“We Feel Abandoned”: Americans Stranded in Dubai Amid Middle East War Voice Frustration with U.S. Response
“We Feel Abandoned”: Americans Stranded in Dubai Amid Middle East War Voice Frustration with U.S. Response
For Sasha Hoffman and thousands of other Americans currently in the United Arab Emirates, the morning of March 2, 2026, brought a terrifying contradiction. As news broke of Iranian retaliatory strikes hitting targets near Dubai International Airport (DXB), the U.S. State Department issued a Level 4 “Do Not Travel” advisory, urging all citizens to depart the region immediately.
The problem? The very skies they were told to use were already closed.
The Sasha Hoffman Story: A Voice for the Thousands
Speaking to CBS News’ Shanelle Kaul from a hotel room in Dubai, Hoffman’s voice trembled with a mixture of fatigue and anger. Her story is representative of the approximately 94,000 UK and U.S. citizens currently caught in the crossfire of a widening regional war.
“The government tells us to ‘depart now’ from countries like the UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain,” Hoffman said during the broadcast. “But every flight is cancelled. The airline apps are crashing. When we call the embassy, we get a recording telling us to stay indoors. We feel completely abandoned by the administration that started this.”
The Breakdown of the “Safety Net”
The frustration voiced by Hoffman highlights a significant gap in crisis management during Operation Epic Fury. While the Trump administration’s military objectives were clear—targeting Iranian nuclear facilities and naval assets—the “Exit Strategy” for civilians was seemingly an afterthought.
The Flight Vacuum: Major carriers like United and American Airlines suspended all Gulf operations within 24 hours of the initial strikes.
Communication Gap: Stranded citizens reported that the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) was providing alerts to leave, but no information on how to leave, leading many to feel they were being given impossible instructions.
Financial Strain: Many Americans, particularly those on shorter vacations or business trips, are now facing thousands of dollars in unplanned hotel and food costs as their “48-hour stay” turns into a week-long ordeal.
The Humanitarian Corridor Conflict
The CBS News report shed light on the diplomatic “bottleneck” preventing evacuations. While the U.S. military can run C-17 transport flights, the closure of Iranian and surrounding airspaces has made civilian-targeted “mercy flights” a high-risk gamble.
Compounding the issue is the fact that airports in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Doha have become targets for Iranian drones because they host U.S. military logistics hubs. For people like Hoffman, the very places they need to go to escape have become the most dangerous spots on the map.
A Message to Washington
The sentiment among the stranded is shifting from worry to political pressure. “This isn’t just about a delayed vacation,” Hoffman noted in her CBS interview. “There are families here with kids who are running out of formula. Some people need medication. We need more than a ‘Do Not Travel’ advisory; we need a way out.”
In response to the growing outcry, the State Department has stated it is “exploring all options,” including potential land-based evacuations through Saudi Arabia or maritime routes via the Red Sea, though both remain perilous due to the active conflict.
Practical Survival Advice for Americans in the Region
For those currently sharing Sasha Hoffman’s experience, the following steps are being advised by independent security experts:
Shelter in Place: If you are in a high-rise in Dubai or Doha, move to the interior of the building during siren events.
Conserve Digital Power: Keep phones on “Low Power Mode” and only check for updates every hour to preserve battery for emergency calls.
The “Paper Trail”: Print out your passport, visa, and insurance documents. If the local internet (already under stress from Iranian cyberattacks) goes down, you will need physical copies.
Register with Local Missions: Even if the phone lines are busy, ensure you are registered with the U.S. Embassy in the UAE.
The Horizon: Waiting for the “Green Light”
As of March 4, 2026, the aviation world remains in a holding pattern. While small windows of “clear sky” have allowed a handful of flights to depart for London and Singapore, the “American Exit” remains stalled. Sasha Hoffman’s story has become a rallying cry for a more coordinated civilian rescue effort, reminding the world that in the grand theater of war, it is the ordinary traveler who often pays the highest price in silence.
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Source: travelandtourworld.com
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