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Satellite firm extends Middle East image delay to prevent use by US adversaries

By Thomson Reuters Mar 10, 2026 | 5:27 PM

By Cassell Bryan-Low and Joey Roulette

WASHINGTON, March 10 (Reuters) – California-based Planet Labs has expanded restrictions on accessing its imagery of the Middle East to prevent adversaries from using it to attack the U.S. and its ​allies, a sign of how the expansion of commercial space business ‌can impact conflicts.

Planet, which operates a large fleet of Earth-imaging satellites and sells frequently updated images to governments, companies and media, told customers on Monday that it was extending restrictions to a period of 14 days from a delay of four days imposed last week.

The move was ‌temporary ​and in “an effort to limit any uncontrolled distribution of ⁠the images that might result ⁠in their unintentional access and use as tactical leverage by adversarial actors,” a Planet spokesperson told Reuters in a statement.

“This conflict is dynamic and in many ways unique to others, and thus Planet is taking robust steps to ​help ensure our images do not contribute in any way to attacks on allied and NATO personnel and civilians,” the spokesperson said.

Some space specialists say that ⁠Iran could be accessing commercial imagery, including via ⁠other U.S. adversaries.

SPACE WAR ARENA

Militaries rely on space for everything ​from identifying targets, guiding weapons and tracking missiles to communications. In a sign of ​space’s central role in modern warfare, U.S. officials last week said ‌their space forces were among “the first movers” in the operation against Iran.

A U.S. Space Command spokesperson declined to detail the capabilities it used. Space Command is responsible for helping with missile tracking, secure communications and using Pentagon satellites as overwatch for ⁠U.S. and joint forces on the ground.

While high-quality satellite imagery used to be the preserve of advanced space powers, access to commercial satellite imagery has leveled the playing ⁠field, as Ukraine has experienced ‌during its war with Russia. Now, satellite operators are ⁠deploying AI to help speed up the ability to analyze ​imagery and ‌identify areas of interest.

“This expert analysis used to be ​the preserve ⁠of high-end military analysts, not anymore,” said Chris Moore, a defense industry consultant and retired air vice-marshal in the British military.

“Ultimately it will create an all-seeing eye from space that will make the concealment of military forces and deception operations difficult to achieve.”

(Reporting by Cassell Bryan-Low in London and Joey Roulette in Washington; Editing by Joe ​Brock and Stephen Coates)