US Request Prompts Planet Labs To Withhold Iran War Images

The San Francisco-based commercial satellite provider said Sunday that the measures apply retroactively from March 9 and are expected to remain in place until the conflict ends.

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Planet Labs, which has contracts with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the US Navy, among others, is moving to a "managed access" model, extending publication delays for new imagery.
(Source: Planet Labs PBC/AP)

The Trump administration has asked satellite imagery providers to voluntarily withhold images of designated areas of interest due to the conflict in the Middle East, prompting Planet Labs PBC to restrict access to data from the region.

The San Francisco-based commercial satellite provider said Sunday that the measures apply retroactively from March 9 and are expected to remain in place until the conflict ends.

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"These are extraordinary circumstances, and we are doing all we can to balance the needs of all our stakeholders," the company said in a statement. "We will continue to monitor the situation and make adjustments as possible to minimize the impact on data availability to our customers."

The Pentagon said in an emailed statement that it does not comment on intelligence-related matters.

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Planet said in its statement that the US government has "requested all satellite imagery providers voluntarily implement an indefinite withhold of imagery in the designated Area of Interest."

Planet Labs, which has contracts with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the US Navy, among others, is moving to a "managed access" model, extending publication delays for new imagery. It will release images of the designated areas only on a case-by-case basis, including in cases of "urgent, mission-critical requirements" or when deemed to be in the public interest.

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The decision underscores the growing strategic role of commercial satellite operators in modern conflicts, where high-resolution imagery can influence military planning as quickly as it informs financial markets and the public. Once controlled by governments, Earth observation has evolved into a multibillion-dollar industry supplying near-real-time intelligence worldwide.

The move follows tighter restrictions introduced last month, when Planet Labs increased commercial imagery delays from four days to two weeks, citing concerns that the data could be used to target NATO members. At the time, the company had said the temporary hold on imagery wasn't the result of any government requirement.

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ALSO READ: Israel Says More Than 1,000 Iranian Missiles Still Threaten It

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