — claiming it destroyed a command-and-control centre and an aircraft maintenance facility. Doha tells a different story, insisting it intercepted the missiles heading for the base. Kuwait’s army said it was engaging hostile aerial targets and told residents to shelter, Bahrain activated its air defences, and the UAE confirmed intercepting several projectiles. Tehran also claims hits on Prince Hassan air base in Jordan and on Oman’s Duqm port, which is used by the US navy.
Why now?
The escalation follows a tit-for-tat logic that has been building for weeks. A ship was attacked in the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday night; the United States answered with a fresh round of strikes on Iranian territory, adding to the dozens of targets already hit in previous days; and Iran answered that with Sunday’s offensive. Along the way, Donald Trump had already threatened Tehran with a “1,000-missile” response, which gives a sense of the rhetorical temperature between the two capitals.
What happens next?
What is new here is the direct involvement of the airspace of half a dozen Arab states hosting American assets — including allies that were trying to stay out of the line of fire. US Central Command’s regional operations are detailed on CENTCOM’s official site. So far none of the countries hit has announced casualties, but every wave like this narrows the room for diplomacy — and leaves oil prices, flights and global supply chains holding their breath.
Image: Stevertigo / Wikimedia Commons (public domain)