DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — We had been laughing about a dismal performance in
this year’s edition of the Italian Sanremo song contest — when we heard a big
bang outside.
The boom triggered an alarm in our modernist apartment block beside Dubai’s
towering Burj Khalifa, and the phones all began buzzing with an emergency
government notification: “Please remain indoors in safe areas.”
We grabbed our passports, bolted down the staircase and hunkered down in the
garage. There are no air raid shelters in Dubai.
During an almost sleepless night, I checked my phone every hour — giving me a
slight glimpse of what ordinary Ukrainians have endured for more than four
years.
Until now, none of us — presumably not even Italian Defense Minister Guido
Crosetto, who rushed back to Rome in a military plane from Dubai on Sunday
— could have imagined having to seek shelter in this glitzy resort town, which
has monetized its reputation as a safe harbor from tensions in the Middle East.
My plans on Saturday to fly to Nicosia, Cyprus to cover an upcoming meeting of
EU ministers after stopping over in Dubai to visit a friend were suddenly
obliterated by Iran’s unprecedented strikes on Gulf countries including the
United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
The UAE’s Ministry of Defense said that within 24 hours the country was attacked
by 165 ballistic missiles, two cruise missiles and 541 drones — most of which
were destroyed by their air defenses. Debris from those intercepts hit Dubai
Airport and two luxurious hotels, Fairmont The Palm and Burj Al Arab.
It soon became clear that Dubai’s Western expats — an exotic mix of high-flying
corporates, influencers and holiday-goers like me — were poorly equipped to
handle a crisis.
Few people chose to take the stairs — a no-brainer when drones and missiles are
flying above the city. Several residents waited in the reception area with their
chihuahuas and cats — the sound of barking and meows being drowned out by the
roar of sports cars heading for nearby highways.
“Where on earth are they going?” I wondered. We had dismissed the well-intended
advice of an acquaintance to drive for more than two hours to Oman — a
theoretical safe haven, until it was targeted by Iranian strikes the following
morning.
On Sunday, Dubai’s usually choked highways were empty as ominous blasts
continued to echo throughout the city.
Buzzy Kite Beach — which had been bustling with bulked-up joggers before the
conflict erupted — emptied the following day. Any unexpected noise drew panicked
reactions from the few beach-goers who continued to order avocado toasts.
Buzzy Kite Beach — which had been bustling with bulked-up joggers before the
conflict erupted — emptied the following day. | Andrew Aitchison/AFP via Getty
Images
Despite the unease, the legions of people who deliver food on tiny mopeds never
stopped working and continued to supply the homebound population. They reminded
me of the nurses and doctors who kept the medical system afloat during the
Covid-19 pandemic.
It’s too early to tell whether Iran’s attack will permanently damage Dubai’s
image as a safe and trendy melting pot.
“Iran did not strike a military base in Dubai. It struck the idea of Dubai,” the
analyst and author Shanaka Anslem Perera wrote on X. “Dubai is a financial
thesis. It is the proposition that you can build a global city at the mouth of
the Persian Gulf and insulate it from the region’s violence.”
But as in every crisis, Dubai’s sharky financiers, at least, see an opportunity.
“It’s the right time to buy property, prices will massively go down after the
attacks,” a young consultant enthused to me as I tried to blink away the
sleepless night.