A new video has emerged from Kuwait International Airport, capturing for a brief, shocking moment the arrival of an Iranian drone. The footage, grainy and urgent, shows a small black shape descending through the shimmering heat haze, then a sudden blossom of flame. Alarms ring, people scatter, and the world is reminded once more that the Persian Gulf is not a holiday resort.
It is a tinderbox. And yet, watching the response, one is struck not by the gravity of the act but by the sheer theatricality of our modern panic. We have seen this movie before.
The year is 2025, but the script is from 1914. Everyone knows the opening scene: a minor skirmish, a flash of fire, and then the great powers stumble into war. The difference now is that our stumble is filmed in 4K and broadcast instantly to a billion trembling screens.
The drone, a piece of Iranian hardware that likely cost less than a single Gucci handbag, has achieved what a fleet of battleships could not: it has punctured the sterile bubble of Gulf security. Kuwait, that little merchant republic of air-conditioned malls and imported labour, is now a battle zone. Or so the footage suggests.
But let us be serious. A single drone strike, horrifying as it is, does not a war make. The real danger is not the drone itself but the reaction it provokes.
Already, the usual chorus of pundits and politicians are calling for retaliation, for escalation, for the full weight of the American and British navies to be brought to bear. They speak of red lines and existential threats, as if a single explosion at an airport is the moral equivalent of the Fall of Constantinople. It is not.
It is a provocation, yes, a criminal act, undoubtedly. But it is also a test. And we, the Western world, are failing that test by acting exactly as the Iranians expect us to act.
We clutch our pearls, we issue stern warnings, we rattle our sabres. And in doing so, we confirm the Iranian narrative: that we are soft, decadent, and easily panicked. The Victorians understood the game of geopolitics.
They knew that a show of force must be calibrated, not hysterical. A single gunboat in the right place could do more than a thousand speeches. Today, we have countless gunboats, but no resolve.
We have smart bombs, but no strategy. We have drones of our own, but we use them for surveillance rather than deterrence. The footage from Kuwait is not a warning; it is an invitation.
An invitation for us to overreact, to spend billions, to alienate allies, and to sink deeper into the quagmire of Middle Eastern politics. We should decline the invitation. Instead, let us take a deep breath.
Let us recall that the Iranian regime thrives on chaos and attention. Let us treat this incident as what it is: a crime, to be investigated, its perpetrators punished, but not a casus belli. The airport will reopen.
The flights will resume. The sun will still set over the Gulf. And if we are wise, we will let the drone strike become a footnote, not a headline.
But we are not wise. We are a civilisation addicted to outrage, drunk on spectacle, and incapable of restraint. So the footage will loop on cable news.
The pundits will scream. The politicians will posture. And the Iranians will laugh all the way to the next provocation.
That is the tragedy of our age. We have the power to shape the world, but we lack the temperament to use it wisely.









