Kuwait has been dragged violently into the Iran war after a wave of missiles and armed drones slammed into Kuwait International Airport and border outposts overnight, leaving flames on the runway and border guards ᴅᴇᴀᴅ, Gulf officials say.
Shortly after 2:00 a.m., sirens wailed across Kuwait City as radar picked up launches from southwestern Iran. Patriot batteries roared to life, intercepting part of the salvo, but at least one missile—or large fragment—cratered the edge of the main runway, shattering terminal windows and igniting service vehicles on the tarmac. Incoming flights were diverted to Saudi Arabia and Qatar as fire crews fought to contain blazes around a cargo apron.

Along the northern frontier, near the Iraqi border, Iranian rockets and Shahed‑style drones struck two guard posts and a logistics checkpoint used by Kuwaiti and coalition forces. Security sources report multiple border guards killed and others wounded as prefabs and watchtowers went up in flames, forcing surviving personnel to retreat to secondary lines.
Tehran’s Revolutionary Guard is boasting that Kuwait has been “taught a lesson” for hosting US troops and logistics hubs, framing the strikes as part of a broader campaign that has already hit sites in the UAE, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. Kuwait’s government has condemned the attacks as “unprovoked aggression,” declaring a state of emergency around critical infrastructure and quietly asking Washington for reinforcements and additional air‑defence ᴀssets.

As smoke still hangs over the airport and blackened border posts, one fear now grips Gulf capitals: with Kuwait “burning” on live feeds, has Iran’s war just crossed another red line—turning every US‑aligned state on the Arabian shore into an open target?