Against the snow-frosted backdrop of Alaska’s Chugach Mountains, serving a city of just 300,000 people, sits what might just be the best-located airport in the world today.
While a look at a standard 2-D map of Earth might tell you Alaska is a far-flung outpost, spin the globe in your head and you’ll see that the US state is, quite literally, on the top of the world.
→ London’s Gatwick airport will reopen south terminal in March.
Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport is an unassuming cargo hub, equidistant between New York and Tokyo and, as its website declares, just 9.5 hours flying time from 90% of the industrialized world.
Now that more than 30 countries have banned Russia from their airspaces, with Russia responding in kind — and Ukraine and Belarus airspace also closed — Anchorage could prove strategically important.
You could almost say it’s what this airport was built for.
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