El Paso’s airspace is back open, flights are resuming, and what turned into one of the strangest 24 hours in recent memory has thankfully ended without incident.

Late Tuesday night, the Federal Aviation Administration grounded all flights to and from El Paso, including commercial, cargo, and general aviation. The temporary flight restriction was originally set to run from February 10 at 11:30 p.m. through February 20 at 11:30 p.m., but it has now been lifted.

So what actually happened?

Cartel Drones Triggered Military Response

According to CNN, an administration official said Mexican cartel drones breached U.S. airspace near El Paso. That breach reportedly triggered a U.S. military operation tied to drug cartel activity.

“The Department of War took action to disable the drones,” the official told CNN. “The FAA and DOW have determined there is no threat to commercial travel.”

CNN also reported that the sweeping flight ban was driven by military operations out of Biggs Army Airfield at Fort Bliss. Drones, helicopters, and other aircraft operate from that facility. The FAA acted after the Department of War could not assure the safety of civilian aircraft in the area during the operation.

In short, this was a security situation tied to military activity, not a direct threat to the public.


READ MORE: EL PASO AIRSPACE SUDDENLY SHUT DOWN BY FED GOVNMT


Local Leaders Frustrated by Lack of Notice

El Paso International Airport said the FAA issued the restriction on short notice, halting all aircraft operations in El Paso and neighboring Santa Teresa, New Mexico. Airport staff reached out for guidance while airlines worked to inform passengers.

Congresswoman Veronica Escobar called the decision “highly consequential” and “unprecedented,” noting there was no advance notice provided to her office, the City of El Paso, or airport officials. She emphasized there was no immediate threat to the community.

Mayor Renard Johnson was even more direct, saying the shutdown never should have happened without coordination. He pointed out that medical evacuation flights were forced to divert to Las Cruces and that grounding all aviation operations created real public safety concerns. He said the city expects better communication and accountability moving forward.

Big Headline, Quiet Ending

For a moment, it sounded dramatic. Federal airspace shutdown. Military operation. Cartel drones.

And then, thankfully, it was over.

No injuries. No public emergency. Just canceled flights, diverted medevacs, and a lot of very confused travelers.

As of now, the FAA says there is no threat to commercial travel, and El Paso is officially cleared for takeoff again.

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