There are only two double-landlocked countries in the world:
- Liechtenstein
- Uzbekistan
A double-landlocked country is surrounded only by landlocked countries. In other words: to reach the sea, you must cross at least two borders.
From an aviation perspective, that creates a fascinating paradox. No coastline. No port cities. No maritime gateways. Yet aircraft still depart daily — connecting these geographic “centers of the center” to the world.
Let’s look at how aviation works when geography gives you no water at all.
Liechtenstein: The Airline That Doesn’t Exist
Liechtenstein has no airport and no national airline.
The entire country is just 160 km² — smaller than many airports. Instead, it relies on nearby Swiss and Austrian airports:
- Zurich Airport (ZRH) – the main global gateway
- St. Gallen–Altenrhein Airport (ACH) – a small regional option
Effectively, Swiss carriers like Swiss International Air Lines serve as Liechtenstein’s de facto airline.
Aviation reality:
Liechtenstein is double-landlocked but fully integrated into Switzerland’s aviation system. It is one of the rare sovereign states with no airport and no airline at all.
For someone like you, Maarten — who tracks aircraft types and airport codes — Liechtenstein is a curiosity: a country you “visit” by landing somewhere else.
Uzbekistan: A Double-Landlocked Hub
Unlike Liechtenstein, Uzbekistan has a full aviation ecosystem.
Its flag carrier, Uzbekistan Airways, operates long-haul and regional routes from:
- Tashkent International Airport (TAS)
- Samarkand International Airport (SKD)
Despite being surrounded by:
- Kazakhstan
- Kyrgyzstan
- Tajikistan
- Turkmenistan
- Afghanistan
— none of which have sea access either — Uzbekistan maintains strong global links to Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
Historically, it even operated the Il-62 and Il-86 — classic Soviet long-haul machines that connected deep inland Central Asia to Moscow, Delhi, and beyond.
Aviation reality:
Uzbekistan shows that landlocked geography does not limit global connectivity. In fact, Tashkent is positioned as a Silk Road crossroads — now in jet form.
Why Double-Landlocked Aviation Is Fascinating
- Every route is international – There are no coastal shortcuts.
- Geopolitics matters more – Overflight rights are critical.
- Hub strategy becomes essential – Especially in Central Asia.
- Air cargo replaces sea cargo – High-value goods move by air.
For an aviation-minded traveler like you, it’s interesting that some of the most geographically isolated countries are deeply dependent on global air networks.
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