US Without explanation, FAA closes El Paso and New Mexico airspace for 10 days, cites national defense

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https://ghostarchive.org/archive/x2nJI

The Federal Aviation Administration issued unexplained notices late Tuesday closing airspace over El Paso and a large patch of southern New Mexico west of Santa Teresa for 10 days. El Paso International Airport is closed to all flights, the city said.

The orders close off all air travel in the affected area, which could cause massive disruption in the nation’s 23rd largest city.

“THE FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION (FAA) CLASSIFIES THE AIRSPACE DEFINED IN THIS NOTAM AS ‘NTL DEFENSE AIRSPACE’. PILOTS WHO DO NOT ADHERE TO THE FOLLOWING PROC MAY BE INTERCEPTED, DETAINED AND INTERVIEWED BY LAW ENFORCEMENT/SECURITY PERSONNEL,” the notices said.

“THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT MAY USE DEADLY FORCE AGAINST THE AIRBORNE ACFT, IF IT IS DETERMINED THAT THE ACFT POSES AN IMMINENT SECURITY THREAT,” the notice continued.

The notices, known as Notice to Air Missions, or NOTAM, took effect at 11:30 p.m. Mountain Time Tuesday, and expire at 11:30 p.m. Feb. 20.

The El Paso city government issued an advisory early Wednesday that flights at El Paso International Airport are canceled.

“The FAA, on short notice, issued a temporary flight restriction halting all flights to and from El Paso and our neighboring community, Santa Teresa, NM. The restriction prohibits all aircraft operations (including commercial, cargo and general aviation) and is effective from February 10 at 11:30 PM (MST) to February 20 at 11:30PM (MST),” the city said in a news release.

“Airport staff has reached out to the FAA, and we are pending additional guidance. In the meanwhile, commercial airlines operating out of El Paso are being informed of the restriction, which appears to be security related. Travelers are encouraged to contact their airlines to get the latest information on their flight status.”

Closing off airspace over a major U.S. city is a rare action, and officials with the Federal Aviation Administration didn’t immediately respond to questions from El Paso Matters on the reasons for the action.

A person familiar with the notices, who asked not to be identified because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly, said the action to close airspace over a major U.S. for security reasons over extended period hasn’t happened since immediately after the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

“All air traffic has been halted in a 10 nautical mile range around the airport, so encompassing El Paso and Fort Bliss, from the ground to 17,000 feet. So no aircraft in or out, regardless of what they are, whether it’s air carriers, military, medevac helicopters, law enforcement. Nobody can fly as this thing is written up,” the person said.

The notices include a phone number at the FAA’s Special Operations Support Center to call for more information. A man identifying himself as Eric spoke briefly to El Paso Matters late Tuesday and said he couldn’t explain the reason for the notices.

“Not really, not because I won’t, it’s because I don’t know. I mean, this is just the office that publishes. So we’re handed the sheets and they say go with it,” Eric said.

The restricted airspace covers most of El Paso County, but doesn’t include Mexican airspace, according to information provided by the FAA.

It also includes a large area of southern New Mexico west of San Teresa, but not the airport in the suburb west of El Paso. The restricted New Mexico airspace goes from the Mexican border on the south to the Organ Mountains-Desert Peak National Monument to the north.
 
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Something is going on in the Mount Riley Wilderness. Cartel members with missile launchers? An encampment that will be subject to miltary action?

airspace.jpeg

The military is also jamming GPS, but this was supposedly preplanned.

gps_jamming.jpeg
 
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This is ridiculous. It sounds like it's for some military maneuvers or something.

I was looking at taking a trip later in the year that hinged on me flying out of El Paso possibly. If we now live in a world where a trip I book out of any given airport 3 months from now can randomly get canceled 10 days before by the government without notice it makes planned air travel impossible. Any vacation or trip you take would have to have 1-2 days built in for emergency travel rerouting by default. So you lose 10-20% of your PTO for possible bullshit.
 
This is ridiculous. It sounds like it's for some military maneuvers or something.

I was looking at taking a trip later in the year that hinged on me flying out of El Paso possibly. If we now live in a world where a trip I book out of any given airport 3 months from now can randomly get canceled 10 days before by the government without notice it makes planned air travel impossible. Any vacation or trip you take would have to have 1-2 days built in for emergency travel rerouting by default. So you lose 10-20% of your PTO for possible bullshit.
Yes its terrible, but "national security" has priority over your chuddy trip. Hopefully we will learn why this occured(doubt)
 
Yes its terrible, but "national security" has priority over your chuddy trip. Hopefully we will learn why this occured(doubt)
Yeah, it's totally cool we can just live in a world where transportation is randomly shut down for vague "security reasons" that we will never find out about. LOL it's just a vacation bro, it's just a work trip, it's just someone coming home, who cares, find a different way to travel! It's for your safety!

Here's Google flights one way from Miami to Albuquerque.
Screenshot_20260211_064355_Chrome.jpg
If you were flying to El Paso, you could have booked a flight for $100 to $130 a few weeks or months in advance:
Screenshot_20260211_064732_Chrome.jpg
If you have to suddenly rebook to Albuquerque, you could pay up to $400 for a flight in the next 2 days--if there's seats. Then you have to rent a car and drive. I would bet the airlines' liability to give vouchers or discounts would be very limited by an act of government, so you may not get much help there.

What national security issues could we have? An air invasion from Mexico? Ayylmaos? Why is this not mentioned by Trump? Why is this not on Drudge? Why is it halfway down the page on Google News?

If the government starts randomly shutting down transportation hubs with no notice for nebulous "security reasons" it's going to be extremely disruptive to any kind of travel.
 
Yeah, it's totally cool we can just live in a world where transportation is randomly shut down for vague "security reasons" that we will never find out about. LOL it's just a vacation bro, it's just a work trip, it's just someone coming home, who cares, find a different way to travel! It's for your safety!
If Total Cartel Death happens, I'll be OVERJOYED that your flight got canceled.
 
Either aliens or we are invading and or bombing something in Mexico soon.

Im all in on aliens.
 
Ayylamaos finally responding to the Roswell distress beacon.
Delta Green has been activated and the resources allocated to the agents (a high school physics teacher, a used car salesman, and a sheriff's deputy) include an antique revolver, a shotgun that refuses to cycle, 57 dollars and 31 cents in assorted change, and a telegraph for if they need to signal for reinforcements. Pray for them.
 
out in the airport
they have in el paso
I had my flight stopped
when I was mid trip
 
Temporary Flight Restrictions:
https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2233 (archive.ph)
https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_6_2234 (archive.ph)

Airliners.net topic:
https://www.airliners.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=1508065 (archive.ph)

edit: From a few days ago. Saw this in the above thread:

Cartel drones coming over the border worry New Mexico officials
KTSM 9 News (archive.ph)
By Julian Resendiz
2026-02-06 21:27:37GMT
EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) – Law enforcement officials from Chihuahua and New Mexico met this week to discuss Mexican drug cartels’ increasing use of drones at the U.S.-Mexico border.

The meeting between Bernalillo County District Attorney Sam Bregman, Chihuahua Public Safety Secretary Gilberto Loya and other officials Thursday in Santa Fe came as the New Mexico state legislature weighs a bill to define unlawful use of drone technology.

SB 136 was unanimously referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee last week. It creates the crime of unlawful use of an unmanned aircraft and establishes penalties ranging from a misdemeanor to a fourth-degree felony.

Examples of unlawful use is directing the drone toward critical infrastructure such as utility plants, pipelines, jails, detention centers or airports. Other instances are using a drone in the commission of a crime or capturing images of a person for unauthorized surveillance.

Along the U.S.-Mexico border, the fear is that drones will be used by criminal organizations to smuggle drugs and migrants or to harm law enforcement.

“We want people to be able to use drones,” said Bregman, who also is chairman of the New Mexico Organized Crime Commission. “However, the idea that drones can be used to circle law enforcement to do things that are known to be criminal activity, the idea that you are going to use a drone, fly it over the border form Mexico, drop a package or guide traffickers so they not be detected, that’s a real problem.”

A former El Paso U.S. Border Patrol chief told Border Report last year that his officers routinely were spied upon by drones on the Mexican side of the border wall.

The Chihuahua state police, meantime, reported a drone bomb attack that injured several military officers early in 2024. A profanity-laced video of the attack can still be found on social media.

Bregman said law enforcement on both sides of the border are collaborating to confront this threat.

“We have not seen drones used to commit actual violent acts in New Mexico, but we do know that’s happened in Mexico,” Bregman later told KRQE. “So we are very concerned with drones used in criminal activity, organized crime – specifically, drugs – human trafficking, mapping out (smuggling) routes.”

Loya said he knows criminals know no borders, so it’s important for law enforcement in Mexico and the U.S. to work together.

The Chihuahua state police has had multiple encounters with drones operated by transnational criminal organizations, particularly in the mountainous western part of the state.

“What we are doing here today is making it possible for Chihuahua and New Mexico to be more safe and secure,” Loya said at a news conference with Bregman. “To that end, we have started today a structural collaboration to tackle these emerging issues and crimes.”

Loya earlier said his agency has acquired and uses dozens of drones to protect police units patrolling dangerous roads and to locate criminals on the run.

Last week, drones helped the state police and the Mexican National Guard locate three drug cartel camps in different parts of Chihuahua.
 
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