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US satellite firm extends Middle East image delay

Andrew Murphy by Andrew Murphy
March 10, 2026
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This sequence of Planet Labs satellite images shows Dubai's Jebel Ali commercial port before and after it was hit by an Iranian attack. ©AFP

Paris (France) (AFP) – American firm Planet Labs PBC on Tuesday said it now imposes a two-week delay for access to its satellite images of the Middle East because of the US-Israeli war against Iran. Both major US satellite firms, Planet and Vantor, now delay or block the release of images from the Middle East because of the conflict that erupted on February 28 with US-Israeli strikes on Iran.

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California-based Planet initially imposed a 96-hour delay last week for access to its high-resolution images, which are usually available a few hours after they are taken. “After consulting with experts inside and outside of government…Planet has decided to take additional, proactive measures to ensure our imagery is not tactically leveraged by adversarial actors to target allied and NATO-partner personnel and civilians,” a statement said. From now on, coverage of “all of Iran and nearby allied bases, in addition to the Gulf States and existing conflict zones” will be blocked for 14 days, it said. Planet, founded in 2010 by former NASA scientists and whose images are widely used by media and researchers, did not say whether the decision was taken in response to an official US request.

For a zone running from Egypt to the Gulf states, Turkey, and Djibouti, the most recent images released by Planet date from March 6. Under US legislation, any company headquartered in America that deals in high-resolution satellite images may be subject to restrictions for national security or foreign policy reasons. Industry leader Vantor (formerly Maxar) has had a long-standing policy of not distributing images of US or allied bases. But it denied in a statement that it had acted under any government order to hold back images.

“During times of geopolitical conflict, Vantor may implement enhanced access controls to prevent the misuse of sensitive geospatial intelligence and to help protect allied forces and civilians,” it said. “These controls can include limiting who is able to task new imagery or purchase historical imagery over areas where US, NATO, and other allied and partner forces are actively operating, as well as over areas that are being actively targeted by adversaries.” Vantor said it “independently determines” the controls. “These decisions are not mandated by any government, military organization, or third party.”

During Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza, which started in October 2023 and ran up to a ceasefire in the same month last year, Planet imposed a 30-day delay while still maintaining extensive coverage of the territory. Many media organizations, including AFP, use satellite images from sources such as Planet and Vantor to cover major conflicts—such as Ukraine, Gaza, or the Sudan civil war—where on-the-ground access is made difficult or virtually impossible.

© 2024 AFP

Tags: geopoliticsIransatellite imagery
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