A single drone. A crowded airport. One dead, dozens wounded. And in the background, the whine of RAF engines scrambling to defend what’s left of order. If you were hoping that the 21st century would spare us the theatrics of the 20th, I have bad news. This is not a video game. This is history repeating itself, but with cheaper hardware.
Let us not mince words. The attack on Kuwait International Airport is a pivotal moment, not because of the body count—tragically low by modern standards—but because of the method. A drone, probably an Iranian Shahed, slipped through the air defences of a wealthy Gulf state and struck at the heart of international travel. The RAF’s scramble, a reassuringly Churchillian gesture, will make for excellent headlines in the Daily Mail. But it will not stop the next drone. Or the one after that.
We are witnessing the democratisation of violence. Once, only great powers could launch aerial attacks. Now any state or non-state actor with a few thousand dollars and a GPS signal can cripple an airport. The Iranians, of course, deny involvement. They always do. But their proxies in Iraq, Yemen, and Lebanon have been perfecting this tactic for years. The Kuwait attack is simply the next logical step: a test of the West’s willingness to defend its client states.
And what of the West? The RAF scrambles, but for how long? Britain’s fighter fleet is a shadow of its Cold War self. The United States is distracted by its own internal decay. The Gulf monarchies, for all their petrodollars, cannot buy the loyalty of the skies. They can only rent it, and the lease is running out.
This is the fall of Rome, but with jet fuel. The barbarians are not at the gates; they are in the air, guided by algorithms and paid for by a theocracy that understands something the West has forgotten: that history is not a linear climb to enlightenment. It is a cycle. And we are in the downward arc.
Some will call me a pessimist. They will point to missile defences, to diplomatic channels, to the resilience of the Kuwaiti people. But resilience is not a strategy. The Roman Empire had resilience too. It lasted 500 years. Then it was gone. The question is not whether we can survive this attack, but whether we will learn from it.
We will not. Because learning would require acknowledging our own decadence. Our love of comfort, our fear of sacrifice, our reluctance to treat the Iranian regime as the existential threat it is. We will instead issue statements. We will scramble jets. We will mourn the dead. And then we will go back to our smartphones and our Netflix queues, pretending that the drone was an aberration rather than a harbinger.
The drone age is here. And it will not be kind.








