The escalation of hostilities in the Middle East has seen air defenses across the Gulf intercept, destroy or otherwise engage large numbers of drones over the past several days.
In the United Arab Emirates, defense forces have been actively engaging Iranian-linked drones launched as part of a retaliation campaign following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran. The UAE Ministry of Defence said hundreds of drones were detected, with the majority successfully intercepted by air defense systems. According to tallies shared by defense officials, air defenses detected 689 drones, of which 645 were intercepted, though dozens fell within Emirati territory, causing limited infrastructure damage and debris-related incidents in places such as Abu Dhabi and Dubai.
Across the Gulf, similar defensive efforts have played out:
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Kuwait reported its armed forces shot down roughly 283 Iranian drones as part of broader ballistic and aerial interception operations.
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In Bahrain, officials said they intercepted scores of aerial threats, with interceptions occurring near populated areas and military installations.
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Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Defence said its air defense systems destroyed five hostile drones near Prince Sultan Air Base, preventing them from posing a threat to the military facility.
In some cases, friendly military aircraft are also reported to have downed hostile unmanned systems. UK MoD confirmed via social media that a Royal Air Force Typhoon jet operating out of Qatar shot down an Iranian drone over the region during defensive air patrols.
Drone strikes have not been limited to purely military targets. Technology infrastructure also came under attack alongside aerial threats. Cloud service provider Amazon Web Services (AWS) reported that several of its data centers in the UAE and Bahrain suffered structural damage and service outages attributed to drone strikes.
Reuters and other outlets have noted that Shahed-style systems have been deployed in large numbers across the Gulf, pushing defensive networks to sustain a high operational tempo. Counter-drone defenses across the region are being put to the test following years of efforts to build effective layered defenses capable of intercepting large swarms.
Despite the high number of intercepts, some drones have breached defenses. UAE officials acknowledged that a small percentage of unmanned threats or falling debris have impacted civilian infrastructure.
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Post Image – An Iranian store of Shahed drones (Post Image Credit: Distributed to Iranian media in April 2023)
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