Five Weeks and Counting: Kuwait Airport Still Shut by Drones

by | Apr 3, 2026 | News | 0 comments

Quick Facts
AirportKuwait International Airport (KWI)
StatusClosed to commercial flights since late February 2026
CauseRepeated drone strikes linked to Iran conflict
DamageRadar systems, fuel storage, Terminal 1 infrastructure
Reopening TimelineNone announced
ImpactThousands of travellers stranded, all commercial operations halted
Kuwait International Airport terminal building
Kuwait International Airport — closed since late February 2026 after repeated drone strikes damaged critical infrastructure. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

Kuwait International Airport has been shut for over five weeks. No departures. No arrivals. No timeline for reopening. A country’s entire civil aviation system, switched off by drones.

The closure began in late February when the first drone strikes — attributed to Iran-linked groups — hit the airport perimeter. Since then, the attacks haven’t stopped. Radar systems essential for air traffic control have been damaged. Fuel storage facilities belonging to the Kuwait Aviation Fuel Company were struck, igniting fires visible from across the city. Terminal infrastructure has taken hits. Each time repair crews make progress, another strike sets them back.

As of April 3, Kuwait’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation has not announced any reopening date.

When Drones Close a Country

Kuwait is not a belligerent in the Iran conflict. It sits next door to it. The country shares a maritime border with Iran across the Persian Gulf, and its geography makes it impossible to avoid the spillover of a regional war. The drone strikes targeting KWI are not aimed at military installations — they’re hitting civilian infrastructure in a neutral nation.

That distinction matters. This isn’t a military airfield being denied to an adversary. It’s an international commercial airport being rendered inoperable by weapons that cost a fraction of what the airport’s radar systems are worth. A single one-way attack drone — some costing as little as $20,000 — can destroy radar equipment worth tens of millions and keep an airport closed for weeks.

The asymmetry is staggering. And it reveals a vulnerability that the aviation industry has never had to confront at this scale: airports are soft targets, and in a regional war, the drones don’t distinguish between military and civilian.

The Human Cost

Thousands of travellers have been stranded. Foreign workers who depend on regular flights home are stuck. Business travellers reroute through Bahrain or Saudi Arabia — if those airports are still operating normally, which is increasingly uncertain. Cargo operations are disrupted, affecting supply chains that depend on Gulf air freight hubs.

Kuwait Airways, the national carrier, has suspended all operations from its home base. The airline is attempting to operate skeleton services from alternative airports, but the logistical challenges of running an airline from someone else’s hub are immense. Crew positioning, maintenance facilities, ground handling — everything is designed around KWI. Without it, the airline is operating in emergency mode.

Kuwait International Airport terminal building
Kuwait International Airport — shut down for over five weeks after drone strikes damaged critical infrastructure. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

A Warning for the Gulf

Kuwait is the canary in the coal mine. Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain — the Gulf’s mega-hubs handle millions of passengers and connect the world’s long-haul routes. They were built on the assumption that the region’s airspace would remain open and its airports would remain safe. That assumption is being tested.

Dubai International already experienced massive disruption in early March, with 23,000 flights cancelled as Middle East routes collapsed under airspace restrictions. If the drone threat that shuttered Kuwait were to reach Dubai — the world’s busiest airport for international passengers — the cascading effect on global aviation would be unprecedented.

The technology to protect airports from small drones exists, but deploying it at the scale needed to shield a major international hub is expensive, complex, and largely untested in a sustained combat environment. Counter-drone systems that work on a military forward operating base don’t automatically scale to protecting a facility that handles 90 million passengers a year.

No End in Sight

Five weeks into the closure, there is no sign of the attacks stopping. The Iran conflict continues to escalate. The drone threat is evolving — attacks have grown more targeted, striking specific infrastructure rather than the airfield broadly. That suggests intelligence-driven targeting, not random harassment.

Kuwait International Airport may eventually reopen. Radar can be repaired, fuel farms rebuilt, terminals patched. But the lesson has already been delivered: in the age of cheap drones, an entire nation’s connection to the sky can be severed by weapons that fit in a car boot. That’s a new reality for civil aviation, and the industry hasn’t begun to reckon with it.

Sources: Airways Magazine, IBTimes, Argus Media, KUNA

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