Read the daily news to learn English

picture of article

Iran war live updates: US temporarily lets India buy Russian oil amid energy fears; Israeli military launches strikes on Beirut

The Israel Defence Force says it conducted “a broad-scale wave” of 26 strikes in the Dahieh area of Lebanon overnight, targeting Hezbollah infrastructure. "Among the targets were an executive council’s command center and a facility storing UAVs used for attacks against Israel. The IDF had earlier issued forced evacuation orders for the whole population of Beirut’s southern suburbs – home to 500,000 people – sparking widespread panic and leading to huge queues of traffic as people tried to flee. It comes in spite of calls from world leaders including Emmanuel Macron urging Israel not to expand the war into Lebanon. According to the Lebanese health ministry, Israeli strikes have killed at least 123 people and injured 683 in Lebanon since Monday. Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah militia warned Israeli residents on Friday to evacuate towns within 5 km (3 miles) of the border. “Your military’s aggression against Lebanese sovereignty and safe citizens, the destruction of civilian infrastructure and the expulsion campaign it is carrying out will not go unchallenged,” Hezbollah said in a message posted on its Telegram channel in Hebrew.

picture of article

Iran war briefing: US lets India buy Russian oil after energy prices jump

The US granted Indian refiners a 30-day waiver to buy Russian oil after the US-Israel war on Iran sparked fears of a supply crunch, lifting global prices. Barely a month ago, Donald Trump claimed India had agreed to stop purchasing oil from Russia, in a shift that he said would “help END THE WAR in Ukraine” by cutting off a key source of funds for Moscow. The US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, insisted this temporary waiver, designed “to enable oil to keep flowing” into the market, “will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government”. The IDF has begun striking what it describes as Hezbollah infrastructure in the Dahiya neighbourhood, a densely populated commercial and residential area in the southern suburbs of Beirut. The IDF had earlier issued forced evacuation orders for the whole population of Beirut’s southern suburbs – home to 500,000 people – sparking widespread panic and leading to huge queues of traffic as people tried to flee. It comes in spite of calls from world leaders including Emmanuel Macron urging Israel not to expand the war into Lebanon. According to the Lebanese health ministry, Israeli strikes have killed at least 123 people and injured 683 in Lebanon since Monday. Trump has pushed back against Iranian claims that it is ready for a ground invasion by US and Israeli forces. “They’ve lost everything. They’ve lost their navy,” the US president told NBC News, without citing evidence for the claim. “They’ve lost everything they can lose.” More on that here. Trump also said he must “be involved in the appointment” of Iran’s next leader as he was in Venezuela, and dismissed the idea of the assassinated ayatollah’s son, Mojtaba Khamenei, succeeding his father as supreme leader as “unacceptable”. Trump has spoken in vague terms about who he wants to lead the country, but declined to provide specific names. More on that here. The war has escalated each day, now affecting an additional 14 countries across the Middle East and beyond. On Thursday, Azerbaijan accused Iran of drone attacks, which Tehran denied. The first government-chartered plane evacuating British nationals has landed in the UK. The plane took off from Muscat, the capital of Oman, at 1.36pm GMT on Thursday and arrived at London Stansted just before 1am on Friday. More on that here. Meanwhile, the US House of Representatives has voted down a Democratic-backed measure to halt hostilities with Iran, as Republicans cleared the way for Trump to continue the conflict that has drawn in countries across the Middle East, but criticised as having unclear goals. Our story here. The UK’s defence secretary, John Healey, has declined to rule out Britain joining US-Israeli strikes on Iran. More on that here. Canada’s top general said allies were in talks about possibly helping Gulf states defend themselves. The defence chief, Gen. Jennie Carignan, said a meeting was set for Friday to discuss such a proposal among allied militaries, and the Canadian Armed Forces would present a recommendation to the Canadian government. She did not specify what type of support this might involve but said Canada is not taking part in the US bombing of Iran and confirmed the discussions were not about participating in Operation Epic Fury. The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said he received a request from the US “for specific support” in dealing with Iran’s Shahed attack drones, as the US and its allies in the Middle East seek Ukraine’s expertise in countering such attacks from Russia. “I gave instructions to provide the necessary means and ensure the presence of Ukrainian specialists who can guarantee the required security,” Zelenskyy wrote on X. More on that here.

picture of article

Iran-backed militias intensify attacks against US, Israel and allies

Iran-backed militias around the Middle East are intensifying attacks against Israel, the US and their allies, in retaliation for the ongoing joint US-Israeli offensive against Tehran as the war draws in new armed actors, threatening wider chaos and violence. Israel and the US have targeted Iran’s network of militant groups, with Iraq emerging as a key front in this new and often clandestine confrontation. Militia in Iraq have launched dozens of attacks since the war began on Saturday, targeting Israel and US bases in Jordan and Iraq itself. In recent days, they have also targeted the infrastructure of Iranian-Kurdish opposition groups based in the self-governing Kurdish-dominated north of Iraq. Israel and the US are trying to degrade the capabilities of pro-Iranian militias in Iraq with airstrikes and special forces operations on the ground, according to analysts and well-informed former regional intelligence officials. Since the 2003 US-led invasion, Iraq has been a proxy battleground between the US, its allies and Iran, but the country’s current leaders have sought to avoid becoming drawn into this new conflict. The militias are recruited among Iraq’s majority Shia community, and follow orders from senior officers from Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). On Tuesday, in a sign of an intensifying war of proxies across the region, officials in Washington suggested they were considering mobilising the opposition Iranian Kurds, possibly for an invasion of Iran’s north-west region. Several Iran-backed armed factions have claimed attacks on the US base at Erbil airport in Iraq’s north in recent days. Other drones and missiles have been launched from sites in Iran’s western desert at targets in Jordan; while militia in the south fired a missile into Kuwait. On Thursday, the militias issued a joint statement telling European countries not to join the war and threatening their “forces and bases in Iraq and the region”. Iraq’s state-run Iraqi News Agency reported that an attempt to launch missiles from an area in Basra province in southern Iraq “intended to target a neighbouring country” had been thwarted and that security forces had seized a mobile launch platform carrying two missiles that were ready to be fired. A spokesperson for Israel’s military confirmed on Wednesday evening that drones had been launched at Israel from Iraq though “not in significant numbers”. Michael Knights, an Iraq expert at Horizon Engage, a strategic advisory based in New York, said Iran-backed Iraqi groups were trying to work out how to be relevant and how to respond to the killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. In what appears to be a clandestine counteroffensive, militia bases south of Baghdad, and near the southern cities of Nasariya and Basra, have come under attack from small “suicide drones” that are reported to have killed 15 fighters, mostly from Kataib Hezbollah, the most powerful among the Iraq-based pro-Iran groups. Knights said: “There are short-range drone systems being used in Iraq that can’t have been flown all the way from Israel. We saw exactly this during the last war [between Iran and Israel last year] and suggests some kind of covert action under way on the ground. There is a lot of proxy war happening.” On Thursday, Kataib Hezbollah said that one of its commanders had been killed in a strike in southern Iraq the previous day. Two sources from the faction told Agence France-Presse on Wednesday that a strike had hit a vehicle near the group’s main base in southern Iraq, killing two fighters. The toll then rose to three, including the commander. The group’s Jurf al-Nasr base has been repeatedly attacked since the weekend. There are also reports of large explosions at militia bases in Iraq’s western Anbar province. There have also been a series of unexplained blasts that have immobilised Iraqi government radar systems that monitor air traffic through Iraqi airpsace. Two former senior intelligence officials in Israel said they could not comment on the explosions but that the suggestion that Israel’s intelligence services or special forces were responsible was “credible”. A third said US forces might be involved. Iran has spent decades investing in a coalition of militant groups stretching from the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean intended to both deter attack on Iran itself and project influence across the region. Israel has launched a broad offensive in Lebanon after Hezbollah, the major Islamist movement in Lebanon which also has very close relations with Iran, joined the conflict, attacking Israel but also launching a drone towards a UK base in Cyprus. However the so-called “axis of resistance” has been seriously weakened by successive Israeli offensives since one of its members, Hamas, launched a surprise attack into Israel on 7 October 2023, triggering the series of recent wars. Hamas, the Palestinian militant Islamist movement, and the Houthis in Yemen both have close ties with Tehran, but have so far remained on the sidelines of the current conflict. Renad Mansour, a senior research fellow focused on the Middle East at Chatham House, said: “It’s very much about survival … And survival to them is based on calculations that aren’t necessarily about Iran’s survival.” Phillip Smyth, a US-based independent analyst of Iran’s allies and proxies, said Tehran might be holding the Houthis “in reserve” but that the movement’s leaders might also be “hedging their bets in case the Iranian regime collapses”. In a further sign of the possible use by the US of proxies recruited from among Iran’s ethnic minorities to weaken the Iranian regime, there are reports of attacks by an armed group affiliated to separatist movements among Iran’s Arab community against Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps targets in south-western Iran. A strike on an IRGC base in Ahwaz, an Iranian city close to the border with Iraq, was claimed by an apparently newly formed group calling itself the “Ahwaz Falcons”.

picture of article

A lone battle: Why is Pedro Sánchez the only European leader to take on Trump?

On Wednesday morning, Pedro Sánchez delivered a 10-minute televised address with the rather bland title: “An institutional declaration by the prime minister to assess recent international events.” The speech’s words, however, were anything but beige. Hours after Donald Trump had threatened to cut off trade with Spain over its government’s refusal to allow two jointly operated bases in Andalucía to be used to strike Iran, Sánchez set out his thinking. In doing so, he became one of the very few European leaders to openly and emphatically reject the demands of a US president whose trademark negotiating style is an erratic mix of bullying, humiliation and self-aggrandisement. The thrust of the Spanish prime minister’s argument was that another war in the Middle East would claim numerous lives, further destabilise the world and have dire economic consequences – but many of its paragraphs were unambiguously personal. A government’s overriding duty, said Sánchez, was to protect and improve the lives of its citizens, not to manipulate or profit from global conflicts. “It is absolutely unacceptable that those leaders who are incapable of fulfilling this duty use the smokescreen of war to hide their failure and, in the process, line the pockets of a select few – the same ones as always; the only ones who profit when the world stops building hospitals and starts building missiles,” he said. Then came the lines: “It is naive to believe that democracies or respect between nations can spring from ruins. Or to think that practising blind and servile obedience is a form of leadership … We will not be complicit in something that is bad for the world and that is also contrary to our values and interests, simply out of fear of reprisals from someone.” Who “someone” was needed no explanation. Even if Sánchez was preaching to the converted in his speech – according to a recent survey, only 15.7% of Spaniards have a favourable opinion of the US president – his words would still have resonated with the many who were infuriated by the country’s support for the 2003 invasion of Iraq under its then prime minister, José María Aznar. While Wednesday’s address thrilled Sánchez’s leftwing base, it elicited a predictable response from his political opponents. Alberto Núñez Feijóo, the leader of the conservative People’s party, accused the prime minister of playing partisan politics and jeopardising Spain’s relationship with the US. Santiago Abascal, who leads the far-right, pro-Trump Vox party, suggested the decision had been taken by the “ayatollahs” and by a prime minister hellbent on remaining in power, despite a series of corruption scandals facing his inner circle, his socialist party and his administration. But Sánchez’s language, though stark, was hardly out of character. As well as being one of the most vociferous European critics of Israel’s conduct in Gaza – he has accused the country of “exterminating a defenceless people” by bombing hospitals and “killing innocent boys and girls with hunger” – he spoke out against the US’s armed toppling of Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela. He has also bucked global trends by defending and promoting the benefits of immigration at a time when most politicians across the continent prefer radical rhetoric and razor wire. His is an increasingly loud voice, but, for the time being at least, a solitary one. While Denmark’s prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, has won plaudits and boosted her profile by rallying European leaders against Donald Trump’s attempt to claim Greenland, Sánchez has not found full-throated support in Europe’s major capitals. For reasons that are sometimes domestic, sometimes global, sometimes ideological and sometimes practical, his counterparts in Berlin, Paris and Rome have found themselves unwilling or unable to speak out against Trump. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, contacted Sánchez on Wednesday to express France’s “European solidarity” in the face of the US’s trade threats. Macron, who has only one year left in office and is focusing almost entirely on foreign policy, now faces the challenge of trying to de-escalate another international conflict that appears far out of France’s hands. Paris, which staunchly opposed the US-led 2003 war in Iraq under the then vociferously dissenting president Jacques Chirac, is now walking a tightrope of pragmatism. Macron has been clear in saying that the US and Israeli attacks on Iran did not observe international law. But he has also said that the Iranian leadership bore responsibility by disregarding international law with its nuclear programme, financing terrorist groups and with its human rights abuses. In a televised address on Tuesday, Macron said of the killings of Iran’s supreme leader and top officials: “History never weeps for the executioners of their own people, and none of them will be mourned.” France has moved its aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle, to the eastern Mediterranean, as well as other anti-air defence capabilities, for what Macron called a “strictly defensive” presence in support of its regional allies, including Cyprus, but also Qatar, Kuwait and the UAE, where France has a sizeable military base. One of France’s top priorities was “working to find a way out of this crisis,” a French official said. It is from Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, however, that Europe has seen rhetoric most sharply differing from Sánchez’s. On Sunday, as he prepared to head to Washington, Merz struck a remarkably conciliatory note in a statement for the cameras at his chancellery in Berlin. “Categorising the events [in Iran] under international law will have relatively little effect,” Merz stated. “Therefore, this is not the time to lecture our partners and allies. Despite our reservations, we share many of their goals without being able to actually achieve them ourselves.” Merz’s stated strategy at the long-planned Oval Office meeting on Tuesday was – taking a page from the Canadian prime minister Mark Carney – to use pragmatism to allow the greatest room for manoeuvre on Europe’s most pressing concerns: Ukraine and the president’s chaotic tariffs. The unpopular chancellor, who is trying to fight off a stiff challenge from the far-right Alternative für Deutschland party before five state elections this year while also struggling to revive Europe’s top economy, can ill-afford a frontal collision with Trump. So when, on Tuesday, shortly after the US president had announced his plans to stop trading with Spain, a reporter offered him an opportunity to defend Spain, Merz instead threw his support behind Trump’s renewed attack on Madrid for refusing to accept Nato’s proposal for member states to increase their defence spending to 5% of their GDP. Merz later told German journalists that he had not wanted to contradict Trump “on the open stage” but that in private talks he had stood up for Spain and the UK (whose prime minister, Keir Starmer, had been derided by Trump in the Oval Office as “no Winston Churchill” and who was forced this week to insist the “special relationship” between the US and UK was still alive). But by then, the diplomatic damage was done, allowing Trump a win in his persistent efforts to drive a wedge between European allies. Commentators back home said that while Merz had earned praise last June for pushing back on some of Trump’s more outrageous statements regarding Ukraine and the second world war, the chancellor’s reticence this time was “shameful”. If Sánchez was casting around for support in his stance on the Iran war, he won’t have been looking to Rome. Italy’s position appears deliberately ambiguous. The prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, has tried to keep one foot in Trump’s camp – often boasting of her personal and political affinity with him – and the other in Europe. This balancing act has become a defining feature of Meloni’s foreign policy. As with Trump’s tariff wars and the war in Gaza, Meloni has been careful not to openly break with Washington, yet equally reluctant to commit Italy to a clearly independent line. “We are not at war and we do not intend to enter one,” Meloni told the Italian radio station RTL 102.5 on Wednesday. “The situation is worrying, I would say on several fronts. I am concerned about an increasingly evident crisis of international law. The world is increasingly governed by chaos.” On Thursday, however, the defence minister, Guido Crosetto, took a more forthright line, telling the lower house of parliament that the decision to launch the strikes against Iran “of course fell outside, needless to say, the rules of international law”. Crosetto added: “It is a war that was started without anyone in the world knowing. One in which we, like the rest of the world, find ourselves having to manage [the consequences].” Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, said Rome had not yet received any US requests to use military bases on Italian soil for operations against Iran, and would evaluate any requests if they were to arrive. In the meantime, Spain’s lonely duel with Washington rumbles on – especially after the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, claimed on Wednesday that Madrid had changed its mind and was now happy to cooperate with the offensive. The suggestion was quickly, and bluntly, dismissed by Spain’s foreign minister, José Manuel Albares. “Our ‘no to war’ stance remains clear and unequivocal,” he said. “[Leavitt] may be the White House press secretary, but I’m the foreign minister of Spain and I’m telling her that our position hasn’t changed at all.”

picture of article

Jimmy Lai will not appeal conviction, paving way for political negotiations over release

Jimmy Lai, the prominent pro-democracy activist who was recently sentenced to 20 years in prison in Hong Kong, has said he will not appeal his conviction. The decision marks the end of a years-long legal saga for the 78-year-old critic of the Chinese Communist party (CCP), and opens the door for political negotiations to his release. A member of Lai’s Hong Kong legal team said: “We can confirm we have clear and definitive instructions not to lodge an appeal against conviction or sentence.” Lai, a British citizen, was sentenced in February after being convicted in December on charges of sedition and conspiracy to collude with foreign forces. He had pleaded not guilty to all charges. Although Lai was spared the maximum penalty of a life sentence, his 20-year jail term is the harshest penalty given for national security offences in Hong Kong. His family has said that it could mean “he will die a martyr behind bars”. Western governments including the UK have described Lai’s prosecution as politically motivated and have called for his immediate release. The UN rights chief, Volker Türk, has said that the verdict was incompatible with international law and must be quashed. The UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, is understood to have raised Lai’s case in his recent meeting with China’s leader, Xi Jinping, in Beijing. Lai’s son, Sebastien, subsequently said the UK did not do enough to secure his father’s release on the highly anticipated China trip. The decision not to appeal against the conviction concludes Lai’s legal process, and could mark the start of the political process to secure his release. Western governments have previously secured the release of citizens held by China, including the Australian journalist Cheng Lei and the Canadian citizens Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, who were imprisoned after a row between Beijing and Ottowa over the detention of a Huawei executive. But those cases were all linked to deteriorating bilateral relations, while Lai has been an outspoken critic of the CCP, a regime that treats dissidents harshly. Lai’s lawyers would not elaborate on why he was not appealing. A Hong Kong appellate court recently overturned separate fraud convictions against Lai, the sentences for which have already been served. The numerous legal cases brought against the once powerful media mogul were described by his supporters as “lawfare” – the use of the legal system to silence critics. The US president, Donald Trump, is expected to visit China between 31 March and 2 April. Trump has previously said that he asked Xi to “consider” releasing Lai, who previously said that Trump was “the only one who can save” Hong Kong from the tightening grip of the CCP. The Chinese and Hong Kong authorities have defended Lai’s conviction and said that it is not related to press freedom. The UK Foreign Office and the Hong Kong government were approached for comment.

picture of article

Ukraine war briefing: Trump urges Zelenskyy to ‘get a deal done’ with Russia

US president Donald Trump on Thursday again urged Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy to strike a deal with Russia, claiming that Russian president Vladimir Putin was prepared to reach an agreement. “Zelenskyy, he has to get on the ball, and he has to get a deal done,” Trump said in an interview with Politico. Trump, returning to language he used during a tense White House meeting a year ago where he and vice-president JD Vance publicly berated Zelenskyy, suggested the Ukrainian president was in a weak position and needed to make compromises, saying “Now he’s got even less cards” and repeated his insistence that “Putin is ready to make a deal”, without providing evidence. Trump has long said that US support for Ukraine is wasteful to the US and has spoken admirably in the past about Putin, whom he invited to Alaska in August 2025. Zelenskyy said the US and its allies in the Middle East are seeking Ukraine’s expertise in countering Iran’s Shahed drones. The Ukrainian president said various countries, including the US, have approached Ukraine for help in defending against Iranian drones. He said he had spoken in recent days to the leaders of the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Jordan and Kuwait about possible cooperation. Russia has fired tens of thousands of Shaheds at Ukraine since it invaded its neighbor just over four years ago. Iran has responded with the same type of drones to joint US-Israeli strikes on Iranian targets. Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha accused Hungary early on Friday of detaining seven employees of Ukraine’s state savings bank while they were transporting cash from Austria back to Ukraine. Sybiha was writing on X after Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán said Budapest would force Ukraine with “political and financial tools” to reopen the Druzhba pipeline carrying Russian oil to Hungarian refineries. Hungary is one of the few European countries to maintain close ties with Russia since its Ukraine offensive. “In fact, we are talking about Hungary taking hostages and stealing money,” Sybiha wrote. “If this is the ‘force’ announced earlier today by Mr Orban, then this is a force of a criminal gang. This is state terrorism and racketeering.” Repair crews have restored an external line to the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in south-eastern Ukraine nearly a month after it was taken out of operation, the head of Russia’s nuclear energy corporation said. Alexei Likhachev, director general of Rosatom, said in a statement that repairs to the Ferosplavna-1 line connecting the plant to the power grid were completed late on Thursday afternoon. Europe’s largest nuclear plant, with six reactors, was seized by Russia soon after Moscow’s troops invaded Ukraine in February 2022. A downed Ukrainian drone fell next to a five-storey apartment building in the port of Sevastopol in Russian-held Crimea, injuring nine people and causing considerable damage, the Russian-appointed governor said early on Friday. Mikhail Razvozhayev said the drone was filled with metal pieces and explosives fell next to the building, badly damaging it. Sevastopol hosts the Russian Black Sea Fleet in Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014.

picture of article

Explosions heard across Tel Aviv – as it happened

This liveblog is closing now but you can continue to follow live coverage of the Middle East crisis here. Thank you for reading.

picture of article

How Flightradar24 became the go-to platform for the world to watch global aviation crises unfold

Mikael Robertsson and Olov Lindberg did not set out to build one of the pre-eminent monitors of global airspace. In a bid to draw more eyes to their Swedish flight price comparison portal, the entrepreneurs added a page charting air traffic. That page became Flightradar24, the portal that people around the world now turn to when there is chaos – and drama – in the skies. “Very soon this flight tracker … became more popular than the price comparison [tool] itself,” recalled Robertsson, who spoke to the Guardian from the firm’s office in Stockholm. In 2010, when the eruption of Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull volcano released a vast cloud of ash that grounded flights across Europe, millions turned to Flightradar24 to monitor flight movements (or lack thereof) in real time. It was the first time the platform attracted an influx of curious users, keen to watch a major event unfold in real time. It wouldn’t be the last. “You can pick any kind of major aviation event you want after that,” said Fredrik Lindahl, chief executive of Flightradar24 – from the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in 2014 to the onset of the Covid pandemic, which crippled the travel industry in 2020. While crises affecting millions can trigger a sharp increase in the platform’s audience, so too can the flight of a single individual. When the late Russian opposition activist Alexei Navalny was evacuated to Berlin to be treated for suspected poisoning in 2020, and when he returned to Russia in 2021, users followed both journeys live in their droves. In recent days, as the US-Israel war on Iran rapidly cleared the airspace over the Middle East, prompting widespread travel chaos that disrupted hundreds of thousands of travellers, viewers from around the world gravitated to the platform. On Saturday, after the US and Israel launched airstrikes on Iran, and Iran deployed a barrage of retaliatory missiles across the Middle East, countries across the region swiftly shut their airspace. On Flightradar24 the impact on aviation was clear. With large swaths of the Middle East closed to air traffic, two narrow flight corridors emerged, crammed with little yellow plane symbols – the first to the north of Iran, through the Caucasus, but below Ukraine’s closed airspace, and the second to the south, through Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Oman. “For each big aviation event, we do get a big traffic spike, and then it sort of dies down,” Lindahl said. “But the traffic stays slightly higher than it was before.” No event has yet drawn more attention to Flightradar24 than the journey of the late Queen’s coffin in 2022, when 4.8 million people followed the plane’s short journey from Edinburgh to Northolt. How does it work? Flightradar24 tracks all this through a network of about 58,000 radio receivers, including a dozen in Antarctica. It started with just two, installed by Robertsson and Lindberg on their respective homes, after they learned it was possible to monitor airspace with devices bought from the UK. “It sounded like something impossible,” said Robertsson. “Like, how can you track air traffic with a small box? I would probably classify it as scam if I found something like this today.” Every aircraft has a transmitter, sending out flight information – its callsign, position, direction, speed and altitude – which is collected by receivers. By early 2010, up to 40,000 people were visiting Flightradar24 each day. When Eyjafjallajökull erupted that April, it spewed out a gigantic ash cloud which closed over 300 airports, grounded more than 100,000 flights – and gave rise to an extraordinary surge of interest in global airspace. “I think we had, like, four million visitors in a couple of hours,” said Robertsson. As war broke out in Iran and the surrounding region on Saturday, visits to Flightradar24 were more than double the norm. “Saturday was a spike, then we went down a bit on Sunday, and then a bigger spike on Monday,” said Robertsson. “And now we’re slowly, slowly, losing some traffic again.” Flightradar24 has built a business around this intermittent audience, marketing a premium tier with more data to its most avid users. Subscriptions account for about 70% of its revenue, and it also sells commercial packages to industry operators, as well as advertising. The platform is reliant on aviation enthusiasts. “We’re really trying to have a very strong free product because … what underlies all this is like the crowdsourced aspect of Flightradar24, with people around the world hosting our receivers,” said Lindahl. To maintain a reliable map, “we need to have a strong product, that a lot of people are exposed to”, he added. “And then, some of them will become interested enough to maybe think ‘oh, maybe I should host one of these receivers.’” Today Flightradar24, which sold a 35% stake to Sprints Capital, a London-based venture capital firm, in September 2025, has a base of more than 1.5 million paying subscribers, and typically attracts about 60 million free viewers to its website each month. “It will definitely be higher in March,” said Lindahl.