WSJ What’s News - U.S. Embassy Struck as Conflict Widens
Episode Date: March 3, 2026A.M. Edition for Mar. 3. The State Department is expanding its diplomatic pullback from the Middle East after the U.S. Embassy in Saudi Arabia was attacked by an Iranian drone. Plus, with tourists and... expats looking on, Persian Gulf nations have thus far managed to intercept the majority of drones and missiles directed at them by Iran. But Oxford Analytica’s Rawan Maayeh explains that the countries are struggling to balance a tough response to Iran’s attacks with the desire to end fighting and restore a sense of calm. And limited flight operations resume in Dubai, even as airspace across much of the Middle East remains shut. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Getting ready for a game means being ready for anything, like packing a spare stick.
I like to be prepared.
That's why I remember, 9-88, Canada's Suicide Crisis Hubline.
It's good to know, just in case.
Anyone can call or text for free confidential support from a train responder anytime.
9-88 Suicide Crisis Helpline is funded by the government in Canada.
Fighting kicks up another notch across the Middle East, leading the U.S. to pull back diplomats from
six countries. We'll look at how Gulf states are responding to waves of Iranian attacks and the
challenge facing airlines trying to stay out of harm's way. They're looking at one of the most
significant aviation crises when it comes to war-related disruption that we've rarely ever seen.
Plus, how the conflict is threatening to send consumer prices higher. It's Tuesday,
March 3rd. I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal. And here is the AM edition of What's News.
The top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
The U.S. is evacuating a number of its diplomatic sites across the Middle East this morning,
after its embassy in Saudi Arabia was hit by drones.
We report there were no casualties in that attack, but that hasn't stopped the State Department
from closing its embassy in Kuwait and ordering that non-emergency personnel and their families
leave the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, and Qatar.
The U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi has also warned there could be militant attacks in the UAE.
Those steps by the U.S. come as Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that American military action against Iran is expected to intensify.
The hardest hits are yet to come from the U.S. military.
The next phase will be even more punishing on Iran than it is right now.
Someone was screaming, how long will it take?
I don't know how long it'll take.
We have objectives.
We will do this as long as it takes to achieve those objectives, and we will achieve those objectives.
Just this morning, Israel launched a fresh barrage of strikes on Tehran, as well as against Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Israel's military said that troops are also taking defensive positions in southern Lebanon in response to ongoing rocket fire from Hezbollah.
Meanwhile, Gulf states are racing to hold back an onslaid of Iranian drones and missiles.
In some cases, in full view of thousands of tourists stuck in cities like Doha or Dubai,
before those countries' stockpiles of defensive weapons are depleted.
For more on that, I'm joining you.
joined by Ruan Maya, senior analyst for the Middle East and North Africa at Oxford Analytica,
a part of Dow Jones, the publisher of the Wall Street Journal.
Rewan, according to our reporting, some Gulf states could burn through their air defenses within days.
I'm just to paint a picture of the pressure that they're under.
The UAE said last night that over the prior three days, it had been targeted by 174 Iranian ballistic missiles,
as well as nearly 700 drones.
Where is this situation leaving these countries?
Well, Luke, certainly the Gulf states are in an incredibly difficult position. They've sought a detente with Iran since 2003, and they've effectively attempted several times to mediate and de-escalates tensions between the U.S. and Iran, and yet have now found themselves very much on the front line of this war. And they certainly appear to be bearing the overwhelming brunt of the Iranian retaliation. And taking the war to the Gulf states in this precise way is very much a strategic decision on the part of Tehran. We have an Iranian leadership that sees.
itself in a fight for survival. And it is acting on expressed intent. And that expression has been
made several times that it would seek to expand the conflict. And by doing so, it wants to significantly
raise the cost for the United States and its regional allies. And in fact, the global economy
as a whole, we've seen oil and gas prices now starting to rise. It seeks that precise economic
impact in order to push the Gulf neighbors to start pressing Washington for an end game.
Now, the silver lining, as you've said, is that there have been successful interceptions. The majority
of incoming attacks did not hit their targets. Most had failed. But Iran is keen on expanding
its list of targets. So we've seen civilian infrastructure being hit. We've seen soft targets
being attacked. We've had international airports in Kuwait, Bahra and Dubai and Budabi being hit,
as well as hotels in Bahrain and Dubai. But beyond this material damage, it's really the
psychological impact that has been quite profound. The barrage of strikes threatened to hit
the soft appeal of the Gulf states. And, Ruan, that appeal is not just for tourists and
for expatriates, but for businesses, too, wanting to operate in these countries.
We heard from Amazon, just citing one company here, reporting overnight that some of its data centers in the UAE and Bahrain have been targeted with drones.
So the economic impact here could continue to grow, I imagine, as well.
Yes, for Dubai in particular, it's marketed itself as a business and tourism hub.
Noha sees steady streams of meetings and events.
The closure of airspace in Qatar, the UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, has also left thousands of people stranded.
It's been cancellations of flights.
Cargo operations, which are also important to local supply chains, have been disrupted.
And we also have the issue, obviously, of the Straits of Hermos and disruption in cargoes by there.
And the Amazon issue that you've cited, coupled with the Qatar and the Saudi energy strikes.
Yesterday, it was strikes reported on Qatar's gas facilities.
Saudi Arabia announced a temporary shutdown of the Rashtunura oil refinery.
And one does wonder whether we're now significantly going up the escalation ladder,
whether Tahran is now really looking to attack more oil and gas infrastructure, other critical infrastructure,
and that would obviously raise the scale and the severity of the conflict.
What would it take for the Gulf states to get more directly involved here?
What's their calculus?
Saudi Arabia has hinted at taking all necessary measures to protect its security.
Qatar has said, you know, these attacks must not go unanswered.
So definitely the military question is being put out there.
But I think that we have to be quite careful in whether we determine that that would be the course of action that's going to be taken.
a military move would definitely carry really quite high risk.
And I'm not sure what the probability of reward would be.
Israel and the United States have far superior capabilities operationally in terms of intelligence.
And so any such intervention is not going to be something that's going to dramatically alter the trajectory of the war.
But what it might invite is even firmer and stronger Iranian retaliation,
more so than what we are seeing now.
And that's something that would be quite dangerous.
And therefore, the economic calculus of that military option is probably a weighing quite heavily on the
UCC leaders of this point in time.
But I think the involvement might be more about expanding the access of the U.S. to their territories for that use to then be made to attack Iran.
But I think the emphasis will be on defense more so than offense at this point.
I know they did taunt and the rapprochmo is probably dead as we speak,
but there needs to be a way to handle and manage Iran in the long term.
And that might not be through being actively involved in attacking the country.
I've been speaking to Rowan May, a senior analyst for the Middle East and North Africa at Oxford Analytica.
Rowan, thank you so much for being with us on What's News.
Thank you.
The first flights have begun taking off and landing in Dubai,
even as airspace closures remain in place across large swaths of the Middle East.
Journal Aviation reporter Ben Katz has the latest.
We're looking at a situation where, yes, some flights have restarted into parts of the Middle East,
but that's really quite ad hoc.
Those are limited operations.
The vast majority of flights coming into the region have still been cancelled.
Airlines, of course, are cautious about this.
They don't want to be occupying skies where there are missiles or drones being targeted.
There's also the risk of being misidentified by air defense systems, which we saw with the three
US-operated fighter jets that were shot down by friendly fire in Kuwait.
Now, the crux of the issue here is that there actually isn't that much airspace to use
at the moment with Russia, Ukraine, with a growing conflict between Pakistan and Afghanistan,
this critical highway for traffic is really condensing.
And it adds hours to flights.
It adds fuel costs.
these really careful schedules that the airlines have put together,
and it just adds huge amounts of uncertainty,
which is the worst thing that an airline could ever really want to deal with.
And while it's not uncommon to see airspace closed temporarily
when fighting flares up around the world,
Ben said that this time the effects are substantially greater.
The big question, really, is how long this lasts.
We've heard from President Trump saying four to five weeks.
What that means for aviation is they're looking at one of the most significant aviation
crisis when it comes to war-related disruption that we've really ever seen. Airlines use the Middle East
as this really critical corridor that can connect Europe to Asia, southern Asia into Africa. There's a lot of
exchange of passengers. In addition to that, the Middle East of the last 20, 30 years has become
a critical destination. You look at airlines like Emirates, Qatar Airways. These are some of the
biggest airlines in the world when it comes to international traffic. That's really reflected in the
numbers. We've seen over 12,000 cancellations of fly.
and we've seen an estimated 1.5 million passengers being disrupted.
A number of airline stocks dropped in trading Monday with Air France KLM,
British Airways owner IAG and Deutsche Luftansa declining by more than 5%,
with all three also falling today.
Coming up, we'll look at how the escalating conflict is raising the specter of higher inflation yet again.
Plus, Paramount may have won the Warner race,
but at what cost those stories and more after the break.
You don't need AI agents, which may sound weird coming from Service Now, the leader in AI agents.
The truth is, AI agents need you.
Sure, they'll process, predict, even get work done autonomously.
But they don't dream, read a room, rally a team, and they certainly don't have shower thoughts, pivotal hallway chats, or big ideas.
People do.
And people, when given the best AI platform, they're freed up to do the fulfilling work they want to do.
To see how ServiceNow puts AI to work for people, visit ServiceNow.com.
Government bonds are selling off amid fears that the Middle East conflict will lead to rising inflation driven by higher oil prices.
And as markets reporter Chelsea Delaney explains, that won't just mean a bigger bill at the pump.
These energy prices set the cost for transport, for shipping, for airlines, the prices that businesses pay for,
energy, it can feed through into the economy in a really big way. We saw this back in 2021 and
2022. At that time, economists thought that these energy price spikes would be temporary, but then
it really had this broad-based impact on inflation, and then that ended up driving up wages and
things like that. So it can really spiral into a larger inflation impact. And should inflation,
in fact, start to rise? Investors worry central banks will respond by rapidly increasing
increasing interest rates.
Yeah, this comes at a bit of an unfortunate time because central banks, including
the Federal Reserve, were just sort of getting over the inflation crisis that followed the
pandemic.
They're bringing down interest rates that was filtering through to households.
Now they're staring down a potentially another energy price crisis and rise in inflation.
And that could mean that they have to slow the interest rate reductions that they've been doing.
It also could mean that they have to start raising interest rates again, how long this conflict
last, how long the disruptions to global energy prices last, that's what's going to really
determine how big of an impact this has on inflation and how central banks are going to respond to
it. Meanwhile, Paramount may have won the race to buy Warner Brothers Discovery, but the $81 billion
bid is also costing the company a credit rating downgrade. Fitch Ratings has slashed Paramount's
rating to junk status. Warning to the deal's massive financing needs and integration challenges
could cause the company to miss its financial targets.
And we are exclusively reporting that IR Labs, the chip startup, backed by Invidia and
AMD, has raised $500 million to develop a new power-efficient AI chip.
The advanced technology is known as co-packaged optics and is expected to revolutionize
chip efficiency.
Invidia is betting big on the new processors, announcing a $4 billion investment in two similar
optical firms this morning.
And that's it for what's news for this Tuesday morning.
Today's show was produced by Hattie Moyer and Daniel Bach.
Our supervising producer is Sandra Kilhoff, and I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.
We will be back tonight with the news show.
Until then, thanks for listening.
