Britain’s Royal Air Force base at Akrotiri in Cyprus was hit by a suspected drone strike just after midnight local time on Monday, March 2, 2026, officials confirmed, in a rare direct attack on a Western military installation amid escalating Middle East tensions. No casualties were reported and only limited material damage was caused, according to the UK Ministry of Defence and Cypriot authorities.
The incident triggered a security alert, with personnel on the base instructed to shelter in place and a Cyprus national security council convened to monitor developments. Explosions and sirens were heard near Limassol, and British forces scrambled fighter jets and increased defensive postures around the sovereign base area.
The Ministry of Defence said its armed forces were responding to the suspected drone strike and that “force protection in the region is at the highest level,” without confirming the origin of the drone. RAF Akrotiri, a key hub for British and allied operations in the eastern Mediterranean and Middle East, last endured a direct attack in the 1980s.
Cypriot officials emphasized that Cyprus itself was not a combatant in the wider regional conflict, even as local residents reported panic and precautionary measures after the blast. The strike comes amid broader hostilities following the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader and subsequent military actions by the US, Israel and Iranian‑aligned forces across the region.
