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U.S.–Venezuela Standoff Deepens as Terror Designation Takes Effect and Flights Are Cut

The designation equips Washington with new legal tools against figures tied to Nicolás Maduro.

Overview

  • Multiple international carriers suspended Caracas routes after an FAA warning about a potentially dangerous airspace, prompting Venezuela to threaten revocation of traffic rights within 48 hours as IATA urged dialogue.
  • Operation Southern Spear continues with more than a dozen U.S. warships and roughly 15,000 personnel deployed, and public tallies attribute at least 83 deaths to maritime strikes on suspected drug vessels since September.
  • Nicolás Maduro highlighted closer ties with China and Russia and announced plans for deeper intergovernmental cooperation in energy, finance and defense after rejecting the U.S. move as a fabrication.
  • Axios reported that President Donald Trump is considering a direct call with Maduro with no date set, as senior U.S. defense officials engage partners in the Dominican Republic and Trinidad and Tobago on counter‑narcotics coordination.
  • Maduro rallied security forces and supporters, calling the situation a decisive test for the republic, as authorities signaled readiness to defend territory against what they describe as external threats.