El Paso airspace – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 12 Feb 2026 03:02:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png El Paso airspace – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 FAA and Pentagon – The Hindu https://artifex.news/article70622394-ece/ Thu, 12 Feb 2026 03:02:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70622394-ece/ Read More “FAA and Pentagon – The Hindu” »

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The Pentagon allowed U.S. Customs and Border Protection to use an anti-drone laser earlier this week, leading the Federal Aviation Administration to suddenly close the airspace over El Paso, Texas, according to two people familiar with the situation who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive details.

The confusing arc of events began as the FAA announced on Wednesday (February 11, 2026) that it was shutting down all flight traffic over the city on the U.S.-Mexico border for 10 days, stranding some travellers, but the closure ended up only lasting a few hours. The Trump administration said it stemmed from the FAA and Pentagon working to halt an incursion by Mexican cartel drones, which are not uncommon along the southern border.

One of the people said the laser was deployed near Fort Bliss without coordinating with the FAA, which decided then to close the airspace to ensure commercial air safety. Others familiar with the matter said the technology was used despite a meeting scheduled for later this month between the Pentagon and the FAA to discuss the issue.

While the restrictions were short-lived in the city of nearly 7,00,000 people, it is unusual for an entire airport to shut down even for a short time. Stranded travellers with luggage lined up at airline ticket counters and car rental desks before the order was lifted.

Normal flights resumed after seven arrivals and seven departures were cancelled. Some medical evacuation flights also had to be rerouted.

Jorge Rueda, 20, and Yamilexi Meza, 21, of Las Cruces, New Mexico, had their morning flight to Portland, Oregon, canceled, so they were losing part of their Valentine’s Day weekend trip.

Rueda said he was glad that “10 days turned into two hours”. They were booked on an evening flight out of El Paso.

The investigation into last year’s midair collision near Washington, D.C., between an airliner and Army helicopter that killed 67 people highlighted how the FAA and Pentagon were not always working well together.

The National Transportation Safety Board said the FAA and the Army did not share safety data with each other about the alarming number of close calls around Reagan National Airport and failed to address the risks.

Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, a former Army helicopter pilot who serves on committees focused on aviation and the armed services, said the issue Wednesday was the latest example of “the lack of coordination that’s endemic in this Trump administration”.

Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said he would request a briefing from the FAA on the incident.

Rep. Veronica Escobar, a Democrat whose district includes El Paso, said neither her office nor local officials received any advance notice of the closure. After it was lifted, she said “the information coming from the federal government does not add up”.

“I believe the FAA owes the community and the country an explanation as to why this happened so suddenly and abruptly and was lifted so suddenly and abruptly,” Escobar said at a news conference.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said earlier that the airspace was closed as the Defense Department and the FAA halted an incursion by Mexican cartel drones and “the threat has been neutralised”.

Officials at the Department of Homeland Security, FAA and Department of Transportation did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A Trump administration official insisted the agencies were in lockstep to protect national security and pointed to Duffy’s statement. The Pentagon said it had nothing to add to its statement that largely mirrored Duffy’s.

Republican Rep. Tony Gonzales, whose congressional district covers an area that stretches about 800 miles (1,300 kilometres) along Texas’ border with Mexico, said cartel drone sightings are common.

“For any of us who live and work along the border, daily drone incursions by criminal organisations is everyday life for us. It’s a Wednesday for us,” Gonzales said.

Steven Willoughby, deputy director of the counter-drone programme at the Department of Homeland Security, told Congress in July that cartels are using drones nearly every day to transport drugs across the border and surveil Border Patrol agents. More than 27,000 drones were detected within 500 metres (1,600 feet) of the southern border in the last six months of 2024, he said, mostly at night.

What is “extremely rare” is the closure of an entire airport over a security issue, according to a former chief security officer at United Airlines.

Officials usually will try to take security measures to isolate the risk if a specific plane or airline is threatened rather than shut down the airport, said Rich Davis, now a senior security adviser at risk mitigation company International SOS.

Asked about the drone explanation provided by U.S. officials, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said she had “no information about the use of drones on the border”. She noted that if US authorities have more information, they should contact Mexico’s government.

Mexican defense and navy secretaries planned to talk with officials from US Northern Command in a meeting Wednesday in Washington attended by several other countries, Sheinbaum told reporters. Sheinbaum said the Mexican officials would “listen” in the meeting and her government would look into “the exact causes” of the closure.

El Paso is a hub of cross-border commerce alongside Ciudad Juárez. That Mexican city is home to about 1.5 million people, and some of its residents are accustomed to taking advantage of facilities, including airports, on the US side of the border.

That easy access to the United States also has made Juarez, like other border cities, attractive to Mexico’s drug cartels seeking to safeguard their smuggling routes for drugs and migrants headed north and cash and guns moving to the south.

El Paso Mayor Renard Johnson told reporters that he did not hear about the closure until after the alert was issued.

“Decisions made without notice and coordination puts lives at risk and creates unnecessary danger and confusion,” Johnson said. “This was a major and unnecessary disruption, one that has not occurred since 9/11.” The airport describes itself as the gateway to west Texas, southern New Mexico and northern Mexico. Southwest, United, American and Delta are among the carriers that operate flights there.

A similar 10-day temporary flight restriction for special security reasons remained in place Wednesday around Santa Teresa, New Mexico, which is about 15 miles (24 kilometers) northwest of the El Paso airport. FAA officials did not immediately explain why that restriction remained.

Sen. Ben Ray Lujan, a New Mexico Democrat, said in a statement that he was seeking answers from the FAA and the Trump administration “about why the airspace was closed in the first place without notifying appropriate officials, leaving travellers to deal with unnecessary chaos”.

Travel plans on both sides of the border were disrupted.

María Aracelia was pushing two roller suitcases across the pedestrian bridge from Ciudad Juarez to El Paso on Wednesday morning. She had a round-trip flight to Illinois scheduled for the afternoon.

After receiving a text at 4 a.m. telling her about the 10-day closure, she scrambled to try to find other options, even how to get to another airport. Then came a notification that the El Paso airport had reopened.

“This is stressful, and there isn’t time to make so many changes, especially if you need to get back for work,” Aracelia said.



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U.S. says Mexican cartel drones breached Texas airspace https://artifex.news/article70621387-ece/ Wed, 11 Feb 2026 21:06:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70621387-ece/ Read More “U.S. says Mexican cartel drones breached Texas airspace” »

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A Delta Airlines plane sits at El Paso International Airport after the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration lifted its temporary closure of the airspace over El Paso, saying all flights will resume as normal and that there was no threat to commercial aviation in El Paso, Texas, U.S., on February 11, 2026.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Mexican drug cartel drones entered American airspace but were intercepted by the U.S. military, officials said on Wednesday (February 11, 2026), explaining the brief but mysterious closure of El Paso airport in Texas.

But Mexico said it had “no information” on drones at the border, and the Trump administration’s version of events has been questioned by lawmakers as well as sources cited by U.S. media who suggested the shutdown was triggered by U.S. military drone or counter-drone activity.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said on late Tuesday (February 10, 2026) the airspace over the Texas metropolis would be shut to all aircraft for 10 days, citing unspecified national “security reasons”, only to lift the closure after less than 24 hours.

The report of a drone breach comes some five months into a U.S. military campaign targeting alleged drug-smuggling boats and could provide a pretext for President Donald Trump to follow through on his threats to expand the strikes to land, potentially in Mexico.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in a post on X that the FAA and the Defence Department “acted swiftly to address a cartel drone incursion”, adding: “The threat has been neutralised, and there is no danger to commercial travel in the region.”

A U.S. administration official, meanwhile, said the breach was by “Mexican cartel drones”, and that U.S. forces “took action to disable the drones”, without specifying how they did so.

But top Democratic lawmakers from the House Committee on Transportation suggested the Pentagon may have been responsible for the situation, saying that language in defence policy legislation allowed the U.S. military to “act recklessly in the public airspace”.

The lawmakers called for a solution that ensures that “the Department of Defence will not jeopardise safety and disrupt the freedom to travel.”

U.S. media reported that the El Paso airport closure may have been the result of U.S. military drones or anti-drone testing rather than a cartel threat.

War against ‘narco-terrorists’

The Pentagon referred questions on the closure to the FAA, which said when it announced the move that “no pilots may operate an aircraft in the areas” covered by the restrictions and warned of potentially “deadly force” if aircraft were deemed a threat.

It updated its guidance on Wednesday morning (February 11, 2026), saying on X that the closure was lifted.

El Paso has a population of about 700,000 and is one of the 25 largest cities in the United States. Almost 3.5 million passengers passed through the airport between January and November 2025, according to data on its website.

Mr. Trump’s administration insists it is effectively at war with “narco-terrorists”, carrying out strikes on alleged traffickers in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific, while the US president has repeatedly said he plans to expand the strikes to land.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum opposes U.S. military intervention in her country but has so far managed to negotiate a fine diplomatic line with Mr. Trump.

She has stepped up the extradition of cartel leaders to the United States and reinforced border cooperation amid tariff threats from Trump, for whom curbing illegal migration from Mexico was a key election promise.

Ms. Sheinbaum told a news conference on Wednesday (February 11, 2026) that she had “no information on the use of drones at the border” but that her government was investigating the airport closure.

The United States began carrying out strikes on alleged drug-trafficking boats in September, a campaign that has killed at least 130 people and destroyed dozens of vessels in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean.

U.S. officials have not provided definitive evidence that the vessels are involved in drug trafficking, prompting heated debate about the legality of the operations, which experts say amount to extrajudicial killings.

Mr. Trump also ordered a shocking special forces raid in Caracas at the beginning of January to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, whom Washington accused of leading a drug cartel.



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