Kuwait's air defenses engaged hostile targets for the second consecutive day, intercepting missiles and drones directed at military installations on Kuwaiti territory [1]. The continued activity confirms the war's airspace has expanded well beyond Iran and Israel.
On May 30, Kuwait's defenses intercepted an Iranian Fateh-110 ballistic missile headed for Ali Al Salem Air Base [2]. The intercept succeeded — but the warhead's debris still struck the flight line, injuring contractors and destroying an MQ-9 Reaper drone outright. "A clean intercept stops the warhead. It doesn't stop 500 kilograms of missile falling out of the sky," Mario Nawfal reported [2].
Iran has fired over 1,850 ballistic missiles across the region since the war began [2]. At that volume, even successful intercepts carry costs. The strategy is not precision — it is saturation. Each intercept depletes defensive missile stocks and generates debris that damages the assets it protects.
On X, RT reported Kuwait's defense ministry confirming the intercepts of hostile missiles and drones [1]. The framing treated the engagements as routine — a sign that aerial combat over Kuwait has become normalized.
The paper's coverage of the war's geographic spread has documented how the conflict extends into neighboring states' airspace. Kuwait's continued intercepts confirm the pattern: the war's boundaries are defined not by borders but by missile ranges.
-- YOSEF STERN, Jerusalem