News Flash

KUWAIT CITY, March 2, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - An AFP correspondent saw black smoke
rising from the US embassy in Kuwait on Monday, with the diplomatic mission
telling people not to come to the premises as Iran pressed on with a third
day of Gulf attacks.
Sirens earlier sounded over the city following the latest volley of Iranian
attacks in retaliation for US and Israeli strikes that killed the supreme
leader and other top officials.
The embassy did not announce it had been hit, but issued a security alert
urging people to stay away.
"There is a continuing threat of missile and UAV attacks over Kuwait. Do not
come to the embassy," the statement said.
"US Embassy personnel are sheltering in place," it added.
Kuwait's interior ministry said it intercepted an unspecified number of
drones targeting the small, oil-rich country at dawn.
The Iranian attacks have so far killed five people in the Gulf, according to
authorities, including one person in Kuwait.
Earlier on Monday, AFP correspondents and residents heard loud explosions
across the Gulf cities of Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Doha, Manama and Kuwait.
Iran's continued and unprecedented bombardment of the Gulf has hit military
bases but also civilian infrastructure including residential buildings,
hotels, airports and sea ports, rattling a region long seen as a haven of
peace and security in the turbulent Middle East.