The UK travel industry is sounding the alarm over an unprecedented influx of tourists to Spain, as Middle East avoiders reroute their holidays to the Iberian Peninsula. This is not a mere travel trend; it is a strategic vulnerability, a pressure point that hostile actors could exploit with devastating effect. Overcrowding at Spanish airports, strained visa processing systems, and stretched local infrastructure are creating a fertile ground for intelligence gaps and operational disruptions.
My analysis: this is a logistical chokepoint in the making, one that could be targeted to destabilise European travel and commerce. The threat vector is clear: an over-reliance on a single destination for mass tourism creates a single point of failure. A coordinated cyber attack on Spain's airport networks or a physical disruption at key hubs like Barcelona or Madrid could paralyse travel across the continent.
The UK's travel industry must treat this as a readiness issue, not a market opportunity. The time to pivot is now.









