Cuba Trump: Airspace over Venezuela is considered closed

SDA

29.11.2025 - 18:28

ARCHIVE - US President Donald Trump answers questions from reporters during a meeting with Argentine President Milei in the Cabinet Room of the White House. According to the US head of state, the US military killed six men in an attack on a boat suspected of being loaded with drugs. Photo: Alex Brandon/AP/dpa
ARCHIVE - US President Donald Trump answers questions from reporters during a meeting with Argentine President Milei in the Cabinet Room of the White House. According to the US head of state, the US military killed six men in an attack on a boat suspected of being loaded with drugs. Photo: Alex Brandon/AP/dpa
Keystone

US President Donald Trump has announced that he is closing the airspace over Venezuela. "To all airlines, pilots, drug dealers and human smugglers, please keep the airspace over and around Venezuela completely closed," Trump wrote on his social network Truth Social. It was not immediately clear whether there would be any direct consequences from the post. According to international law, countries have the right to determine their own airspace independently, explains the International Air Traffic Controllers Association (IFATCA) on its website.

Keystone-SDA

The Venezuelan government had previously revoked the operating licenses of six foreign airlines in the South American country. Numerous international airlines had recently temporarily suspended their connections to Venezuela after the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) called for particular caution when flying to Caracas airport due to the poor security situation and increased military activity.

Washington has sent the world's largest aircraft carrier

Trump has been toughening his tone and approach towards the South American country for weeks. The United States had gathered additional soldiers in the Caribbean and withdrawn the world's largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, from the Mediterranean and deployed it to the region, accompanied by other warships and a long-range bomber. According to the government in Washington, the deployment is aimed at combating drug smugglers.

In view of these increasing tensions, there has been speculation that an attack on targets in Venezuela could be imminent. It was suspected that the US government might be seeking a change of power in Caracas.

Cuba's Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez has now accused the USA of "persistent electromagnetic interference" in the region in light of its increased military presence in Caribbean airspace. Such interference can affect the communication and navigation systems of aircraft. Venezuela is particularly affected by this, Rodríguez wrote on Platform X. This is part of the escalation of Washington's "military aggression and psychological warfare" against Caracas, criticized the Cuban minister.