Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has delivered what US officials are calling its fiercest blow yet of the war, slamming missiles and armed drones into the sprawling Al‑Udairi training area and logistics hub in Kuwait, a key rear base for American forces.

The attack began just after 3:15 a.m. local time, when radar operators picked up near‑simultaneous launches from western Iran and proxy positions in southern Iraq. Patriot batteries roared to life, downing several ballistic missiles outside the perimeter, but at least two warheads and multiple Shahed‑style drones punched through, triggering huge blasts that lit up the desert for kilometres.
Satellite imagery and shaky phone video from nearby villages show fireballs erupting from fuel farms, ammunition revetments and vehicle parks inside the Al‑Udairi complex. One strike shredded a row of armoured vehicles awaiting deployment; another appears to have hit a maintenance hangar, collapsing its roof and sending secondary explosions ripping through stored munitions.
Pentagon sources confirm “significant structural damage” and a rising casualty toll among US and coalition troops, with medevac helicopters ferrying wounded to facilities in Kuwait City and further afield. The base has shifted to full lockdown, with non‑essential personnel evacuated and live‑fire training halted indefinitely.

Tehran’s state media is hailing the strike as a “historic punishment of the American occupation in the Gulf,” boasting that Al‑Udairi was the “staging heart” for recent raids on Iranian territory. Washington counters that the ᴀssault on Kuwaiti soil is a reckless escalation that will bring “consequences across every rung of Iran’s military ladder.”
For Kuwait—long a quiet platform for US power rather than a battlefield—the images of burning depots and diverted highways are a grim warning: the Iran war is no longer just next door in Iraq or across the Gulf in Iran. It has arrived on Kuwaiti sand, and the next volley may bite even deeper.
