A coordinated Iranian barrage of missiles and armed drones has slammed into four key Gulf states — the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia — shaking capitals, rattling oil markets and drawing a stark warning from US President Donald Trump that “all options are now on the table.”
Just after 2:00 a.m. local time, Patriot and THAAD batteries lit up skies from Abu Dhabi to Doha as radars picked up near‑simultaneous launches from western and southern Iran. Explosions were reported near Al Dhafra Air Base in the UAE, close to energy facilities outside Doha, around the US Fifth Fleet‑linked port in Bahrain, and near a major oil processing hub in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province.

Gulf officials say most of the incoming threats were intercepted, but admit “limited penetrations”: debris and at least one suspected direct hit set fuel tanks ablaze at an industrial site in the UAE, damaged storage yards near Doha, and shattered homes on the outskirts of Manama. Casualty counts are still emerging, with dozens wounded and at least several fatalities reported across the four countries.
Speaking from the White House, Trump condemned the strikes as “a reckless ᴀssault on America’s closest partners and our troops abroad,” promising that Iran would “face consequences it has never seen” if the attacks continue. Tehran’s Revolutionary Guard, by contrast, is celebrating the barrage as “regional punishment” for US–Israeli raids on Iranian soil.

As fires burn at Gulf industrial sites and war rooms in Abu Dhabi, Doha, Manama, Riyadh and Washington stay lit through the night, one question now grips the region: was this Iran’s peak show of force — or the opening chapter of a direct, multi‑front confrontation in the heart of the world’s energy corridor?