Greg Mack
31 posts


There is a video circulating right now that will change the insurance map of the Middle East permanently. It shows a low-flying drone, consistent with Iran’s Shahed-136 design, the same one-way suicide drone Tehran sold to Russia for Ukraine, gliding between high-rise towers in central Dubai and detonating on impact against a residential building. Not a military installation. Not an airfield. A building where people live. Immediate flames. Smoke pouring from upper floors. A man filming from the apartment next door breaking down on camera because the war just arrived at his bedroom window. Dubai Media Office confirmed four people injured in the Palm Jumeirah incident. Fire brought under control. CNN confirmed a drone struck near the Fairmont The Palm hotel. One civilian already dead in Abu Dhabi from earlier missile debris. UAE air defenses intercepted the majority of incoming ordnance. This one got through. And this one changes everything. There is a difference between a missile intercepted at altitude, where the public sees a flash in the sky and moves on, and a drone flying at rooftop level between residential towers and detonating against the glass facade of a building people can name. The first is a statistic. The second is a video that plays on every screen on earth for the next month. The Shahed-136 flies low and slow. It does not trigger the same radar signatures as ballistic missiles. It was designed to saturate defenses by volume, to send enough that some get through. Tonight one got through in Dubai and the footage exists. Every expatriate in that building is calling their relocation consultant tonight. Every property investor who bought off-plan on the Palm is recalculating. Every global insurer who underwrote Gulf real estate is convening emergency committees to reprice sovereign risk for a country that just absorbed a suicide drone on a residential tower. Lloyd’s of London does not care whether Iran intended to hit a hotel or a military base. Lloyd’s cares that a drone hit a building and there is video. Dubai spent three decades proving that proximity to Iran did not matter. That you could build the tallest towers, the most luxurious islands, the most connected airports 150 kilometers from the IRGC’s missile batteries and it would never be relevant. Tonight a Shahed drone, the same 50,000 dollar weapon Iran mass-produces in factories outside Isfahan, flew between those towers and proved that every square meter of Dubai is within range of a weapon that costs less than a single night at the hotel it struck. Fifty thousand dollars to build. Billions in brand damage on impact. That is the exchange rate of asymmetric war. And Dubai just learned it the hard way. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…




















