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Two-dimensional maps can be deceptive: the shortest distance between two points on the surface of the earth is rarely a straight line. Take the journey I have just made, on a Korean budget airline, T’Way Air, between Zagreb and Seoul ’s Incheon airport. The most direct flight path between the Croatian and South Korean capitals begins by aiming northeast.

This “great circle” route cuts diagonally across Hungary; clips corners of both Slovakia and Poland; and continues over western Ukraine, eastern Belarus and – for two-thirds of the journey – over Russia . Were the captain to take the straightest course, the final approach would involve flying over Mongolia, China and a western corner of North Korea before descending to Incheon International Airport. That, as they say, is not going to happen.



Let’s run through the obstacles. Ukraine has been off limits to civil aircraft since the Russian invasion. Belarus has been regarded as risky since a routine Ryanair flight from Athens to Vilnius was ordered to land in Minsk by air traffic controllers, with MiG fighters intercepting the Boeing 737 by way of friendly persuasion.

A Belarusian dissident was removed from the plane before it was allowed to continue to Lithuania. Since then, Belarus air traffic control has not enjoyed a great reputation. Continuing the putative flight plan: many Western airlines are banned from Russian skies.

Others, including T’Way, choose to avoid the world’s biggest country. Yet Russia perm.

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