Fears of Nuclear Fallout From U.S.-Israel Iran Conflict
"Where is all this going?""The schools are closed, and air sirens are ringing multiple times a day, and distant booms keeps more people at home farther from public places.""But my company is booming -- cashing in on the crisis -- as more and more people opt to leave, with land routes now the only way out."Egyptian taxi driver in Kuwait"Weeks into the U.S. and Israeli war with Iran, alarm is mounting after a series of strikes targeting sensitive nuclear facilities, including reported damage last week metres from the reactor of Iran's Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant -- located just across the Gulf from Kuwait."Mohamed Fahmy, journalist, Kuwait City
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| An Iranian flag outside the building housing the reactor of the Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iranian port town of Bushehr, 1200 km south of Tehran, Iran. (AFP Photo) |
Just
275 kilometres' distant across the Gulf from Kuwait, the Bushehr
Nuclear Power Plant's proximity is a threat to Kuwait; its geographic
placement threatening that prevailing northwesterly wind has the
potential to carry nuclear radiation contamination toward Kuwait in the
event of a radioactive release should the plant be hit by a missile.
According to nuclear authorities, should a severe incident occur at
Bushehr, the result would be comparable to the breakdown of the
Chernobyl plant in Ukraine.
The
director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael
Grossi, calls for maximum restraint while warning continued strikes in
the area risk a nuclear accident being triggered while conflict between
the United States, Israel and Iran goes into its fourth week. "An
accident at an operating nuclear power plant would be something very,
very serious. This is the reddest line of all in nuclear safety", he warned grimly.
In
its tit-for-tat responses, hours following the Natanz enrichment
complex in Iran being struck on Saturday, Iran launched retaliatory
ballistic missile strikes on the towns of Dimona and Arad in southern
Israel, where 180 people were injured. This strike, as inaccurate as it
was, served as a warning that the Islamic Republic's reach is as far as
has been feared possible. A mere 13 kilometres from Israel's
strategically sensitive Negev Nuclear Research Center.
Hundreds
of ballistic missiles and drones have been launched by Iran across
Kuwait and neighbouring Gulf states that include the UAE, Bahrain, Saudi
Arabia and Oman. Oil refineries, gas installations and major ports and
airports have been targeted across the Gulf by Iran. This is the face of
Iran that its Gulf partners have always feared. Their cautious
opposition and awareness of the Islamic Republic's drive to spread its
volatile Islamist fundamentalism linked to its striving for uranium
enrichment and resulting warheads for its ballistic missiles has created
an atmosphere of fear and apprehension among its neighbours.
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| The scene where a missile fired from Iran impacted in the southern Israeli city of Dimona, March 22, 2026. (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90) |
Not
the least of which is the State of Israel, which is itself a discreet
nuclear power, knowing that its survival is in Tehran's Shiite-jihad
crosshairs should they ever succeed in their nuclear mission. The Middle
East Arab Sunni states, while relaxing their historic hostility to
Israel's presence, have been content to watch on the sidelines as Israel
and the Iranian regime confront one another, in the hope that Israel
would prevail and solve their Iran-problem for them.
Now,
in the ongoing conflict where U.S. and Israeli aerial bombardment is
bludgeoning Iran's government and military infrastructure along with its
weapons caches, Iran, now in the complete control of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, warns that the region's infrastructure would
be hit should the U.S. president's threats come to fruition. The most
recent retaliatory barrage was a taste of what could be intensified. Air
defence forces in Kuwait managed to intercept and destroy dozens of
missiles and drones, though some slip through.
A
number of major international and national organizations have been
actively preparing for the possibility of a nuclear 'incident'. The
World Health Organization is preparing for a "worst-case scenario" involving
nuclear risks. It has taken to a repeat of staff training on emergency
response protocols and reinforcing radiation-related health risk
guidance. Contingency plans are being updated across 13 countries in
preparation for possible strikes on nuclear facilities ... even use of a
nuclear weapon.
Facilities
equipped with specialized ventilation systems, food supplies, bunk
beds, prayer areas, medical clinics and decontamination and clothing
disposal units are being prepared through the establishment of 195
public shelters in Kuwait for the protection of their civilians, using
schools and university sites. More Gulf nations are being drawn into the
kind of conflict they had long thought of and hoped to be able to
avoid. The spectre of a direct hit on a nuclear site could result in a
humanitarian crisis in more than one country in the Middle East, as Iran
implodes while striking out to punish its enemies.
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| Iranian flag flies at the Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran, accessed on Feb. 1, 2026. (AFP Photo) |
Labels: Atomic Energy Commission, Bushehr Nuclear Plant/Iran, Dimona Nuclear Plant/Israel, Nuclear Power Plants, U.S.-Israel Iran Conflict, World Health Organization




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