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- US lifts Caribbean airspace curbs after Venezuela attack, resuming flights at 10 p.m.
- Major airlines, including United, plan to restore operations but face delays.
- FAA closed airspace citing safety risks; non-US airlines also canceled flights.
WASHINGTON — The United States has told airlines its curbs on Caribbean airspace will expire at 10 p.m. MST and flights could resume as schedules are quickly updated, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on Saturday.
The comments on X followed the cancelation of hundreds of flights by major airlines after the U.S. attack on Venezuela and the capture of its president, Nicolas Maduro.
United Airlines is preparing to resume flights to the Caribbean, beginning with San Juan in Puerto Rico on Saturday night, it said.
"We expect to operate most scheduled flights to the region for Sunday," the airline added in a statement.
Even after the removal of curbs, however, airlines will need several days to restore normal operations, said airline analyst Robert Mann, adding, "They have a day's worth of passengers basically," already stranded in the Caribbean.
American Airlines, Delta, United, Frontier Airlines, Spirit Airlines and JetBlue Airways began cancelling flights in line with Federal Aviation Administration airspace closures in the Caribbean.
JetBlue canceled 215 flights, an airline spokesperson said.
In a notice to airmen, the FAA said it closed the airspace to carriers "due to safety-of-flight risks associated with ongoing military activity."
In other security notices for non-U.S. air carriers, the agency warned them away from Venezuelan airspace.
It cautioned British operators against "potential risk from anti-aircraft weaponry and heightened military activity" if flying within 100 miles of Venezuelan airspace.
The FAA declined further comment.
Non-US airlines also cancel flights
Several European and South American airlines also canceled flights.
The curbs would be lifted "when appropriate," Duffy had said in a post on X.
American military activity near Venezuela led to a near mid-air crash in November between a JetBlue airliner and an aerial refueling tanker, media said.
Several carriers waived change fees and fare differences for customers affected by the closures if they postponed travel.
Saturday's military operation captured Venezuela's long-serving President Nicolas Maduro, President Donald Trump said, promising to put the country under American control for now, by deploying U.S. forces if necessary.
Air Canada said its Caribbean and South American operations were normal, under guidance from Transport Canada, and it was monitoring the situation, adding, "We will update as required if the situation changes."
Commercial air traffic over Venezuelan airspace appeared to stop after Saturday's attack, records on tracker FlightRadar24 showed.
Contributing: David Shepardson, Preetika Parashuraman and Gnaneshwar Rajan







