Americans stuck in the Middle East recount finding their way home with little government help
More than 17,500 Americans have returned amid widespread airspace closures and flight cancellations disrupting travel across the Middle East, with many relying on informal networks for evacuation.
- Thousands of American citizens remain stranded in the Middle East as Iran retaliates with drone and missile strikes, disrupting flights and closing airspace after operations by the United States and Israel on February 28, 2026.
- U.S. State Department officials noted that cuts and vacant ambassador posts left the foreign service shorthanded as advisories came after the air campaign, and officials urged registration with STEP despite limited evacuation capacity.
- White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt noted that `more than 17,500 Americans have safely returned`, as C-17 cargo planes and charter flights are mobilized.
- When Americans called the State Department hotline on Tuesday, they heard an automated message warning against relying on government evacuation, while Democratic lawmakers sharply criticized planning and U.S. embassies were evacuated or struck amid six U.S. service members killed.
- Several countries rapidly organized evacuations, with Italy evacuating 2,500 citizens, and over 2,200 people joined WhatsApp groups to share tips and rides from Oman, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan.
58 Articles
58 Articles
Middle East Conflict: Americans Stuck in Gulf Region Recount Finding Their Way Home With Little Government Help
Ramos is one of the many Americans and citizens of other countries who evacuated from the Middle East or were still stranded there Friday, almost a week after Israeli-U.S. attacks on Iran rapidly entangled more than a dozen nearby countries. Middle East Conflict: Americans Stuck in Gulf Region Recount Finding Their Way Home With Little Government Help.
Americans stuck in Middle East recount trek home with little government help
Stranded Americans across the Middle East say they've been left to navigate flight cancellations and confusing government guidance on their own.
Americans stuck in the Middle East recount finding their way home with little government help
Stranded Americans across the Middle East say they’ve been left to navigate flight cancellations and confusing government guidance on their own.
War in Iran: Stranded Americans returning home
NEW YORK (PIX11) -- Americans are starting to arrive back in the United States after families, students, and tourists found themselves trapped in the Middle East. Hundreds of thousands of people have been stranded across the region due to flight cancellations and airspace closures, leaving ...
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