As the war set off by the joint U.S.-Israeli strike that took down Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei continues to escalate and spread far throughout the region, the severe disruption to air travel persists, even as some airlines and governments run limited rescue flights to get stranded travelers back home.

United Arab Emirates national airlines Emirates and Etihad Airways have run approximately 100 rescue flights to cities across Europe and Asia during specific closures worked around airspace closures.

KLM also ran an emergency flight between Muscat in Oman and Amsterdam Schiphol Airport on March 4, while Lufthansa ran one between Muscat and Frankfurt the following day.

“A limited number of flights continue to operate” out of UAE, airline confirms

But as repeated Iranian strikes target cities such as Dubai and Abu Dhabi, any flights could end up diverted or canceled at the last minute. Emirates just confirmed that any non-rescue flights will not run until March 7 at the earliest. Qatar Airways is also suspending all service into the weekend.

In addition, the largest low-cost airline in the Middle East, AirArabia, just revealed that it is extending its suspension of all flights into the UAE to March 9.

Related: Iranian strike hits major airport, injuries reported

The only operating flights are rescue ones for stranded travelers. Although they are theoretically open for booking, these routes immediately fill up with those who had previously booked travel and were moved to the first available reopened flight.

“A limited number of flights continue to operate in coordination with the relevant authorities, subject to operational and safety approvals,” Air Arabia said in a March 4 statement. “Passengers scheduled on operating flights will be notified directly.”

Those with travel booked during those times can use the flight disruption travel voucher to either reschedule their flight free of charge, claim a credit for use on a future flight, or request a refund to the original method of payment.

Deadlines for these options are being extended as more cancellations occur.

Emirates is running exclusively rescue flights throughout the first week of March.

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These Middle Eastern flights will remain canceled throughout March

For travelers going to and from the U.S., Delta Air Lines has suspended its service to Tel Aviv from JFK until at least March 22 over “ongoing conflict in the region,” The Points Pundit wrote on Travel Update.

American Airlines currently plans to resume its flight between Philadelphia and Doha in Qatar on March 12, but the escalation of the conflict makes it highly likely that this date will be moved further.

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British Airways also continues to suspend its services to cities such as Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Tel Aviv, Doha, and Amman from London throughout the week.

More than 2,100 flights to cities around the world remain canceled on March 5 from Muscat, Doha, and Dubai, according to flight data from Cirium cited by Daily Express.

“We are constantly reviewing the situation and will continue to do everything we can to support our customers and colleagues in the region, and if we are able to, we will add additional services,” British Airways said in a statement.

The airline has so far run one rescue flight from Oman on March 5 that filled up with stranded travelers immediately after it was announced.

Related: U.S. government warns against travel to a European country as Iran war edges in