US resumes commercial passenger air service to Venezuela after 7 years

An American Airlines flight from Miami receives a water cannon salute after landing at Simon Bolivar International Airport, as the U.S. carrier returned to Venezuela after nearly seven years of suspended services, in Maiquetia, Venezuela, Thursday.

An American Airlines flight from Miami receives a water cannon salute after landing at Simon Bolivar International Airport, as the U.S. carrier returned to Venezuela after nearly seven years of suspended services, in Maiquetia, Venezuela, Thursday. (Fausto Torrealba, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Passenger air service from the U.S. to Venezuela resumed Thursday with a flight from Miami to Caracas.
  • The first flight to the country in seven years, operated by American Airlines through Envoy, included government officials and reporters.
  • Venezuelan Transport Minister Jacqueline Faria called it "a pleasure" to receive the flights, "because they mean connectivity."

WASHINGTON — Passenger air service to Venezuela resumed on Thursday morning after ​seven years, with an American Airlines flight from Miami to Caracas.

American is resuming daily service to Venezuela, offering flights on an Embraer 175 through Envoy, its wholly-owned ‌regional subsidiary. It plans to add a second daily flight starting May 21. The first flight, which includes government officials and ⁠reporters, landed on Thursday afternoon.

Transportation Secretary ​Sean Duffy lifted a 2019 order in ⁠January that had barred U.S. airlines from flying to Venezuela, after President Donald Trump directed ‌him to do so, and ‌then in March approved American's request for flights.

'Attention for our people'

"For Venezuela, it ⁠is a pleasure to receive these flights because they ⁠mean connectivity, which in turn means development, which means productivity, which means attention for the people in the world and attention for our own people," Venezuela's Transport Minister Jacqueline Faria said. She was speaking at a welcome event at Maiquetia airport near Caracas shortly before the flight landed, where she was accompanied by U.S. charge d'affaires John Barrett.

Faria ‌added that Venezuela anticipates 100,000 passengers a year, roughly 7,200 ​to 8,000 per month, on the renewed flights.

"Today marks another historic milestone in relations between the United States and Venezuela. We are witnessing the rebuilding of our economic ties, the reopening of Venezuela to global trade, and the recognition of our people — the people of both countries," Barrett said. "Today, we are sending another clear signal to global markets that Venezuela is once again open for business."

The Transportation Security Administration was in Caracas in March ​to review airport security procedures, a necessary step to resume flights. American Airlines announced plans to resume service ‍weeks after the ‌military seized ‌the country's ⁠leader, Nicolas Maduro.

American, which started operating in Venezuela in 1987, was the largest U.S. airline in the country before it suspended its service in 2019 after the ban. It said the planned daily flights will provide opportunities for business, leisure and humanitarian travel.

The State Department lifted Venezuela ‌from its "Do Not Travel" list ​for Americans in March, issuing a less serious "Reconsider Travel" ‌advisory due to risk of ⁠crime, kidnapping, terrorism, ​and poor health infrastructure.

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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