
U.S. strikes on Iran raise air travel risks, prompt flight cancellations across Middle East
U.S. strikes on Iran's nuclear sites could heighten the threat to American operators in the region, an organization that monitors flight risks warned on Sunday, as some airlines cancelled flights to and from Dubai and Doha.
Airlines continued to avoid large parts of the Middle East due to missile exchanges between Israel and Iran, the latest upheaval to travel in the region.
Singapore Airlines said it cancelled flights from Singapore to Dubai following a security assessment and British Airways cancelled flights to and from Dubai and Doha.
But following an early barrage of Iranian missiles, Israel reopened its airspace for six hours on Sunday to bring back those stranded abroad since the conflict with Iran began on June 13.
Israel's Airports Authority said so-called rescue flights to the country would expand starting on Monday with 24 a day from various destinations, 'marking a significant step toward the gradual restoration of routine international travel.' It said each such flight departing Israel could carry up to 50 passengers.
Safe Airspace, a website run by OPSGROUP, said the U.S. attacks on Iran may increase risks to U.S. operators in the region.
'While there have been no specific threats made against civil aviation, Iran has previously warned it would retaliate by attacking US military interests in the Middle East – either directly or via proxies such as Hezbollah,' Safe Airspace said.
Meanwhile, flight tracking website FlightRadar24, said airlines maintained flight diversions around the region.
Its website showed airlines were not flying over Iran, Iraq, Syria and Israel. They have chosen routings such as north via the Caspian Sea or south via Egypt and Saudi Arabia, even if these mean higher fuel and crew costs and longer flight times.
Missile and drone barrages in a growing number of conflict zones represent a high risk to airline traffic.
In the nine days since Israel attacked Iran, carriers have suspended flights to destinations in the affected countries, though there have been some evacuation flights from neighbouring nations and some bringing stranded Israelis home.
With Russian and Ukrainian airspace also closed due to war, the Middle East has become a more important route for flights between Europe and Asia.
Airlines are also concerned about a potential spike in oil prices following the U.S. attacks, which will increase the cost of jet fuel.
In the days before the U.S. strikes, American Airlines suspended flights to Qatar and United Airlines did the same with flights to Dubai.
Safe Airspace said airspace risks could now extend to Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. 'We continue to advise a high degree of caution at this time,' it said.
The BA and Singapore Airlines cancellations were only for Sunday, but Singapore said other flights between Singapore and Dubai may be affected as the situation remains 'fluid.'
BA, owned by IAG, said customers scheduled to travel between now and June 24 to Dubai and Doha can rebook up to and including July 6, free of charge.
Israel's carriers, El Al Israel Airlines, Arkia, Israir and Air Haifa, said earlier on Sunday they had suspended rescue flights bringing people back to Israel until further notice.
El Al said it would also extend its cancellation of scheduled flights through Friday and Israir said it had halted the sale of tickets for all flights through July 7.
Israeli authorities opened the country's main airport, Ben Gurion near Tel Aviv, for rescue flight landings on Sunday between 1100 and 1700 GMT. The small Haifa Airport serving Israel's north was also open from 1100 to 1700 GMT.
El Al, along with Arkia, Air Haifa and Israir, said they would operate at least 10 flights on Sunday from 1100 GMT.
Tens of thousands of Israelis and others who had booked tickets to Israel are stuck abroad.
At the same time, nearly 40,000 tourists in Israel are looking to leave, some of whom are going via Jordan's borders to Amman and Aqaba and others via Egypt and by boat to Cyprus.
Japan said it had evacuated 21 people, including 16 Japanese nationals, from Iran overland to Azerbaijan. It said it was the second such evacuation since Thursday and that it would conduct further evacuations if necessary.
New Zealand said it would send a Hercules military transport plane to the Middle East on standby on Sunday to evacuate New Zealanders.
The government was also in talks with commercial airlines on how they could help.
Hashtags

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


Globe and Mail
30 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Oil rises and US stock futures slip as markets react to US strike on Iran nuclear sites
NEW YORK (AP) — The price of oil rose and U.S. stock futures fell as global markets react to the U.S. strike against nuclear targets in Iran. The price of Brent crude oil, the international standard, rose 2.6% to $79 a barrel. U.S. crude rose 2.6% to $75.76 a barrel. On Saturday, U.S. forces attacked three Iranian nuclear and military sites, further increasing the stakes in the war between Israel and Iran. Futures for the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.3%, while Nasdaq futures fell 0.5%. Treasury yields were little changed. The modest moves indicate markets are taking the latest development in stride. The conflict, which began with an Israeli attack against Iran on June 13, has sent oil prices yo-yoing, which has in turn caused see-saw moves for the U.S. stock market, because of rising and ebbing fears that the war could disrupt the global flow of crude. Iran is a major producer of oil and also sits on the narrow Strait of Hormuz, through which much of the world's crude passes. An Iran retaliation that included closing off the waterway would be technically difficult to pull off but traders are afraid Iran could severely disrupt transit through it, sending insurance rates spiking and making shippers nervous to move without U.S. Navy escorts Some analysts think Iran is unlikely to close down the waterway because the country uses it to transport its own crude, mostly to China, and oil is a major source of revenue for the regime. 'It's a scorched earth possibility, a Sherman-burning-Atlanta move,' said Tom Kloza, chief market analyst at Turner Mason & Co. "It's not probable.' Kloza thinks oil futures will ease back down after initial fears blow over. Ed Yardeni, a long-time analyst, agreed, writing in a report that Tehran leaders would likely hold back. 'They aren't crazy,' he wrote in a note to investors Sunday. 'The price of oil should fall and stock markets around the world should climb higher.' Other experts aren't so sure. Andy Lipow, a Houston analyst covering oil markets for 45 years, said countries are not always rational actors and that he wouldn't be surprised if Tehran lashed out for political or emotional reasons. 'If the Strait of Hormuz was completely shut down, oil prices would rise to $120 to $130 a barrel,' said Lipow, predicting that that would translate to about $4.50 a gallon at the pump and hurt consumers in other ways. 'It would mean higher prices for all those goods transported by truck, and it would be more difficult for the Fed to lower interest rates.'


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
As Iranians take shelter or flee, some also hope for the end of a repressive regime
It was 3 a.m. when a deafening noise shattered the silence of homes in the affluent Saadat Abad district in northern Tehran earlier this month. Windows shook. Children woke up crying. Panicked residents ran into the street. Abideh, a mother of two young children, thought their building was collapsing. Everyone was screaming, she said. Explosions kept going off. She ran to the rooftop and saw a nearby building on fire. That was the night of Israel's first attack on the Iranian capital. With her ten-year-old son and six-year-old daughter, Abideh was forced to leave her home and seek shelter with relatives on the outskirts of the city. 'We're basically homeless now. We don't even know where we'll be tomorrow,' Abideh told The Globe and Mail by phone last week. The Globe is using only first names for the Iranians who were interviewed to protect their security at a time of growing unrest. As Israeli air strikes continue to pound the city of almost 10 million, many residents of Tehran have chosen to flee. Long lines at gas stations, skyrocketing food prices, and severe medicine shortages have only worsened the anxiety. Abideh says that the sounds of the attack on her neighbourhood are still alive in her mind. 'My hands shake, my heart races. The fear hasn't left me,' she said. 'Every night, after my kids fall asleep, I sit and think about the future … a future with no sense of safety.' But inside basements, parking garages and other places where people are looking for safety, it's not just fear that echoes, but also voices rooted in decades of pain. Abideh said that in the shelter where she and her family have been staying, there are women praying for the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose regime has executed their sons. 'Some said maybe this war would finally bring down the government,' Abideh said. She hears chants ringing out in the streets, even in the dead of night: 'Death to the dictator!' 'An end to 46 years of tyranny!' Despite their overwhelming fear, Abideh said people are still clinging to hope: 'Hope for change. Hope that maybe all this pain will finally wake people up.' The main cause of the unrest and the current atmosphere of repression, she said, is the Islamic Republic regime, which has spent taxpayers' money on its proxy forces, pushed the country into isolation and ultimately paved the way for a foreign attack. 'The Iranian people do not want war with anyone; rather, they seek peace with all nations — including Israel,' she said. Only way to topple Iran's regime is through popular movement, Shirin Ebadi says Opinion: Regime change in Iran would lead to chaos But fear among the Iranian population is not confined to Tehran. Reza, a 23-year-old international relations student in Isfahan, the country's second-largest metropolitan area, described a city hollowed out by fear, with deserted streets and shuttered stores. 'It's like the city has died. Everyone's afraid. No one knows what's going to happen tomorrow.' For Reza, life has turned into a sleepless nightmare. 'Every moment, I'm waiting for a missile to hit. I can't sleep from the stress,' he told The Globe last week. What haunts him even more is the uncertainty. 'We don't even know what's hidden in our neighbourhoods. Maybe that grey wall near my house is hiding a drone factory. Who knows?' Like Abideh, Reza also speaks of an end — not just to war, but to dictatorship. 'People hate this regime. Without internal co-operation, Israel couldn't have struck so precisely.' He says that now, more than ever, there's a strange, cautious hope among Iranians. 'There are rumours everywhere. That Khamenei is dead. That tomorrow the revolution begins. Even if they're not true, just the fact these rumours spread shows how desperately people want this regime gone.' In streets that just days ago were full of life, silence now dominates. Storefronts are dark. Sirens wail sporadically. Mothers whisper prayers in the shadows. 'Today the roads are empty,' Reza said. 'Shops are closed. People are anxious. Worried about a future they can't see – and don't know will ever come.'


CBC
2 hours ago
- CBC
After U.S. strikes in Iran, Torontonians with family in Iran, Israel worry for loved ones
Social Sharing U.S. strikes on Iran this weekend are reverberating in Toronto, as with some in the city fear for their loved ones in the Middle East while others protested outside the U.S consulate in reaction. On Saturday, the U.S. military attacked key Iranian nuclear sites in Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan, the latest development in an escalating conflict between Israel and Iran. Mina Morshed, a Toronto woman who has family in Tehran, told CBC TV's Rosemary Barton Live that her parents and sister are in Tehran and she spoke to them a few days ago. She said she has tried to tell them that they are not alone. "I am worried about my parents, family, friends," Morshed said. WATCH | Iranian Canadian in Toronto worries for family in Tehran after U.S. strikes: Iranian Canadian says she's worried about family, hopes for peace 4 days ago Duration 6:04 Those with family in Israel have similar concerns. Laurent Attali, a Toronto-born Montrealer now living in Etobicoke, said he has been trying for days to get his two daughters and their families, who live near Tel Aviv, out of Israel. He said he bought them two sets of plane tickets that were cancelled by the airlines. Attali said the latest plan is for them to go by bus from Tel Aviv to the Amman airport in Jordan, but it's not a good solution, as Amman is considered hostile to Israelis because of Palestinian supporters who live there. He said he thinks the Canadian government could charter a boat or plane from Israel to get Canadians people out. Now, Attali said he has been glued to the television to figure out where the bombs are being dropped in Tel Aviv to see if the sites are near where his family and friends live. "For us, since that evening, we have been 10 to 15 hours a day [watching] the TV. We are all the time at the TV," he said. Protestors gather outside U.S. consulate Sunday Meanwhile, hundreds of people gathered outside the U.S. consulate on Sunday afternoon to protest U.S. military action in Iran. Organizers of the "Hands Off Iran" rally said in a media advisory that the demonstrators condemn Western involvement in the conflict, and are also calling on the Canadian government to sanction Israel and to implement an arms embargo on Israel. Parsa Golesorkhi, an organizer of the rally, said he has been watching his hometown of Tehran get bombed in what he called an "unprovoked, illegal and criminal act of aggression" by Israel and now, the United States. "We are here first of all to condemn this aggression against our people — and we are not just as Iranians, but standing with our allies from different communities, from the Palestinian community, from the Jewish community," Golesorkhi said. Noah Shack, CEO of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, based in Toronto, said attacks on Iranian nuclear sites are justified given the danger that they pose to the world. "The Iranian nuclear program poses a threat not just to Israel but to the broader Middle East and indeed the world," he said. "This is a dangerous regime and the world is safer without them having access to nuclear weapons." Prime Minister Mark Carney, in a post on X, said on Sunday that the U.S. military action was "designed to alleviate" threats posed by Iran, but the situation in the Middle East remains "highly volatile." "Stability in the region is a priority," Carney said. "Canada calls on parties to return immediately to the negotiating table and reach a diplomatic solution to end this crisis."