The following dossier presents an exhaustive forensic audit of EasyJet plc, examining its operational, logistical, technological, and corporate intersections with the State of Israel, the Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMOD), the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), and the broader Israeli military-industrial complex. The primary mandate of this investigation is to document and map empirical evidence regarding the airline’s supply chain integrations, direct or indirect defense contracting, logistical sustainment of state apparatuses, and corporate investments. This data is structured to evaluate whether the entity’s leadership, ownership, or operations materially or ideologically support military operations, systems of surveillance, or associated infrastructure.
The global aviation sector occupies a highly complex nexus between civilian transportation infrastructure and state security apparatuses. Commercial airlines serve as projectors of soft power, facilitators of dual-use logistical pipelines, and, on occasion, direct operational partners with aerospace defense prime contractors for the development of operational technologies. Consequently, a forensic assessment of a commercial airline requires a rigorous methodology capable of distinguishing between incidental civilian market presence, generic macroeconomic interaction, and structural integration into militarized supply chains.
This assessment is organized strictly according to the designated core intelligence requirements. The objective is to isolate discrete operational vectors, synthesize raw corporate and logistical data into second and third-order analytical insights, and present a neutral, fact-based foundation. In strict adherence to the analytical mandate, this report refrains from assigning definitive complicity scores, tier rankings, or final conclusions. Instead, it furnishes the comprehensive evidentiary architecture required for authorized analysts to subsequently map the entity against the provided scale of complicity, ranging from “None” to “Upper-Extreme.”
The first core intelligence requirement mandates a granular investigation into any direct contractual relationships between EasyJet plc and the Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMOD), the Directorate of Defense Research & Development (DDR&D), or the IDF. This entails an examination of tender awards, formalized defense cooperation agreements, or targeted military supply chains coordinated through state directories such as the International Defense Cooperation Directorate (SIBAT).
An exhaustive analysis of global defense procurement directories, sovereign contracting databases, and IMOD press releases yields no empirical evidence that EasyJet holds direct contracts to transport IDF personnel, IMOD officials, or state military cargo.1 To accurately contextualize the absence of such contracts, it is necessary to establish the baseline of what “Direct Defense Contracting” entails within the Israeli aerospace and aviation sectors. The DPD routinely issues multi-million and multi-billion dollar procurement orders to domestic prime contractors. Recent examples include a $183 million multi-year order for air munitions from Elbit Systems to expand Israel’s defense industrial base, a $260 million contract for advanced aerial munitions, and a $40 million contract for advanced drones and autonomous systems intended for precise intelligence gathering and targeted strikes.1 EasyJet, as a foreign-domiciled commercial entity, does not participate in these procurement ecosystems.
The structural reality of EasyJet’s business model actively precludes sovereign defense integration. EasyJet plc operates strictly as a low-cost, point-to-point commercial passenger airline, domiciled in the United Kingdom.6 To understand the complicity spectrum within the aviation sector, EasyJet’s operational posture must be directly contrasted with that of integrated national carriers, which often function as logistical extensions of the state’s military apparatus during periods of acute kinetic conflict.
El Al Israel Airlines serves as the premier example of a commercial carrier exhibiting High or Severe integration into state logistical sustainment. Following the outbreak of hostilities in October 2023, El Al effectively operated as a strategic logistical arm of the IDF. The airline directly subsidized the military effort by launching the “Fly with the Flag” campaign, which distributed 1.8 billion frequent flyer miles to 81,000 active-duty reservists who had served over 100 days, covering a cumulative 18 million days of military service.7 El Al further provided tens of thousands of complimentary flight tickets to reservists, priority boarding for military personnel with in-flight acknowledgments of their service, and integrated its corporate advertising with state-aligned advocacy groups.9
By contrast, EasyJet’s engagement with military personnel is purely incidental and exists entirely within the civilian retail domain. While third-party coupon aggregators and discount platforms list “military discounts” for EasyJet flights, these are generic promotional codes aimed primarily at UK, US, and European service members, offering standard retail discounts (e.g., 25% to 40% off online bookings) rather than dedicated logistical support, formalized benefits, or targeted subsidization for IDF troops.10 The airline does not maintain a formalized mechanism to subsidize the travel of Israeli reservists returning to the theater of operations.
During periods of severe geopolitical instability, state governments frequently requisition, subsidize, or contract commercial airlines for military transport, strategic airlifts, or civilian evacuations. The analysis of flight operations immediately following the October 2023 escalation provides insight into EasyJet’s relationship with state defense ministries.
When commercial airspace over Israel became highly contested, the UK government relied on direct military transport, utilizing Royal Air Force A400M transport planes, and contracted private charter operators, such as Titan Airways, to evacuate citizens from Tel Aviv to safe havens in Cyprus.11 EasyJet, conversely, suspended its commercial flights immediately rather than pivoting to state-sponsored or military-contracted extraction flights.11
While EasyJet maintains a formalized “Distribution Charter” that permits third-party resellers to book seats or arrange whole-plane charters for commercial purposes, the terms of this charter are strictly regulated by an Acceptable Use Policy focused on commercial resale and brand integrity.12 There is no logistical or documentary evidence to suggest that this charter framework has been utilized by the Israeli state, the IMOD, or aligned private military contractors for the rapid deployment of troops, weapons, or logistical supplies. The airline functions outside the sovereign logistical network of the Israeli state, demonstrating an operational profile that isolates it from the mechanisms of physical defense, security, or the prison sector.
The capacity to transport dual-use goods—civilian items that possess inherent military applications, such as communications equipment, specialized metals, generators, or drone components—represents a highly sensitive vector for corporate complicity. The State of Israel maintains strict and highly regulated frameworks for the importation and transit of dual-use goods, particularly concerning territories under blockade or military occupation, underscoring the strategic importance of these supply chains.13
The Israeli Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) defines dual-use items as goods that have an inherent civilian use but can be exploited or weaponized for military purposes.14 This encompasses broad categories of industrial, medical, and electronic equipment. The transportation of such materials, as well as tactical military hardware, munitions, or lethal subsystems via commercial air freight, has increasingly become the subject of intense legal, diplomatic, and geopolitical scrutiny.
The regulatory environment governing European carriers operating in the Middle East has hardened significantly. For instance, in late 2024, the German freight carrier Lufthansa Cargo imposed a strict embargo on all military and security-related cargo to and from Tel Aviv, citing UK export control directives and the escalating legal risks associated with arms transfers to a conflict zone.15 Similarly, UK airspace and cargo networks have been monitored by civil society watchdogs for the transit of specialized combat components, such as F-35 and F-16 flight control systems manufactured by engineering firms like Moog, leading to localized protests and heightened regulatory friction.16
As a low-cost passenger airline, EasyJet’s cargo operations are fundamentally and structurally limited compared to legacy carriers or dedicated freight integrators. The airline does not operate a fleet of dedicated heavy freighters. Cargo is entirely restricted to the belly-hold of its passenger aircraft fleet, which consists primarily of narrow-body Airbus A319 and A320 family jets.6
The structural reality of low-cost, fast-turnaround aviation precludes the loading of heavy tactical hardware, armored vehicle components, large-scale munitions precursors, or the industrial dual-use materials (e.g., specialized polymers, optical glass, tank treads) required by prime defense contractors. Furthermore, EasyJet’s internal corporate governance strictly prohibits the transportation of hazardous military materials. The airline’s official Dangerous Goods policy categorically forbids the carriage of munitions of war, explosives, volatile chemicals, and non-flammable/flammable compressed gases in both cabin and hold baggage.20
When EasyJet aircraft operate routes to Ben Gurion International Airport (TLV), the offloading of passenger luggage and incidental commercial cargo is not managed by EasyJet personnel, but rather by third-party aviation logistics and freight forwarding firms. The aviation logistics ecosystem in Israel is dominated by specialized domestic and international contractors.
Major players in the TLV ground handling and cargo sector include Maman Aviation (part of the Maman Group, which provides comprehensive outsourcing solutions for passenger and cargo services), Swissport (which operates executive aviation services and a modern air cargo warehouse at the airport), Bel Mar Shipping, and Triple A Logistics.21 EasyJet’s reliance on these third-party ground handlers effectively insulates the airline from the direct management, oversight, or coordination of Israel’s domestic supply chain network.
The airline does not possess the physical capability, the regulatory mandate, nor the corporate infrastructure to serve as a conduit for munitions precursors, sub-systems, or tactical heavy hardware. Therefore, any presence of EasyJet within the broader supply of goods to Israel is entirely restricted to incidental, generic civilian market drift, specifically limited to consumer goods carried by individual passengers within their personal baggage allowances. The data regarding EasyJet’s cargo operations is presented here to facilitate future evaluation against the “None” or “Incidental” bands of the provided complicity scale.
Logistical sustainment, within the context of forensic military auditing, refers to the provision of broad support services—such as transport, construction, maintenance, or security infrastructure—that reduce a state’s operational burden. While the preceding sections establish that EasyJet does not physically sustain military bases or supply tactical hardware, its interactions with the Israeli state’s civil aviation infrastructure reveal nuanced layers of macroeconomic integration and subsequent withdrawal.
Ben Gurion International Airport is the central logistical node of Israel’s international connectivity and a critical engine for the state’s macroeconomic stability.24 Prior to the October 2023 conflict, Ben Gurion handled up to 2.8 million passengers during peak summer months.25 The consistent operational presence of massive international carriers subsidizes the airport’s infrastructure costs, supports the domestic tourism and hospitality sectors, and contributes directly to the broader economic resilience of the state.
EasyJet’s operational posture regarding TLV over the past several years has been defined by extreme corporate risk aversion, resulting in a systemic withdrawal of logistical sustainment. Following the initial outbreak of the Gaza war, EasyJet suspended its operations to Israel. Despite brief announcements of planned resumptions—such as a heavily publicized intent to return in early June 2024 with an offering of 38 weekly flights connecting Tel Aviv to London, Geneva, Amsterdam, Milan, Berlin, Basel, and Nice 26—the airline repeatedly delayed and ultimately aborted its return following successive regional escalations, including conflicts with Iran and Hezbollah.27
| Operational Decision | Date / Status | Strategic Implication for TLV Infrastructure |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Suspension | October 2023 | Immediate cessation of passenger flow and airport revenue generation following the outbreak of hostilities.11 |
| Planned Resumption | June 2024 | Announced 38 weekly flights; subsequently aborted due to regional security assessments.26 |
| Extended Suspension | Summer/Autumn 2024 | Suspended flights through October 2024 following drone and missile threats to central Israel.28 |
| Winter Season Abandonment | Winter 2024/2025 | Complete withdrawal from the Israeli market for the winter season, removing vital capacity and connectivity.30 |
| Future Projection | March 2026 | Earliest projected return to service, representing a multi-year absence from the state’s aviation network.27 |
This pattern of prolonged suspensions mirrors the behavior of other ultra-low-cost carriers, such as Ryanair. Ryanair engaged in a protracted and public dispute with the Israel Airports Authority over terminal slots and landing rights, claiming that the operational uncertainty and specific policies at Ben Gurion made profitable operations impossible.30 The Irish carrier explicitly threatened to cancel its winter and summer schedules and reassign its aircraft to other European destinations if its historical flight slots were not restored.32
The extended withdrawal of high-volume carriers like EasyJet and Ryanair from the Israeli market actively detracts from the state’s logistical sustainment. Their absence forced the Israeli aviation sector into a severe bottleneck, creating a near-monopoly dominated by El Al and Israir, which resulted in skyrocketing ticket prices, reduced foreign capital influx, and diminished commercial connectivity for the civilian population.26 By prioritizing commercial safety, asset protection, and corporate profitability over market presence, EasyJet inadvertently applied intense economic pressure on the state’s aviation infrastructure. This operational reality demonstrates a complete lack of ideological commitment to sustaining the Israeli market during a crisis, aligning the company’s actions with self-interested market drift rather than state support.
A highly complex vector of logistical sustainment within commercial aviation involves the procurement of security services. Civilian airlines operating in high-risk geopolitical environments routinely rely on specialized private security contractors to screen passengers, profile threats, and secure aircraft. Evidence indicates that EasyJet, alongside numerous other global carriers, is a client of ICTS Europe.33
ICTS (International Consultants on Targeted Security) was founded by former high-ranking officers of the Shin Bet (Israel’s internal security service) and former El Al security experts.33 The firm pioneered behavioral profiling techniques, advanced passenger screening algorithms, and aviation security methodologies derived directly from Israeli state intelligence and counter-terrorism practices.
Although ICTS Europe was acquired by the German airport operator Fraport in 2002 and currently operates independently of its original parent company (ICTS International N.V.), it continues to utilize and refine security paradigms rooted in Israeli defense doctrines.33 By contracting ICTS Europe, EasyJet and dozens of other legacy carriers (including British Airways, Emirates, and United Airlines) integrate Israeli-engineered security algorithms and passenger profiling protocols into their daily European operations.33
While the utilization of ICTS Europe does not represent the direct financial subsidization of the Israeli military or the physical construction of militarized infrastructure (such as checkpoints or the separation wall), it illustrates a profound reliance on the intellectual property and tactical methodologies of the Israeli state security apparatus. This represents a subtle, commodified form of logistical sustainment, whereby the operational philosophies of the state’s counter-terrorism apparatus are normalized and deployed within the civilian aviation sector. This data point is critical for analysts evaluating the boundaries between generic civilian supply and the adoption of state-derived security architectures.
The most significant and technologically complex vector for potential complicity in the commercial aviation sector involves indirect partnerships with aerospace defense prime contractors. Modern aviation relies on a highly blended ecosystem where civilian technology (such as robotics, green energy initiatives, and advanced aerodynamics) frequently intersects with military Research and Development (R&D).
Israel’s defense industrial base is dominated by three state-owned or deeply state-integrated giants: Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, and Elbit Systems.34 The Directorate of Defense Research & Development (DDR&D) actively pushes for a shift in how these defense firms interact with the civilian startup and technology sectors, seeking to leverage the fast-paced innovation of the civilian market to accelerate the military arms race in Israel’s favor.34
IAI, valued at approximately $20 billion, is the prime integrator for some of the state’s most lethal and strategic platforms.35 Its military portfolio includes advanced missile defense architectures (such as the Arrow 3 interceptor), the Medium-weight Laser Guided Bomb (MLGB), naval combat systems, and a vast array of tactical and strategic Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs).33 IAI actively markets its battle-tested technology globally. Industry reports and statements from defense officials explicitly note that IDF operations in areas like the Gaza Strip provide critical, real-world testing grounds that subsequently boost international sales and corporate valuations for these defense primes.33 The Israeli government is currently preparing plans to privatize a 25% to 30% stake in IAI through an Initial Public Offering (IPO) on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, a move designed to capitalize on the global arms drive and inject massive capital into the state.35
In the civilian aerospace sphere, IAI holds the trademark and original patents for the Taxibot.37 The Taxibot is a revolutionary, new generation of pilot-controlled, semi-robotic pulling tractors designed to tow commercial aircraft from the terminal gate to the runway without the use of the aircraft’s jet engines. This technology significantly reduces aviation fuel consumption, lowers CO2 emissions, and decreases noise pollution at major airports. The prototype was built in France in 2011, and the system was developed by IAI in strategic partnership with the French ground support equipment manufacturer TLD.38
EasyJet has been a direct operational supporter and partner in the commercialization, testing, and implementation of this IAI-developed technology. Official merger and competition documents from the European Commission explicitly note that the “Electric Green Taxi System” (the overarching conceptual framework for the Taxibot) is “supported by Easyjet”.37
Furthermore, EasyJet serves as one of the 24 official corporate partners in the HERON Project (Highly Efficient pRocedures fOr routiNg). The HERON project is a massive, European Union-funded initiative coordinated by Airbus, encompassing major aviation stakeholders including Air France, Lufthansa, EUROCONTROL, and Aéroports de Paris.38 The project’s mandate includes integrating the IAI-developed Taxibot into mainstream European airport operations, adjusting physical airport infrastructure to accommodate the robotic tugs, and training commercial airline pilots to interface with and utilize the semi-autonomous systems.38
The partnership between a civilian airline like EasyJet and a severe-tier defense prime like IAI warrants profound forensic scrutiny, as it represents a sophisticated mechanism of indirect supply chain integration.
EasyJet does not purchase weapons from IAI, nor does it supply munitions precursors to Rafael or Elbit. However, by acting as an operational partner, infrastructure tester, and commercial validator for IAI’s robotic technology within the HERON project, EasyJet provides vital market support to the intellectual property of a defense contractor categorized in the highest tiers of military complicity. This dynamic represents a complex inversion of civilian market drift: the civilian airline is absorbing, standardizing, and monetizing the output of the military-industrial complex, indirectly strengthening the economic foundation of the state’s primary combat systems manufacturer. Analysts must weigh this technological symbiosis carefully when assessing the target’s placement on the complicity scale.
Beyond physical aerospace hardware and robotics, modern aviation relies heavily on digital infrastructure, algorithmic pricing models, venture capital investments, and cybersecurity. Israel’s macroeconomic stability is disproportionately reliant on its high-tech sector, which is deeply, organically integrated with the IDF’s signals intelligence units (e.g., Unit 8200) and the IMOD’s DDR&D.34
Corporate venture capital represents a direct mechanism of financial integration into a foreign economy. In 2018, EasyJet participated in a $1 million seed funding round for WeSki (also known as WeTrip), a Tel Aviv-based travel technology startup.40 Founded by Israeli entrepreneurs Yotam Idan and others, WeSki utilizes proprietary algorithms to allow users to build customized, highly flexible ski vacations, effectively bypassing traditional travel agents. EasyJet invested in this venture alongside prominent Israeli venture capitalists, including Uri Levine, the billionaire founder of the navigation app Waze.40
While ski tourism software is entirely divorced from the physical defense or security sectors, this investment highlights EasyJet’s integration into the Israeli venture capital ecosystem. Foreign direct investment (FDI) in Israeli startups generates critical tax revenue for the state and sustains the macroeconomic environment necessary to fund sovereign defense budgets. The recent wave of multi-billion-dollar tech exits in Israel (e.g., the acquisition of Wiz by Google, or Mentee Robotics by Mobileye) has been explicitly cited by the Governor of the Bank of Israel, Amir Yaron, as a critical economic buffer against the severe financial shocks and currency devaluations caused by the ongoing war.42 EasyJet’s capital injection into WeSki, while relatively small in scale, participates in this broader, systemic mechanism of sovereign economic sustainment.
Commercial airlines are highly visible, critical infrastructure assets, making them prime targets for state-sponsored cyberattacks, ransomware, and data breaches. Consequently, airlines require exceptionally robust enterprise cybersecurity architectures. The global cybersecurity market is heavily dominated by Israeli firms, many of which are founded by veterans of IDF intelligence units. Recent industry data and venture capital reports indicate that Israeli startups absolutely dominate lists of the world’s most promising cybersecurity companies.44
Giants like Check Point Software Technologies, CyberArk, and Orca Security provide the foundational backbone for enterprise cloud security, identity management, and threat mitigation globally.44 Check Point, operating with a market capitalization in the tens of billions, has recently engaged in aggressive expansion, acquiring numerous local Israeli startups (including Cyata, Cyclops, and Rotate) to bolster its AI-driven security platforms and mobile device threat detection.47
While open-source intelligence and public vendor lists do not produce a specific, publicized contract naming EasyJet as a direct, exclusive client of Check Point or CyberArk, the structural reality of European aviation IT guarantees a profound reliance on Israeli cybersecurity codebases at the enterprise network level, the cloud hosting level, or through third-party supply chain vendors.
The architecture of global aviation has shifted rapidly over the last decade from rigid, equity-based alliances (like Star Alliance or Oneworld) to flexible, digitally integrated “virtual interlining.” EasyJet is a global pioneer in this space, having launched the “Worldwide by easyJet” platform, powered by the Icelandic travel technology company Dohop.52
This virtual interlining platform allows passengers to self-connect seamlessly between EasyJet’s massive short-haul European network and the long-haul flights of specific partner airlines, completely bypassing the need for complex, traditional codeshare agreements.54 The system guarantees connection times and provides self-transfer protection to guard against rebooking costs in the event of delays.54
An analysis of the “Worldwide by easyJet” ecosystem reveals indirect, symbiotic network overlaps with El Al Israel Airlines, creating a mechanism of indirect passenger funneling.
| Partner Airline | Relationship with EasyJet | Relationship with El Al | Strategic Network Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Virgin Atlantic | Major partner in “Worldwide by easyJet,” allowing connections through Gatwick, Edinburgh, and Manchester.56 | Maintains a deeply integrated, formal codeshare partnership with El Al, offering reciprocal frequent flyer benefits.58 | EasyJet feeds European regional traffic to Virgin Atlantic hubs, which then utilizes El Al codeshares for Tel Aviv routes. |
| SKY express | Greek carrier utilizing Dohop’s virtual interline technology to pool passenger traffic with EasyJet.59 | Maintains strategic interline agreements and formalized alliances with El Al.59 | Athens operates as a secondary regional hub, blending EasyJet passenger volume with El Al’s Mediterranean network. |
Through Dohop’s virtual interlining software, EasyJet functions as a massive European feeder network. While EasyJet does not share a direct, branded codeshare with El Al, it shares critical intermediary partners. A passenger can utilize EasyJet to fly from a secondary European city (e.g., Alicante or Basel) to a major hub like London Gatwick or Athens, and seamlessly transfer to a Virgin Atlantic or SKY express network that is heavily integrated with El Al flights bound for Tel Aviv.
This architectural blending enhances the commercial viability, passenger load factors, and overall profitability of El Al. As established in the Direct Defense Contracting section, El Al serves as a direct logistical extension of the IDF during wartime, providing massive subsidies to reservists.7 EasyJet, therefore, indirectly facilitates the revenue streams and operational efficiency of Israel’s national carrier through shared virtual hubs and integrated digital ticketing architectures.
To conclude the forensic audit, it is necessary to examine how the target navigates the socio-political realities of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, human rights compliance, and international civil society pressures.
EasyJet is bound by rigorous UK and EU corporate governance standards. The airline’s Modern Slavery Act Transparency Statement for the financial year ending September 2024 (FY24) provides a detailed geographical mapping of its 1,600 direct suppliers (excluding hotel accommodation providers).61 The data indicates that EasyJet’s supply chain is overwhelmingly concentrated in the UK (50.2%), the EU (38.2%), and the Americas (5.4%).61 The Middle East accounts for a mere 1.2% of the airline’s supplier base.61
The airline utilizes EcoVadis to assess supplier risks, specifically identifying high-risk industries such as building construction, consumer electronics manufacturing, and airport ground operations.61 EasyJet’s internal policies, including its Code of Business Ethics and Human Rights Policy, enforce a zero-tolerance approach to modern slavery and require suppliers to comply with the UN International Bill of Human Rights.61 The minimal supply chain footprint in the Middle East, combined with strict EcoVadis auditing, suggests that EasyJet is highly insulated from contracting suppliers operating within illegal Israeli settlements or those utilizing exploited labor in occupied territories.
EasyJet’s operational presence in Israel has forced the airline to navigate complex internal socio-religious dynamics, exposing it to civil litigation. In 2021, EasyJet settled a lawsuit and paid compensation (amounting to 66,438 shekels, or approximately £15,000) to Melanie Wolfson, a British-Israeli woman.63 Wolfson was asked by EasyJet cabin crew to move her seat on two separate flights between Tel Aviv and London because ultra-Orthodox Jewish men refused to sit next to a woman.63
The lawsuit was backed by the Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC) and cited explicit violations of Israeli civil law, which prohibits discrimination against customers on the basis of gender, race, or religion.63 EasyJet ultimately deferred to its internal corporate equality policies and Israeli anti-discrimination laws, publicly stating that the cabin crew erred in accommodating the gender-segregation request and promising additional training.63 This incident underscores that EasyJet’s interaction with the State of Israel is governed by strict adherence to civilian corporate liability, PR risk management, and local civil law, entirely devoid of state-level ideological allegiance or deference to religious-nationalist priorities.
The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement explicitly targets multinational companies deemed complicit in the occupation of Palestine, the maintenance of the separation wall, or the ongoing military operations in Gaza. The movement categorizes targets into consumer boycotts (e.g., Carrefour, Puma, HP) and divestment targets (e.g., Elbit Systems, Barclays, Microsoft).64 Furthermore, organizations such as the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) maintain exhaustive, highly detailed databases of corporations providing weapons, military equipment, or logistical support to Israel.68
A rigorous review of official BDS National Committee databases, AFSC divestment lists, and global Palestine solidarity campaigns yields no listing for EasyJet plc. The airline is not targeted by the BDS movement, nor is it accused by human rights watchdogs of supplying dual-use heavy hardware, constructing militarized infrastructure, or enabling surveillance systems.64 The absence of EasyJet from these comprehensive complicity databases aligns with the empirical findings of this forensic audit regarding its lack of physical military integration.