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Mehrabad Airport
Nation / PlaceIR

Mehrabad Airport

Major airport in western Tehran. Site of an Israeli Air Force strike that destroyed an aircraft used by former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and senior officials, along with IRGC transport fleet assets.

Last refreshed: 27 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

How did the same airport get struck by Israel and become Russia's supply hub within weeks?

Timeline for Mehrabad Airport

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Common Questions
Has Israel struck Mehrabad Airport in Tehran?
Yes. The IDF struck Mehrabad on two occasions: on Day 40 to destroy Khamenei's aircraft, and again on Day 62 alongside other Tehran airports in a co-ordinated infrastructure strike.Source: IDF / Lowdown event log
Why are Russian planes landing at Mehrabad Airport?
Russian Ilyushin Il-76 transports have been flying radar systems, electronic-warfare components, and aviation parts into Mehrabad at high tempo from late April 2026, per RFE/RL.Source: RFE/RL
Where is Mehrabad Airport and what is its strategic importance?
Mehrabad is Tehran's domestic airport located 12 km west of the city. It serves as both a civilian hub and a military logistics corridor, making it a repeated Israeli strike target and a Russian supply terminus.Source: IDF / Pentagon

Background

Mehrabad International Airport (OIII) is Tehran's oldest and primary domestic airport, located 12 km west of the city centre. During the Iran-Israel war it became one of the conflict's most strategically contested infrastructure nodes. The IDF struck Mehrabad on Day 62 of the war alongside Bahram and Azmayesh airports, targeting military logistics corridors in a co-ordinated infrastructure strike on the ceasefire announcement day. Earlier, on Day 40, the Israeli Air Force destroyed an aircraft used by Ali Khamenei and senior officials at Mehrabad, directly targeting the leadership's aviation assets.

The airport's military significance extends beyond its passenger role. It houses aircraft servicing facilities and is linked to Iran's air-defence command network. By late April 2026, it had become one of two primary Iranian destinations for Russian Ilyushin Il-76 heavy transport flights delivering radar systems, electronic-warfare components, and aviation parts at high tempo. RFE/RL reported the flights alongside deliveries to Bandar Abbas; the Pentagon assessed both as sustaining Iran's operational military capacity after the February strikes.

Mehrabad sits in a civilian urban zone, which gave Israel's strikes political as well as military weight — infrastructure degradation against a facility embedded in a residential city. Its dual role as a civilian domestic airport and a military logistics hub makes it one of the conflict's most contested dual-use sites, and its continued operation as a Russian supply terminus confirms that Israeli strikes on Day 40 and Day 62 did not permanently disable it.