×

UAE denies airstrike on water facility in Iran amid Tehran vs US-Israel war: Report

At least 4 people have died in the UAE since the start of the war between Iran and US-Israel forces a week ago, according to its defence ministry

[File] Smoke rising in the Fujairah oil industry zone on March 4, 2026, following a fire caused by debris after interception of a drone by air defenses, according to the Fujairah media office, amid the US-Israel conflict with Iran | Reuters

For latest news and analyses on Middle East, visit: Yello! Middle East

The United Arab Emirates has denied any involvement in launching a retaliatory airstrike on a water desalination plant in Iran amid the war between Tehran and US-Israel forces.

According to a senior official from the UAE administration, the country did not launch retaliatory strikes on Iran as it would not strike civilian sites if it were to enter the war, only military ones, a Jerusalem Post report said.

This comes amid earlier reports indicating that the UAE had launched an airstrike against Iran—a move that would exponentially add to the chaos in the Gulf.

According to the latest update from the UAE's defence ministry, 16 ballistic missiles and 113 UAVs were destroyed by its air defences as of Sunday afternoon.

However, it also noted that four people had died since the start of the war a week ago, while more than 100 others have sustained injuries.

However, Abu Dhabi is allegedly considering other ways of pressuring Tehran into stopping its attacks on the Gulf country, such as freezing billions of dollars ​worth of Iranian assets, a Wall Street Journal report claimed on Friday, citing officials in the know.

This could even escalate into a wider crackdown on local currency exchanges, which are used to move money outside of ​formal banking channels, in addition to seizures of Iranian vessels, the report added.

A UAE official also told Euronews that despite early preparations for the Gulf chaos, they were still overwhelmed by the scale of the attacks from Iran on its US bases—especially the Al Dhafra base in Abu Dhabi.

“The UAE wants the Iranian aggression against the non-combatant states, the Gulf states, to end immediately,” the official said, adding that Abu Dhabi's focus was to defend its population and infrastructure while keeping the wider conflict contained.

“Any new negotiated settlement with Iran will no longer be confined to the nuclear aspect. Missiles are now centre stage, because missiles now are not seen as self-defence,” the official noted.