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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
5APR

Habshan shut; UAE records first dead

2 min read
19:51UTC

The UAE's air defences intercepted 69 projectiles in one day. Debris from those intercepts killed 12 people and shut down the country's largest gas hub.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

Intercept debris is causing the casualties and shutdowns that direct hits would cause.

The UAE Ministry of Defence reported intercepting 18 ballistic missiles, 4 cruise missiles, and 47 drones on 3 April alone. Cumulative totals since 28 February now stand at 475 ballistic missiles, 23 cruise missiles, and 2,085 drones . The interception rate remains high. The consequences of interception do not. 1

Habshan gas facility, the UAE's largest domestic gas processing hub, fully suspended operations after debris from intercepted projectiles struck the site for a second time . One Egyptian national died during evacuation. Two UAE Armed Forces members were killed on duty, the first confirmed UAE military fatalities of the conflict. Ten civilians died from debris: Pakistani, Nepalese, Bangladeshi, Palestinian, and Indian nationals.

CENTCOM has described Iranian strike capability as "dramatically curtailed." The UAE intercepted 37 ballistic missiles in two days. Those two propositions cannot both be true.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The UAE has been intercepting incoming Iranian missiles and drones every day since the war began. When a missile is shot down, its wreckage still falls somewhere. On 3 April, that falling debris hit the UAE's largest gas processing plant, killed 12 people, and forced the facility to shut down. The UAE's air defences are working well at hitting the missiles, but they cannot control where the pieces land.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's strike strategy targets Gulf state critical infrastructure to raise the economic and political cost of hosting the US campaign. Habshan was struck a second time because the first demonstrated it was reachable and that interceptor debris could cause shutdown regardless of a direct hit.

The IRGC exploited interceptor geometry: fragments scatter over a wide area with no controllable trajectory. Pete Hegseth's firing of the Army Chief of Staff on 2 April during active UAE operations planning removed a commander who had flagged these cascading risks, replacing him with a political loyalist mid-campaign.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Habshan's second suspension reduces UAE domestic gas processing capacity and increases energy import costs at a moment of regional supply disruption.

  • Risk

    First UAE military fatalities increase domestic political pressure on Abu Dhabi to reassess its passive hosting of a US-led campaign.

First Reported In

Update #58 · First US aircraft fall over Iran

Gulf News / UAE Ministry of Defence· 4 Apr 2026
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