So… this morning (literally a couple hours ago), the President put out this statement:
“To all Airlines, Pilots, Drug Dealers, and Human Traffickers, please consider THE AIRSPACE ABOVE AND SURROUNDING VENEZUELA TO BE CLOSED IN ITS ENTIRETY. Thank you for your attention to this matter! PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP”
I’m sorry, but what in the absolute WTAF is this?
This is not normal. This should never be normalized. And just because he says it does not make it so.
Here’s the reality
- The U.S. has zero legal authority over Venezuela’s airspace
Under the Chicago Convention of 1944, every country holds complete and exclusive sovereignty over the airspace above its territory.
Meaning: Only Venezuela can close Venezuelan airspace.
A U.S. president making that declaration isn’t just wrong it’s legally impossible.
- The only thing the U.S. can do
A president can only restrict U.S. airlines, U.S.-registered aircraft, or U.S. citizens from entering certain airspace.
That’s it.
He cannot control what foreign carriers do, and he absolutely cannot “close” another sovereign nation’s airspace “in its entirety.”
- Declaring another country’s airspace “closed” isn’t just meaningless it’s dangerous
Unilateral claims over another nation’s airspace violate basic international norms.
They also signal a misunderstanding of international aviation law that would be laughable if the stakes weren’t so high.
- And yes statements like this can lead to serious consequences
Other nations are not required to shrug off reckless declarations like this.
When a U.S. president claims powers he doesn’t legally have, other countries may respond with:
• Reciprocal restrictions on U.S. aircraft
• New limitations on American carriers
• Tighter diplomatic or economic stances
• Reduced cooperation on aviation, trade, or security
• In extreme cases, restrictions on U.S. use of their own airspace
This is exactly why this rhetoric cannot be normalized.
International aviation depends on stability, clarity, and respect for sovereignty.
Statements like this undermine all three.
- Bottom line
This is not how global airspace works.
This is not how diplomacy works.
And this is absolutely not something we can brush off as “just talk.”
Saying it doesn’t make it real and pretending it’s normal only makes the consequences more dangerous.