Please donate now to help fund our work

Следующий

Ali, Lombok & Indonesia: The Unexpected Winners of a Global Conflict?

1 Просмотры· 30 Mar 2026
anrnews
anrnews
145 Подписчики
145

⁣Ali, Lombok & Indonesia: The Unexpected Winners of a Global Conflict?
By Jamie McIntyre

It’s one of those rare moments in history where geopolitics doesn’t just reshape borders or alliances… it reshapes where people choose to live, holiday, and invest.

And right now, as the Iran–Israel conflict escalates into a broader Middle East crisis, we are witnessing the early stages of what could become one of the biggest shifts in global tourism patterns in decades.



THE WAR WON’T END QUICKLY — AND THAT CHANGES EVERYTHING

Let’s start with the uncomfortable reality few in Western media are willing to admit.

This war is not ending anytime soon.

Despite early promises of swift victories, the situation has dragged into something far more prolonged and destabilising. The assumption that America and Israel would dominate quickly has not materialised. Instead, we are seeing a drawn-out conflict with escalating retaliation, growing regional instability, and increasing uncertainty across global markets.

And when uncertainty rises… tourism patterns don’t just shift. They fracture.



THE COLLAPSE OF THE MIDDLE EAST AS A TOURISM HUB

For decades, cities like Dubai and Doha positioned themselves as the crossroads of the world.

Luxury, tax-free living, and global connectivity turned the Gulf into a magnet for both tourists and expats.

But war changes perception faster than reality.

Airspace risk. Missile threats. Political instability.

Even the possibility of danger is enough to shift airline routes, insurance costs, and traveller confidence.

The result?
•Airlines begin avoiding conflict-adjacent airspace
•Insurance premiums surge
•Flight routes become longer and more expensive
•Passenger demand declines

Dubai and Qatar’s dominance as aviation hubs becomes fragile overnight.



THE RIPPLE EFFECT: AIRFARES, ROUTES & GLOBAL TRAVEL

Tourism doesn’t exist in isolation. It runs on fuel, logistics, and confidence.

And all three are now under pressure.

Higher oil prices mean:
• Airlines cutting routes
• Smaller carriers collapsing
• Ticket prices rising sharply

In this new landscape, only the most efficient and strategically positioned routes survive.

Emerging winners may include:
• Turkey as a Europe–Asia bridge
• Turkish Airlines expanding its footprint
• Chinese and Russian transit corridors linking Asia to Europe
• Ethiopian Airlines leveraging a northern Africa route

But one major shift stands out:

People will travel shorter distances, less often, and more selectively.



WHAT THIS MEANS FOR AUSTRALIANS
See Part 2

Source: https://x.com/jamiemcintyre21/....status/2038397959747

Показать больше

 0 Комментарии sort   Сортировать по


Следующий