Summary
As of March 2, 2026, the Middle East is in a state of high-intensity conflict following the joint U.S.-Israeli military operation on February 28. In retaliation, Iran has launched widespread missile and drone strikes targeting civilian and military infrastructure across the Gulf. Dubai International Airport (DXB) remains a primary point of strategic and economic exposure, having already suffered confirmed damage and operational paralysis.
Visual Intelligence & Asset Count
Satellite imagery from Skytek (captured March 2, 2026, at 06:57 UTC) confirms a high density of aircraft grounded due to the indefinite suspension of operations.
The concentration of 144 aircraft represents a “cluster risk” of unprecedented scale. A high-density target like the Terminal 3 corridor places billions in aviation assets at risk of damage from direct hits or falling intercept debris.
Current Operational Status
- Confirmed Damage: Dubai International Airport was hit overnight, resulting in minor structural damage to a concourse.
- Casualties: Four airport staff members were injured during the strikes.
- Grounding: Emirates has suspended all flights to and from Dubai until at least March 3, 2026.
- Regional Context: This is part of a broader “aviation apocalypse,” with over 19,000 flights disrupted globally and major hubs like Abu Dhabi and Doha also facing closures.
- Defense Performance: UAE air defenses have successfully intercepted hundreds of drones and missiles, but the volume of attacks continues to pose a significant threat to grounded fleets.