The US State Department has issued one of its broadest emergency advisories in years, urging American citizens to immediately leave more than a dozen Middle Eastern countries as the regional conflict intensifies and security risks multiply amid unchecked escalation.The alert comes amid escalating retaliatory strikes by Iran targeting US and Israeli-linked assets across the Gulf.In a sharply worded post on X, Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Mora Namdar wrote that Washington D.C., “urges Americans to DEPART NOW from the countries below using available commercial transportation, due to serious safety risks.”The language signaled that officials believe the threat environment has moved well beyond precautionary levels.The advisory covers Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. Americans needing assistance have been directed to call the State Department’s 24-hour hotline and enroll in the STEP program for real-time security updates.The @SecRubio @StateDept urges Americans to DEPART NOW from the countries below using available commercial transportation, due to serious safety risks. Americans who need State Department assistance arranging to depart via commercial means, CALL US 24/7 at +1-202-501-4444 (from… pic.twitter.com/vdplAik2Sq— Assistant Secretary Mora Namdar (@AsstSecStateCA) March 2, 2026The sweeping list reflects how quickly a regional confrontation can spill across borders. What may have started off as targeted strikes between states appears to have rapidly entangled aviation hubs, energy infrastructure, and civilian transit corridors far from the initial flashpoints.The warning follows Iranian retaliatory operations launched after joint US-Israeli strikes killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and several senior commanders. Tehran has since targeted American bases and strategic sites throughout the Gulf region.Major aviation centers have not been spared. Dubai International Airport—widely regarded as the world’s busiest international hub—was reportedly hit during drone and missile activity, with damage and casualties reported near aviation facilities in Bahrain, Kuwait, and Iraq.In response to the spreading violence, Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, and the UAE have implemented partial or full airspace closures. The result has been immediate and dramatic: more than 3,400 flights canceled across seven major Middle Eastern airports.Hundreds of thousands of travelers have been affected, with social media footage showing crowded terminals and stranded passengers sleeping on airport floors. Dubai’s airport, which typically functions as a global crossroads, has reportedly resembled what one observer called a “massive waiting room.”Transit passengers have been particularly vulnerable. Nearly half of those stranded in Dubai were connecting travelers, caught mid-journey as the regional aviation network unraveled.The crisis has also affected non-Western carriers. Russian airlines, including Aeroflot, have canceled or rerouted flights to Tehran, Dubai, and Abu Dhabi, while Russia’s Association of Tour Operators (ATOR) estimates that roughly 8,000 Russian tourists are stranded after missing Middle Eastern connections.For American citizens in the region, the practical problem is straightforward: commercial routes are narrowing by the hour. In some locations, such as Israel, commercial air travel was halted after the initial wave of strikes, creating severe bottlenecks for civilians attempting to depart.This logistical reality explains the urgency behind the State Department’s language. “DEPART NOW” is an instruction issued before exit options disappear entirely.Energy markets are watching closely as well. Gulf airspace overlaps with some of the world’s most critical shipping corridors, meaning instability can quickly translate into price spikes felt by consumers thousands of miles away. So far in Europe, energy prices have spiked 50%. In Britain, they’ve gone up even more.The breadth of the State Department’s warning is striking, encompassing allies, adversaries, and countries that consider themselves bystanders, demonstrating how modern conflicts do not respect diplomatic categories.The post State Department Issues “DEPART NOW” Alert for Americans Across Middle East as War Spillover Hits US Interests appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.