Saudi Arabia intercepted and destroyed three ballistic missiles launched towards Prince Sultan Air Base, a Defense Ministry spokesperson announced on Friday.
The military base is located approximately 100km. southeast of Riyadh.
The ministry, later on Friday morning, announced that it had intercepted at least two drone attacks in the Al Kharj Governorate and Eastern Region.
Later on Friday, Bahrain's Interior Ministry announced that Iran targeted a hotel and two residential buildings in Manama.
The attack caused material damage but "no loss of life," the ministry stated.
The ministry previously stated that the attack targeted two hotels and one residential building, but later corrected that statement.
Qatar intercepts drone attacking Al Udeid Air Base
Additionally, Qatar intercepted a drone attack that targeted Al Udeid Air Base, Doha's Defense Ministry announced on Friday morning.
The ministry did not announce any damage or casualties from the drone attack.
Etihad Airways to resume limited commercial flights from March 6
Etihad Airways will resume limited commercial flights between March 6 and 19 to and from Abu Dhabi and key destinations including Cairo, Delhi, London, Frankfurt, New York, Paris, Moscow, Toronto, and Zurich, the company said in a statement on Friday.
Arab foreign ministers to hold emergency meeting Sunday, WSJ reports
Foreign ministers of Arab League member states will hold an emergency meeting on Sunday to discuss Iran's attacks on several countries in the region, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday, citing Arab officials familiar with the matter.
The meeting was requested by Saudi Arabia and will be held via video conference, WSJ added.
Reuters could not immediately verify the report.
Oilfield run by US firm hit in drone attack in Iraqi Kurdistan, sources say
A drone attack struck an oilfield operated by a US firm in Dohuk in Iraq’s Kurdistan region on Thursday, causing a fire, security sources said.
UAE explores freezing Iranian assets to punish Tehran for attacks, WSJ reports
The United Arab Emirates is weighing freezing billions of dollars of Iranian assets held in the Gulf state, a move that could curb Tehran's access to foreign currency and global trade amid the US-Israeli military conflict, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.
Reuters could not immediately confirm the report. The Emirati foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment outside business hours.
This is a developing story.
Reuters contributed to this report.