Dubai International Airport — the world’s busiest for international travel — came under drone attack overnight, as UAE air defences scrambled to intercept a swarm of Iranian Shahed‑style UAVs racing toward the UAE’s glittering hub, officials say.

Sirens blared across the airport just after 3:00 a.m. local time, sending thousands of pᴀssengers scrambling for cover as radar detected at least eight low‑flying drones inbound from the direction of the Gulf. Patriot and short‑range systems lit up the sky, downing six UAVs over the desert outskirts and two more near the runways. Debris rained down on cargo aprons and service roads, sparking small fires but causing no confirmed casualties among civilians or staff.
UAE military spokesmen confirmed the attack originated from Iranian‑backed proxies, calling it “a desperate escalation against civilian infrastructure.” All flights were grounded for hours; terminals locked down as bomb squads swept terminals and runways for unexploded munitions. Early damage ᴀssessments point to shattered taxiways and scorched hangars, but the main pᴀssenger areas escaped direct hits.

Tehran’s Revolutionary Guard praised the “precision probe” as retaliation for US–Israeli strikes on Iranian soil, insisting Dubai’s role as a “US logistics node” made it a legitimate target. Dubai’s ruler condemned the ᴀssault as “terrorism against global trade,” vowing enhanced defences while quietly appealing to Washington for more THAAD batteries.
Oil prices spiked 5% at open, insurers hiked war‑risk fees, and airlines rerouted flights around the Gulf. As Dubai shakes off the shock, the question gripping the Emirates and beyond is stark: was this a one‑off drone scare — or the grim signal that Iran’s war is now coming for the world’s busiest airports?