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Video Shows How Planes Emptied Iranian Skies During Israel's Attack

Video Shows How Planes Emptied Iranian Skies During Israel's Attack

NDTV13-06-2025
Tehran:
As Israel launched a wave of airstrikes on Iran on Friday, targeting nuclear facilities, missile infrastructure and military commanders. A time-lapse video from Flightradar24 showed the immediate impact of the Israeli air strike in the skies. It showed a total clearance of civilian air traffic over Iranian airspace.
The footage captures a rapid and dramatic shift, as commercial aircraft swiftly rerouted to avoid Israeli drones and missiles in Iranian skies, leaving the country's airspace virtually deserted in the aftermath of the strikes. The video offers a rare visual of how conflict instantly reshapes global aviation patterns.
The visuals show commercial aircraft rerouting in real-time, curving away from Iranian territory and opting for alternative corridors.
This time-lapse of air traffic over the Middle East shows how civilian airspace cleared after Israel's operation against Iran began. pic.twitter.com/aap8ilC2MI
— Brady Africk (@bradyafr) June 13, 2025
The mass diversion could likely trigger a ripple effect on international aviation, with longer flight durations, potential delays and increased fuel costs for multiple carriers operating in and out of the Middle East and Asia.
'Operation Rising Lion' And Regional Fallout
The exodus of aircraft from Iranian airspace began shortly after Israel launched a series of strikes on Friday morning. Israel carried out airstrikes on nuclear sites in Iran, with the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) confirming the operation. Explosions were heard in Tehran during the strikes, which were part of what the IDF has dubbed "Operation Rising Lion".
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the operation was necessary as Iran posed a threat to "Israel's very survival."
"We targeted Iran's leading nuclear scientists working on the Iranian bomb, we also struck the heart of Iran's ballistic missile programme," he said.
Quoting an IDF spokesperson, Fox News reported that the strike was launched after Jerusalem gathered "high-quality intel" indicating "Iran is closer than ever to developing a nuke."
Iranian state television reported explosions in the capital, Tehran, and said air defence systems were operating at full capacity. However, reports of civilian casualties, including children, remain unverified. Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps chief Hossein Salami was among those killed.
Israel's Defence Minister, Israel Katz, declared a state of emergency, warning of imminent retaliation from Tehran. "Following the State of Israel's pre-emptive strike against Iran, a missile and drone attack against the State of Israel and its civilian population is expected in the immediate future," Katz said.
Oil prices spiked as much as 6 per cent in early trading following the airstrikes, driven by fears of broader regional destabilisation.
While Iran has accused the United States of supporting Israel's action, US President Donald Trump has denied any direct involvement. Speaking to Fox News, he acknowledged being briefed ahead of the strike but reiterated Washington's position that Iran cannot be allowed to develop a nuclear bomb.
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'We have to fix the deterrence that was lost so nobody can do such a thing to Israel and just stay alive.' Reputational hit Israel's global reputation has taken a big blow as the war has dragged on. In the U.S., more than half of Americans now hold an unfavorable view of Israel, according to a Pew Research Center poll published in June. France has sought to ban or limit participation of Israeli defense companies in leading defense exhibitions. The U.K. has paused trade talks and joined Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Norway in sanctioning senior far-right ministers. Many Israelis say that when they travel abroad, they are afraid to say where they're from. Last week, 28 countries signed a letter demanding an immediate cease-fire in Gaza, including the U.K., France, Italy, Canada, Austria, Spain, the Netherlands, Japan, Greece and Belgium. Demonstrators in Tel Aviv on June 28 calling for the immediate release of hostages held in Gaza. Outside of Israel, Jews who hold pro-Israel views have found themselves ostracized by both the progressive left and the far right. Inside Israel, polls show more than 70% of Israelis want the fighting to end and the hostages to be freed. Even among voters for Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party, some 50% now say they support ending the war through a hostage deal, according to polling by the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem-based think tank. Some of Netanyahu's far-right coalition allies have been doubling down, saying the country should focus exclusively on defeating Hamas militarily and stop negotiating temporary cease-fires. They argue that a total defeat of Hamas is more important for Israel's future than securing the freedom of the rest of the hostages through negotiations. 'The humiliating ceremony of negotiations with terrorists is over. Dear prime minister, now is the time for victory,' Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, a far-right leader in the government, wrote in an X post on Friday. Israel's opposition, along with the majority of Israeli civilians and families of hostages, support an immediate negotiated end to the war, rather than the temporary cease-fire and two-phase deal Israel's government has been pushing for. Israeli troops on June 26 carrying the coffin of one of the soldiers killed in an attack on their armored vehicle in Gaza. Many Israelis worry about the toll the war is taking on soldiers, especially reservists who have had to leave their families and jobs for long stretches of time. More than 400 Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza since Israel's invasion of the Strip. Israel has a very small standing army and relies on reservists for most of its troops. They are exhausted from fighting on expanding fronts in one of the longest stretches of war in the nation's history. Commanders say it is getting harder to recruit men for new fighting. 'Every day people now are killed, and for what?' said a reservist from the 98th commando division, who served in Gaza for months on end after Oct. 7. He has decided not to go back. He said the fighting endangers the lives of the hostages and that, in his view, it is impossible to completely destroy Hamas due to its use of guerrilla warfare. 'It's no longer a just war,' he said. Write to Dov Lieber at and Shayndi Raice at Why Israel and Hamas Won't Stop Fighting Why Israel and Hamas Won't Stop Fighting Why Israel and Hamas Won't Stop Fighting Why Israel and Hamas Won't Stop Fighting

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