No injuries reported after drone strike on US mission; Saudi shoot down multiple UAVs amid widening Gulf conflict
Vehicles drive along a street near the Diplomatic Quarter in Riyadh. PHOTO: REUTERS
An attack by two drones early Tuesday on the US embassy in Riyadh sparked a small fire, a Saudi defence ministry spokesman said in a statement, while Iran pressed on with retaliatory strikes across the Gulf. According to Reuters, there were no reported injuries, two of the people familiar with the matter said, given that the building was empty in the early morning hours.
The growing war began on Saturday after joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran that Tehran said killed dozens of civilians and the country’s supreme leader.
“The US Embassy in Riyadh was attacked by two drones, according to initial assessments. The attack resulted in a limited fire and minor material damage to the building,” the statement said.
Two witnesses told AFP they saw fire engines around the embassy.
Earlier, witnesses said they had seen smoke over the building housing the US mission and heard loud explosions in the diplomatic quarter, home to foreign embassies in the Saudi capital.
A source close to the Saudi army, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive issue, told AFP that Saudi air defences intercepted four drones targeting Riyadh’s diplomatic quarter in the attack.
In the aftermath, the US embassy issued shelter in place notifications for Jeddah, Riyadh and Dhahran and limited non-essential travel to any military installations in the region.
Read: Mideast aflame as war rages
Later on Tuesday, the Saudi defence ministry said it had intercepted more than half a dozen drones near the capital Riyadh and the city of Al-Kharj.
“Eight drones were intercepted and destroyed near the cities of Riyadh and Al-Kharj,” said defence ministry spokesman Major General Turki al-Malki on X.
Official Spokesperson for the Ministry of Defense of the Kingdom of #SaudiArabia, Major General Turki Al-Maliki: Interception and destruction of 8 drones near the cities of Riyadh and Al-Kharj.🇸🇦🇸🇦🇸🇦 https://t.co/593ACF180w
— Khalid A Alorair (@alorair) March 3, 2026
The attacks in Saudi Arabia coincided with a wave of missiles and drones launched at Gulf states, with the UAE defence ministry saying it was dealing with a barrage of ballistic missiles coming from Iran.
In Qatar, the military intercepted two ballistic missiles early Tuesday morning, the country’s defence ministry said in a statement.
Iran’s salvos have hit ports, airports, residential buildings and hotels along with military sites across the wealthy region of oil giants.
On Monday, smoke poured out of Kuwait City’s US embassy, an AFP correspondent saw.
Later, a Kuwait-based diplomat and a Western diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP the embassy had been damaged by several drones, while a second Kuwait-based diplomat said the building had been struck directly.
In Washington, President Donald Trump warned that the war could last longer than first projected, though he insisted at a White House event that the campaign was “substantially ahead of our time projections”.
In his first public remarks about the strikes, Trump laid out four objectives: destroying Iran’s missile capabilities, “annihilating” its navy, preventing it from obtaining a nuclear weapon, and ensuring the regime can no longer arm or direct militant groups abroad.
“The big wave hasn’t even happened,” Trump told CNN earlier, signalling further escalation. He refused to rule out deploying ground troops, telling the New York Post: “I don’t have the yips with respect to boots on the ground.”
At the Pentagon’s first formal briefing, US Gen Dan Caine said more than 1,000 targets had been struck in the first 24 hours and that operations would take “some time” and involve “difficult and gritty work”. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth added: “This is not Iraq. This is not endless.”
Israel said fresh strikes had dealt a “severe blow” to Iran’s command-and-control centres, including headquarters linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. General Caine said US strikes had established “local air superiority”, enabling continued operations.
However, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard signalled that their missile and drone capabilities remained intact despite the strikes, insisting command structures had been swiftly reorganised and that “continuity of resistance” would define the next phase of confrontation.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian warned that Iran “will not remain silent” after the US and Israel of striking a school and a Tehran hospital. Tehran said 168 people were killed at the school in the south, while “scores” of civilians have died in other air strikes.
Among the dead is Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, assassinated in the opening wave, and his wife, 79-year-old Mansoureh Khojasteh Bagherzadeh, who died of her wounds on Monday.
Iran has fired missiles at Israel, US bases and targets in Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Four US service personnel have been killed so far. In Kuwait, three American F-15E jets were mistakenly shot down by air defences during an Iranian attack; all six crew members survived.
The conflict spilled further when Iranian Shahed missile that Cypriot officials said was most likely fired by Hezbollah struck the British air force base at Akrotiri in Cyprus, marking the first hit on a US ally in Europe.
Across the Gulf, Qatar shot down two Iranian Sukhoi Su-24 jets and halted LNG production after drone strikes on energy facilities. Six people have been killed and dozens injured in the Gulf states since the bombardment began.
Saudi Arabia raised its military readiness to “full alert” after a drone strike on Aramco’s Ras Tanura refinery, warning that a concerted Iranian attack could trigger retaliation against Iranian oil facilities. The refinery has been shut after a fire.
As blasts echoed from Dubai to Doha and Manama, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin offered to mediate and called for an immediate ceasefire. NATO said it had “absolutely no plans” to become involved. Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged “an end to the bloodbath”.
For now, both sides show no sign of backing down. Trump insists the campaign is the “last, best chance” to neutralise a long-time adversary. Tehran says it is defending itself against aggression. With each passing day, the war is widening – geographically, militarily and politically.

