
Airspace Disruption Grounds Flights as Middle‑East Tensions Escalate
Commercial carriers are suspending flights across Middle‑Eastern airspace following the US strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, with empty skies appearing over Iran, Iraq, Syria and Israel as airlines divert or cancel services. Singapore Airlines described the situation as 'fluid', cancelling its Singapore–Dubai service after a security review, while British Airways and Air France‑KLM also halted flights involving Dubai, Doha, Riyadh and Riyadh, indicating growing caution among global operators.
Airspace closures have disrupted one of the busiest commercial corridors connecting Europe and Asia. With Russian and Ukrainian airspace off limits, carriers have been forced to reroute via the Caspian Sea or south through Egypt and Saudi Arabia—adjustments that add flight time, crew costs and fuel consumption. FlightRadar24's tracking reveals entire swathes of no‑fly zones over Iran, Iraq, Syria and Israel, emphasising the scale of avoidance.
Safe‑Airspace, an independent watchdog operated by OPSGROUP, warns that missile and drone activity amplified by the US strikes has increased risk for civilian aircraft. Though no specific threats have been aimed at civil aviation, the group highlights Iran's prior pledges to retaliate against US military installations in the region, raising concern that civilian flights might still face misidentification or collateral danger.
ADVERTISEMENT
Air India has already reported cancellations across the region, linking them to both this geopolitical strain and a deadly crash at home; its Boeing‑787 fleet is currently under enhanced inspections by India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation, and flights remain trimmed by around 15 per cent into mid‑July. Likewise, American Airlines and United suspend routes to Qatar and Dubai, while Delta extends its pause on New York–Tel Aviv services through August 31.
El Al and Israir have ramped up rescue operations, with Israeli airports offering up to 24 rescue flights per day from abroad, each limited to fifty passengers, aiming to reconnect tens of thousands of citizens stranded overseas. Israel briefly reopened its airspace for six‑hour windows to facilitate this movement.
Airline industry analysts caution that these disruptions may persist. The closure of airspace over Iraq and Iran since 13 June has seen Saudi air traffic double and Afghan overflights rise nearly six‑fold as carriers seek new corridors. Elevated oil prices—driven by potential threats to the Strait of Hormuz—have further strained margins, coinciding with global airline stocks slipping as investors digest this complex mix of safety, logistical and financial challenges.
Looking ahead, airlines must decide whether to maintain suspensions or resume operations as de‑escalation becomes a test of regional stability and market confidence. For now, the cost of avoidance is steep: longer flights, operational complexity and heightened exposure to geopolitical instability.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arabian Post
21 minutes ago
- Arabian Post
Oil Markets Jitter as Iran Escalates Strike Response
Iran has launched a new wave of missile and drone strikes against Israel, following U.S. airstrikes that obliterated key Iranian nuclear facilities under Operation Midnight Hammer. The ripple effects are already being felt in global oil markets, while diplomatic channels strain under mounting pressure. The bombardment hit Israeli cities including Tel Aviv and Ashdod, with satellite monitoring confirming sirens and intercepted projectiles. Iran disclosed the deployment of dozens of drone strikes featuring anti-fortification warheads, claiming successful strikes on military installations. Iran's armed forces spokesperson warned U.S. President Trump—whom he labelled a 'gambler'—that Tehran intends to finish the war it believes Washington started. U.S. involvement under the codename Operation Midnight Hammer saw bunker-buster bombs and Tomahawk missiles strike Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan around 2:30am Iran Standard Time on 22 June. President Trump hailed the strikes as a 'spectacular success' and hinted at possible regime change even as officials insisted the goal was solely the elimination of Iran's nuclear threat. ADVERTISEMENT State media reports have confirmed Israeli attacks across multiple fronts—targeting runways, missile depots, and even Tehran's Evin Prison—with hundreds of Iranian casualties reported, primarily civilians. Iran, in turn, acknowledges missile strikes that killed at least 24 civilians in Israel, though tensions have yet to directly involve U.S. military assets. Markets are acutely rattled. Brent crude briefly climbed over $80 a barrel before settling around $76.6, reflecting investor anxiety over potential closures of the Strait of Hormuz—through which nearly a fifth of global oil transits. Iran's parliament approved a measure to block the strait, though practical implementation requires Supreme National Security Council approval. Experts warn closure could send prices soaring beyond $100, risking a global economic downturn. Diplomatic initiatives are mounting but yielding little success. Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi travelled to Moscow to discuss coordination with Russia, while the UN Security Council and IAEA held emergency sessions to assess fallout and potential regional contamination. European leaders, including those in Brussels, are urging restraint, though unity remains elusive. On the military front, analysis of commercial imagery indicates substantial damage at Fordow—deep underground—though Iran maintains that much of its nuclear material had been removed beforehand. Experts suggest Iran's retaliatory capacity may be limited due to depleted missile reserves and weakened regional proxies like Hezbollah and the Assad regime. Yet, threats to withdraw from the Nuclear Non‑Proliferation Treaty and ramp up nuclear weaponisation are being voiced by hardliners. U.S. authorities have raised global alerts: the State Department issued a 'Worldwide Caution' travel advisory, and the Department of Homeland Security flagged potential cyberattacks from pro-Iranian actors. U.S. cities have boosted security around cultural and diplomatic sites amid fears of retaliation. Oil traders also show signs of hedging—gold and Swiss franc investments are up, mirroring a flight to safe havens seen in June's earlier Israeli‑Iran exchanges. Tehran has warned no diplomatic efforts will resume until payback is achieved. Meanwhile, Washington and its allies are weighing strategic options, including naval deployments to secure oil flows and counter threats in the Gulf. The situation remains volatile, with escalation possible at any moment.

Middle East Eye
40 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
Putin slams attack on Iran, but offers no support to key ally
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday slammed attacks on Iran as "unprovoked" and "unjustified" in a meeting with Tehran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, but did not announce any concrete support to his key ally in the Middle East. "This absolutely unprovoked aggression against Iran is unjustified," Putin said in televised remarks to Araghchi at the start of their meeting. Putin has pitched himself as a mediator between Iran and Israel, an idea rejected by US President Donald Trump last week. Araghchi told Putin that Russia has been a "partner and companion" to Tehran and hailed ties between Tehran and Moscow "very close and longstanding". "Iran is exercising legitimate defence against these aggressions," he added.


Al Etihad
2 hours ago
- Al Etihad
Tehran hit by Israeli attacks
23 June 2025 14:46 TEHRAN (AFP)Loud explosions rocked Tehran on Monday as Israel said it struck targets in the city, escalating tensions a day after US air strikes on Iran's nuclear in turn, fired missile barrages at Israel and vowed retaliation against the US, as both sides intensified attacks on the conflict's 11th Iranian news agency said Israel struck Fordow -- a key nuclear enrichment facility buried deep in the mountains south of Tehran. The previous day, the US hit the site with "bunker buster" Israeli military said it had struck missile sites in western Iran, and unspecified "military targets" in the media said Israel's strikes hit a power supply system in Tehran, triggering Israel, the national electricity company reported "damage near a strategic infrastructure facility" in the south that disrupted power supply, without naming the location or specifying the were sounded across Israel and blasts were heard over strikes on Iran have killed more than 400 people, Iran's health ministry said. Iran's attacks on Israel have killed 24 people, according to official figures. Israel-Iran Conflict Continue full coverage