Escalating conflict between Iran, the US, and Israel has caused travel chaos for Formula 1 personnel heading to the 2026 Australian Grand Prix opener, canceled a Pirelli tire test in Bahrain, and raised concerns for regional races. Airspace closures forced flight reroutes, but the Melbourne event will proceed as scheduled, with organizers monitoring impacts on Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.
The conflict began on February 28, 2026, when the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran, killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and other officials. Iran and allies retaliated with attacks on Israel and US bases in Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, including explosions in Doha and a strike on the US Navy's Fifth Fleet base in Manama, Bahrain.
These events prompted the cancellation of Pirelli's wet-weather tire test at Bahrain International Circuit, originally scheduled February 28-March 1 alongside Mercedes and McLaren personnel. "The two days of development testing... have been cancelled for safety reasons," Pirelli stated. All involved staff were reported safe, with repatriation efforts underway.
Travel disruptions closed Middle East airspaces and hubs like Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi, affecting up to 2,000 F1 staff en route from Europe to Melbourne for the March 8 Grand Prix. Reroutes via Singapore, Hong Kong, Perth, and charters (around 500 personnel) added travel time, but Australian GP chief Travis Auld confirmed all key staff, drivers, and engineers would arrive on time. "The last 48 hours have required some reshuffling... everyone will be here ready for the race and fans won't notice any difference," Auld told the BBC.
F1 equipment had been shipped earlier from Bahrain testing. An F1 spokesperson noted the next races (Australia, China, Japan) are distant and non-regional: "We closely monitor any situation like this." Contingency plans for Bahrain (April 12) and Saudi (April 19) include potential replacements at Imola or Portimão.
Broader impacts include risks to the World Endurance Championship's Qatar events (March 22-28), with WEC prioritizing safety and daily evaluations. All Qatar sporting events are suspended. FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem expressed concern: "Safety and wellbeing will guide our decisions."