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Iran Conflict 2026
2MAR

13,000 regional flights cancelled

3 min read
14:45UTC

Flight cancellations across the Middle East have increased nearly tenfold in 24 hours, grounding 40% of all regional air traffic and trapping hundreds of thousands of foreign nationals in a closing evacuation window.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The tenfold 24-hour acceleration signals that aviation networks have crossed a systemic threshold: airlines are no longer making tactical route-by-route risk assessments but executing wholesale regional withdrawal driven by insurance market withdrawal.

Aviation analytics firm Cirium reports 13,000 of 32,000 scheduled flights across the Middle East have been cancelled since Saturday — 40% of all regional air traffic. Twenty-four hours earlier, the figure was 1,560 cancellations . The increase is nearly tenfold. Ben Gurion Airport is closed and not expected to reopen before next week. The UAE has partially reopened with limited service.

The Gulf's three mega-hub airports — Dubai International, Hamad International in Doha, and Zayed International in Abu Dhabi — handled a combined 170 million passengers in 2024. Their business model depends on geographic centrality: they sit at the junction of routes linking Europe, Africa, and Asia. That centrality now places them inside the threat envelope. Dubai's terminal infrastructure has already taken physical damage from Iranian strikes . One person was killed and seven injured at Abu Dhabi's Zayed International .

The US State Department's departure advisory covering 16 countries is the broadest since the 2003 Iraq invasion. The Gulf states alone host an estimated 30 million expatriate workers. For those without seats on the limited flights still operating, the window is narrowing: airlines cannot fly into airports within range of Iranian missiles and drones, and the IRGC has demonstrated willingness to strike energy and transport infrastructure across the Gulf .

The comparison to 2003 is instructive in its limits. During the Iraq invasion, the war zone was geographically contained; Gulf airports outside Iraq continued to function. Here, Iranian retaliatory fire has reached Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait. The disruption is region-wide, and there is no adjacent safe corridor for evacuation flights to use. Every 24 hours that passes without a ceasefire adds passengers to the stranded population and subtracts available aircraft from the evacuation capacity.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Airlines cancel flights at this scale not because individual pilots refuse to fly, but because insurers withdraw war risk coverage, making routes financially and legally impossible to operate regardless of the airline's own appetite for risk. Once major carriers cancel, connecting passenger volumes on remaining routes fall below the commercial breakeven threshold, forcing smaller carriers to follow — a cascade rather than independent decisions. This is why the jump from 1,560 to 13,000 cancellations in 24 hours is not proportional to any single military event; it reflects an insurance market tipping point, not a proportional response to threat level.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The 10x jump reveals a threshold effect intrinsic to network industries: once cancellations exceed roughly 15–20% of hub capacity, connecting traffic volumes fall below the commercial breakeven point for remaining carriers, triggering a self-reinforcing cascade that is disproportionate to the underlying threat level and cannot be reversed by incremental de-escalatory signals — only by a decisive change in the insurance market's risk assessment.

Root Causes

Gulf carriers' hub-and-spoke model was built on the commercial premise of regional stability as a competitive asset. Emirates, Qatar Airways, and Etihad concentrated intercontinental traffic through cities — Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi — that now sit within Iranian ballistic missile range. The industry accepted this geographic concentration because Gulf carriers offered unbeatable economics through the 2000s–2020s; the structural vulnerability was always present but priced as negligible. The current disruption is the realisation of a risk that was subordinated to commercial logic for two decades.

Escalation

Based on the 1991 trajectory and the insurance-cascade mechanism, a further increase to 50–70% cancellation rates within 48–72 hours is likely absent a significant de-escalatory signal. The UAE's partial reopening is a countervailing data point but reflects one government's political risk tolerance, not a reversal of the underlying insurance market dynamic that is driving the cascade.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Gulf carrier financial exposure is accumulating at a rate that will require sovereign backstop decisions if the closure extends beyond two to three weeks — Emirates and Etihad are state-owned, but Qatar Airways' exposure overlaps with Qatar's simultaneous military engagement.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Risk

    Intercontinental routes between Europe and South and East Asia transiting Gulf hubs face multi-week disruption, with no short-term alternative routing of equivalent capacity or cost — raising freight costs on trade lanes that carry semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, and perishable goods.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    The speed of the cascade will prompt long-term reassessment by IATA, Lloyd's, and sovereign wealth funds of the systemic risk concentration created by routing global aviation through a geopolitically volatile region — potentially accelerating investment in alternative hub infrastructure.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

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Causes and effects
This Event
13,000 regional flights cancelled
The Gulf's aviation hub model — Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi — connects Asia, Europe, and Africa through the airspace now under fire. A 40% cancellation rate does not merely strand passengers; it severs a transit corridor handling tens of millions of passengers annually. The 16-country departure advisory, the broadest since the 2003 Iraq invasion, signals that the US government considers the entire region unsafe for its citizens. The Gulf states host an estimated 30 million expatriate workers with a narrowing window to leave.
Different Perspectives
Gulf shipping and insurance markets
Gulf shipping and insurance markets
With Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb both hostile at once, war-risk underwriters face their first dual-chokepoint pricing problem; the rerouting hedge that absorbed one closure is gone for Israeli-linked hulls. Any deal that reopens Hormuz without a Houthi stand-down clause delivers only partial shipping relief.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Russia and China met IAEA chief Grossi jointly in Geneva on 5 June to coordinate an advance blocking position against Washington's censure resolution, the first documented instance of proactive pre-session obstruction rather than reactive post-vote dissent. Beijing's move came four days after OFAC designated Shanghai Qianye Energy under Iran energy sanctions.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia was left out of the emergency $4.01 billion Patriot waiver Qatar received on 2 May as its own PAC-3 stocks ran near-empty from intercepting Iranian salvoes over Aramco facilities. Riyadh is on a standard 18-month FMS queue behind a production line booked through 2030, with no equivalent priority to Qatar's Al Udeid basing role.
Houthis (Ansar Allah)
Houthis (Ansar Allah)
The Houthis declared a complete ban on Israeli Red Sea navigation on 8 June and struck Jaffa, their first attack on Israeli territory since April, seven days after the Tasnim authorisation to activate other fronts including Bab el-Mandeb. The declaration put both chokepoints under hostile authority simultaneously.
Iran
Iran
Iran agreed the 9 June mutual halt after the Mahshahr exchange and coordinated with Russia and China to block Washington's IAEA censure resolution, using the Board as a second front while the bilateral pause held on the military one. Tehran's acceptance of the Lebanon carve-out contradicts the linkage position it stated on 1 June.
Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
Israel struck the Karun Petrochemical plant at Mahshahr on 8 June over Trump's explicit objection, then agreed a halt with Iran the following day scoped on Israeli terms with Lebanon carved out. Netanyahu's posture is that the IDF will not accept Iranian missile factories as off-limits regardless of US diplomatic timelines.