DELHI, India. June 16 –Amid intensifying Israel-Iran tensions, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s journey to the G7 Summit in Canada faces major disruption as his official aircraft Air India One is forced onto an extended detour. Escalating conflict in West Asia has triggered widespread airspace closures, throwing regional aviation into chaos and impacting even VIP travel. The specially modified Boeing 747 must now navigate alternative routes after Israel’s June 13 airstrikes on Iran prompted multiple nations to shut their skies.
PM Modi’s three-nation diplomatic tour—covering Cyprus, Croatia, and the G7 Summit—began with a 7:30 AM IST Sunday departure from Delhi. His first stop, Larnaca in Cyprus, typically involves an 8–9 hour flight through Pakistani, Iranian, Iraqi, Syrian, Lebanese, and Israeli airspace. With these corridors now closed or deemed unsafe due to geopolitical turbulence, the Air India One reroute avoids conflict zones entirely. Restrictions on Pakistani airspace since Operation Sindoor (May 7–10) further complicate the path, with UAE/Saudi/Jordan alternatives also unstable.
The revised flight path adds significant travel time to the Delhi-Larnaca leg, delaying the Prime Minister’s Cyprus arrival. After a 24-hour stop, Modi will proceed to Canada on June 16, also skirting Russia-Ukraine conflict airspace. The cascading effect of West Asia’s airspace crisis extends beyond diplomatic travel: commercial carriers like Air India and IndiGo have cancelled over a dozen international flights. Passengers now endure 1–2 hour longer journeys and 15–20% fare hikes, while airlines grapple with 12% higher operating costs.
This unprecedented aviation disruption—the worst since the 2022 Ukraine invasion—highlights how geopolitical volatility paralyzes global connectivity. With West Asian skies remaining high-risk, the fallout reshapes routes for millions of travelers and world leaders alike.