Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
30APR

First Tehran-Moscow flight after 60 days

3 min read
11:30UTC

The first Tehran-Moscow flight in 60 days lifted off on 28 April, with three-times-weekly service resuming the day after Araghchi met Putin at the Boris Yeltsin Library.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Mahan Air resumed Tehran-Moscow service on 28 April, one day after Araghchi met Putin in St Petersburg.

Mahan Air operated the first Tehran-Moscow flight on 28 April 2026 after a 60-day suspension tied to the war, with Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday service resuming in both directions. Iranian state news agency Mehr News reported the resumption from Imam Khomeini International Airport.

Mahan Air is an Iranian privately owned carrier the US Treasury sanctioned in 2011 for moving IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) materiel and personnel; the airline has run the Tehran-Moscow rotation as a primary corridor for both civilian transit and dual-use cargo since the 2018 reimposition of US secondary sanctions. The 60-day suspension that the Tuesday flight broke was the longest interruption since the route opened to scheduled service. Three-times-weekly service in both directions implies six flights weekly across the route, the operating tempo Mahan ran before 28 February.

The resumption arrives one day after Abbas Araghchi's confirmed meeting with Vladimir Putin in St Petersburg , and inside the same week Russian Il-76 transport aircraft were tracked into Mehrabad and Bandar Abbas at high tempo . The Pentagon assessed the China-Russia support pattern as actively compounding the war on that 27 April reporting; the Mahan resumption normalises a civilian-coded version of the same corridor without any signed US instrument covering it. The Treasury's only Russia-Iran asymmetry on the books is the 19 April day OFAC issued sanctions wind-downs on Russian-linked entities while signing nothing on Iran, an asymmetry Senator Lisa Murkowski's unfiled AUMF does not address. Russian airspace authorities cleared the slot allocations for the resumption between Putin's reception of Araghchi on 27 April and the Tuesday departure, a turnaround that suggests the diplomatic trip carried operational instructions on logistics restoration alongside the joint statements.

The corridor is being reopened in real time on the same Tuesday the War Powers Resolution clock runs into its final 24 hours.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Mahan Air is Iran's largest private airline. For 60 days it could not fly to Moscow because the war disrupted operations. On 28 April it resumed flights, three times a week in each direction. This matters for two reasons. First, Mahan Air has been sanctioned by the US and EU for allegedly carrying cargo for Iran's Revolutionary Guard, so its flights operate outside the Western financial system. Second, the timing, one day after Iran's foreign minister met Putin in Russia, suggests the resumption is part of a broader Iran-Russia coordination rather than a routine commercial decision. Russia and Iran are both under heavy Western sanctions and have been building closer ties.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Mahan Air's resumed route provides a practical air bridge for Iranian and Russian personnel and goods that bypasses the 37 CENTCOM-redirected vessels; the Pentagon has no air-interdiction mechanism equivalent to its maritime blockade architecture.

  • Risk

    Russian Il-76 military transport aircraft tracked into Iran at high tempo in the same week as Mahan Air's resumption raises the possibility of parallel military and civilian logistics normalisation; if confirmed, OFAC's existing Mahan designations would need to be extended to cover newly identified routes and operators.

First Reported In

Update #83 · UAE quits OPEC, war signs nothing

Mehr News· 29 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
First Tehran-Moscow flight after 60 days
Mahan Air's resumption normalises the Iran-Russia logistics corridor inside the same trading session that produced Brent's post-war high and Iran's revised ceasefire proposal. The Treasury's only Russia-Iran asymmetry on the books remains the 19 April Russia-yes, Iran-no signature day, leaving the corridor uncovered by signed US text 24 hours before the War Powers Resolution clock expires.
Different Perspectives
Israel
Israel
Israeli strikes on Hezbollah positions in Lebanon continued through the weekend, maintaining the secondary front. The IDF has publicly named Mojtaba Khamenei as an assassination target; his courier-governance mode complicates targeting but does not remove him from the order.
Russia
Russia
Putin told a Moscow press conference that Washington, not Tehran or Moscow, killed the Russia-custody uranium arrangement by demanding US-territory-only storage. Neither Tehran nor Washington has corroborated the account, which appeared in second-tier outlets only, consistent with a trial balloon rather than a formal position.
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
HMS Dragon was redeployed from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Middle East on 9 May, the first physical European platform commitment to the Gulf. The Ministry of Defence called it "prudent planning" while publishing no rules of engagement, no tasking order, and no vessel name, committing a named asset to a conflict zone before the political instrument authorising it exists.
United Arab Emirates
United Arab Emirates
UAE air defences intercepted two Iranian drones over its territory on 10 May, a kinetic escalation six days after the Fujairah oil terminal strike that drew no formal protest. The three-state simultaneous operation, not the severity of individual strikes, appears to have crossed the threshold at which the GCC states collectively began responding.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Riyadh issued the first formal Gulf-state protest of the conflict on 10 May, demanding an "immediate halt to blatant attacks on territories and territorial waters of Gulf states", ending 10 weeks of channelling displeasure through OPEC+ quota discussions. The protest forecloses Saudi Arabia's preferred quiet-channel role and reduces the functioning back-channel architecture to Pakistan alone.
Qatar
Qatar
Doha is simultaneously a strike target, the site of the Safesea Neha attack 23 nautical miles offshore, and an active MOU mediator: Qatar's prime minister met Rubio and Vance in Washington the same weekend. Whether Qatar issues its own formal protest or maintains its dual role is the critical escalation indicator for the week of 11 May.