Paris CDG Hit by 4 Cancellations: Air France, Kuwait Airways, EL AL Ground Milan, Kuwait, Tel Aviv Flights
Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport recorded 4 flight cancellations across Monday and Tuesday, with Air France suspending its Milan Linate service (AFR1732), Kuwait Airways cancelling flight KAC168 to Kuwait International on back-to-back days, and EL AL grounding ELY222 to Tel Aviv.

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Air France, Kuwait Airways, and EL AL Cancel 4 Flights at Paris Charles de Gaulle — Milan, Kuwait City, and Tel Aviv Routes Hit as CDG Schedule Instability Deepens
Four suspended departures spanning three airlines, three destination countries, and two consecutive days have put Paris Charles de Gaulle's operational reliability back under scrutiny.
Quick Summary
- Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (LFPG) recorded 4 total flight cancellations spanning Monday and Tuesday schedules
- Kuwait Airways flight KAC168 to Kuwait International was cancelled on both Monday and Tuesday — the same flight number, different aircraft — signaling sustained operational pressure on the Gulf route
- Air France flight AFR1732 (BCS3) to Milan Linate was cancelled at 09:00 PM CEST Tuesday — disrupting a key European business corridor
- EL AL flight ELY222 (B738) to Tel Aviv was cancelled at 12:40 PM CEST Tuesday — affecting direct Paris–Israel connectivity for both tourism and business passengers
Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (LFPG) has recorded four flight cancellations across Monday and Tuesday operations, with disruptions cutting across three distinct international routes and involving three separate carriers: Air France, Kuwait Airways, and EL AL. The suspended departures affect connectivity to Milan Linate in northern Italy, Kuwait International Airport in the Gulf, and Tel Aviv Ben Gurion in Israel — a spread that reflects instability across both short-haul European and long-haul intercontinental services at one of Europe's most trafficked aviation hubs.
THE FOUR CANCELLED FLIGHTS: COMPLETE DATA
The full cancellation record for the Paris Charles de Gaulle disruption period:
| Airline | Flight No. | Aircraft | Destination | Scheduled Dep. | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Air France | AFR1732 | BCS3 | Milan Linate (LIN / LIML) | Tue 09:00 PM CEST | Cancelled |
| Kuwait Airways | KAC168 | A339 | Kuwait International (KWI / OKKK) | Tue 03:10 PM CEST | Cancelled |
| EL AL | ELY222 | B738 | Tel Aviv (TLV / LLBG) | Tue 12:40 PM CEST | Cancelled |
| Kuwait Airways | KAC168 | A338 | Kuwait International (KWI / OKKK) | Mon 03:10 PM CEST | Cancelled |
KUWAIT AIRWAYS: THE MOST AFFECTED CARRIER — SAME ROUTE, TWO CONSECUTIVE DAYS
The most operationally significant finding in this disruption dataset is the back-to-back cancellation of Kuwait Airways flight KAC168 on both Monday and Tuesday at the identical departure time of 03:10 PM CEST on the Paris–Kuwait International route.
What makes this particularly notable is the aircraft discrepancy between the two cancelled departures: Monday's cancellation involved an Airbus A338 (A330-800neo), while Tuesday's involved an Airbus A339 (A330-900neo) — indicating that Kuwait Airways attempted to substitute a different aircraft on Tuesday's operation and still could not restore the service. This pattern strongly suggests a sustained operational limitation on the Paris–Kuwait pairing rather than a single-day technical event. The repetition across two consecutive operating days, at exactly the same scheduled departure time, points to an issue with fleet positioning, crew scheduling, or route-specific operational constraints that persisted across the full 48-hour window.
Passenger impact: The Kuwait International route (KWI/OKKK) is strategically critical for Gulf connectivity. Travelers holding tickets on either of the two cancelled KAC168 services face extended rebooking timelines due to limited daily frequencies on the Paris–Kuwait corridor. Unlike European routes with multiple daily carrier options, Gulf routes with a single primary direct carrier offer far fewer immediate alternatives.
AIR FRANCE AFR1732: MILAN LINATE BUSINESS ROUTE SUSPENDED
Air France cancelled flight AFR1732 — a BCS3 (Airbus A220-300) operating from Paris Charles de Gaulle to Milan Linate (LIN/LIML) — scheduled to depart at 09:00 PM CEST on Tuesday.
The Paris–Milan Linate route is one of Europe's most commercially significant business corridors. Unlike the larger Milan Malpensa airport, Linate operates as a city-centre-oriented business hub serving Italy's financial and fashion capitals — meaning the typical passenger on AFR1732 is not a leisure traveler with schedule flexibility but a business traveler dependent on same-day or next-morning connections.
The use of a BCS3 on this sector reflects the route's business-skewed passenger mix — the Airbus A220-300 is configured for the premium density European business routes that Air France operates from Charles de Gaulle. A late-evening cancellation at 09:00 PM also creates a specific problem: alternative same-day options are exhausted by that hour, meaning affected passengers face an overnight disruption rather than a delayed same-day arrival.
Passenger impact: Business travelers face overnight delays and potential missed commitments. While alternative Air France or Alitalia services to Milan Malpensa may be available for rebooking, the city-centre advantage of Linate cannot be substituted without additional ground transport overhead.
EL AL ELY222: TEL AVIV LONG-HAUL DIRECT SERVICE SUSPENDED
EL AL cancelled flight ELY222 — a B738 (Boeing 737-800) on the Paris Charles de Gaulle to Tel Aviv Ben Gurion (TLV/LLBG) route — scheduled to depart at 12:40 PM CEST Tuesday.
Long-haul cancellations carry inherently higher passenger impact than short-haul suspensions. The Paris–Tel Aviv route serves a complex and diverse passenger mix: leisure travelers, diaspora passengers making family visits, and business travelers connecting between France and Israel's commercial centers. EL AL's Boeing 737-800 configuration for this route underscores the sector's operational efficiency demands — the type is well-suited for medium-long haul point-to-point services where frequency rather than capacity is the primary metric.
With direct Paris–Tel Aviv services limited to a small number of daily departures across a handful of carriers, a midday cancellation at 12:40 PM creates immediate rebooking pressure. Passengers who cannot be accommodated on the same day's alternative direct services may face a minimum 24-hour delay — or a rerouting through a European hub such as Amsterdam, Frankfurt, or Zurich.
Passenger impact: Extended rebooking timelines, potential hub rerouting, and heightened disruption for passengers with time-sensitive commitments on arrival in Tel Aviv.
ROUTE-BY-ROUTE DISRUPTION PROFILE
| Route | Type | Disruption Severity | Primary Passenger Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paris → Milan Linate (AFR1732) | European short-haul | High for business travelers | Business, same-day return |
| Paris → Kuwait City (KAC168 ×2) | Long-haul Gulf | Highest — 2-day repeat | Business, Gulf connections |
| Paris → Tel Aviv (ELY222) | Medium-long haul | High — limited alternatives | Mixed tourism, diaspora, business |
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR PASSENGERS AT CDG
For travelers holding reservations on any of the four cancelled departures, the immediate action priorities are:
-
Contact your airline directly — Air France, Kuwait Airways, and EL AL each have their own rebooking protocols. Access airline apps or airport service desks ahead of general customer phone lines, which are handling elevated call volumes during any disruption event.
-
European routes (Milan): Alternative same-day options to Milan Malpensa or Milan Bergamo may be available via other carriers — Alitalia, easyJet, Ryanair — but passengers should accept the airport substitution and factor in ground transfer time.
-
Gulf routes (Kuwait): Same-day direct alternatives are extremely limited. Travelers should ask about one-stop routing through Doha (Qatar Airways), Dubai (Emirates/flydubai), or Abu Dhabi (Etihad) to reach Kuwait International.
-
Israel routes (Tel Aviv): Check for available seats on the same day's remaining direct Tel Aviv services at CDG. If unavailable, one-stop options through Amsterdam (KLM) or Frankfurt (Lufthansa) provide the fastest same-day alternatives.
CONCLUSION: FOUR CANCELLATIONS, ONE CLEAR SIGNAL
The four suspended departures at Paris Charles de Gaulle across Monday and Tuesday — AFR1732 to Milan, KAC168 ×2 to Kuwait, and ELY222 to Tel Aviv — are modest in absolute number but outsized in geographic and passenger impact. The two-day consecutive cancellation of Kuwait Airways KAC168 is the most structurally concerning data point, indicating a persistent rather than isolated operational problem on that specific route pairing. As Charles de Gaulle manages growing scheduling pressure across its European and intercontinental networks, the visibility of multi-airline cancellation events on the same operating day underscores the hub's continued vulnerability to cascading disruption when multiple carriers face simultaneous operational constraints.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- 4 total flight cancellations recorded at Paris Charles de Gaulle (LFPG) across Monday and Tuesday.
- Kuwait Airways KAC168 was cancelled on both days at 03:10 PM CEST — with an A338 on Monday and an A339 on Tuesday — confirming a sustained two-day operational failure on the Kuwait route.
- Air France AFR1732 (BCS3 / Airbus A220-300) to Milan Linate was cancelled at 09:00 PM CEST Tuesday.
- EL AL ELY222 (B738 / Boeing 737-800) to Tel Aviv (TLV/LLBG) was cancelled at 12:40 PM CEST Tuesday.
- Kuwait Airways is the most affected operator — 2 cancellations under the same flight number on consecutive days.
- Long-haul cancellations (Kuwait, Tel Aviv) carry significantly higher rebooking difficulty than European routes due to limited daily frequency alternatives.
- Passengers on the Milan route have the best same-day rebooking prospects; Kuwait and Tel Aviv passengers face potential 24-hour+ delays.

Kunal K Choudhary
Co-Founder & Contributor
A passionate traveller and tech enthusiast. Kunal contributes to the vision and growth of Nomad Lawyer, bringing fresh perspectives and driving the community forward.
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