Qatar's air force shot down two Iranian Su-24 attack aircraft, intercepted seven ballistic missiles, and destroyed five drones during Monday's defensive operations — believed to be the first time a Gulf state has destroyed Iranian military aircraft in combat. The Qatari Emiri Air Force, equipped with French-built Rafale and American F-15QA Strike Eagle fighters, engaged the incoming formation during the defence of Ras Laffan and Mesaieed, both of which sustained damage from the strikes that broke through.
Qatar occupies a position in The Gulf that no other state shares. It hosts Al Udeid Air Base — CENTCOM's forward headquarters and home to approximately 10,000 US military personnel — while simultaneously sharing the South Pars/North Dome gas field with Iran, the largest natural gas reserve on earth. For decades, Doha maintained relationships with both Washington and Tehran, acted as a diplomatic intermediary, and kept its economic lifeline — gas exports from the shared field — insulated from regional confrontations. Monday's combat engagement collapses that strategic balance. Qatar is now in a shooting war with the country that sits on the other side of its primary revenue source.
The Su-24 is a Soviet-designed attack aircraft that entered service in 1974. Iran's fleet — sourced from Russian deliveries in the 1990s and Iraqi aircraft that fled to Iran during the 1991 Gulf War — is small and ageing. That Tehran committed these airframes to strike a state hosting CENTCOM raises two possibilities: a deliberate decision by the interim council to demonstrate that no US partner is beyond reach, or — per the foreign minister's own acknowledgement that Iranian military units are operating outside central government direction — an autonomous action by IRGC-aligned forces that may not have been authorised. If the latter, Iran's capacity to deliver on any Ceasefire commitment erodes further, since the entity that would negotiate cannot control the forces that would need to stop fighting.
The political test for Washington is direct. If Iranian strikes on the facility housing CENTCOM's forward headquarters do not trigger a US response distinct from the existing campaign, Gulf States will draw their own conclusions about the value of hosting American forces. Saudi Arabia has absorbed refinery damage. The UAE has taken missile strikes and closed its Tehran embassy . Qatar has now engaged Iranian combat aircraft. Each of these states made a strategic bet that proximity to the US military would deter exactly the kind of attack they are now sustaining.
