Venezuela, the airlines
Digest more
Caracas revokes operating rights for groups including Iberia and Turkish Airlines after they heeded regulators’ security warnings
A key move was Washington's formal designation of the Cartel de los Soles, a network it alleges is deeply tied to top Venezuelan officials, as a terrorist organization, which came into effect on Monday. Venezuela called the label a "ridiculous scheme" intended to justify an unlawful intervention in Venezuela.
As Washington escalates pressure on Venezuela, any push for regime change risks becoming a costly, dangerous gamble — not the quick fix President Trump might hope for.
The U.S. declared an alleged cartel in Venezuela a terrorist organization, the latest action targeting the country and the Maduro government.
1don MSN
Maduro Brandishes Sword and Vows to Defend ‘Every Inch’ of Venezuela Amid Tensions With U.S.
Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro rallied his supporters on Tuesday during a march in the country’s capital, Caracas.
The Trump administration could have expanded authority to take action in Venezuela starting Monday, as the US designates Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his government allies as members of a foreign terrorist organization.
1don MSN
Airlines cancel flights to Venezuela after FAA warns of worsening security, military activity
International airlines are canceling flights to Venezuela after the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration warned pilots about security risks and increased military activity.
2don MSN
Airlines pull Venezuela flights amid safety warning, as Trump ratchets up pressure on Maduro
U.S. aviation warning prompts flight cancellations to Venezuela as Trump administration designates Cartel de los Soles as foreign terrorist organization.
Despite this long relationship, Noriega proved to be a highly unreliable Cold War partner. While on Washington’s payroll, he supplied Castro with intelligence on U.S. operations and helped facilitate the shipment of weapons from Cuba to various Marxist insurgent groups.
CNN analyzed Venezuelan military footage, verified social media video, and other open-source data since early September to explore how President Nicolás Maduro’s regime is flexing its comparatively modest military muscle in its standoff with the US.