Air Freight News

US to hold classified briefing for senators on Texas drone incidents

U.S. officials will give key senators a classified briefing on Wednesday after two incidents in Texas involving government drones that prompted the Federal Aviation Administration to close airspace to airplanes, senators told Reuters.

The U.S. military on February 25 errantly shot down a government drone with a laser-based anti-drone system, which prompted the FAA to expand an area where flights are barred around Fort Hancock, Texas.

On February 18, the FAA said it was halting all flights for 10 days at the airport in nearby El Paso, Texas, only to reverse course and lift its order after about eight hours. The FAA action had been prompted by the use of the high-energy laser system by the Customs and Border Protection agency near the Mexican border to address drone threats.

"I asked for the classified briefing because I want to understand exactly what's happened," Senate Commerce Committee chair Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, told Reuters.

The briefing, from officials at the FAA, Pentagon and Homeland Security Department, is limited to the top Republicans and Democrats on three key committees, congressional aides said.

Senator Maria Cantwell, top Democrat on the Commerce Committee, said the issue of drone attacks has taken on increasing importance but emphasized the need for the military and FAA to coordinate.

"I hope we're going to hear from them some better plan how we try to address these things in the future. But the environment is changing," Cantwell said.

The Pentagon declined to comment on the briefing.

Reuters reported the El Paso closure stemmed from FAA concerns about the use of the laser-based anti-drone system and that the agency agreed to drop its restrictions around El Paso if the Pentagon agreed to delay further testing pending an FAA safety review.

CBP deployed the laser technology in February to take down four suspected cartel drones, despite warnings from the FAA that the technology had not been deemed safe to use in the same vicinity as commercial flights, a congressional aide told Reuters, adding agencies had said the laser had never before been deployed domestically.

Reuters
Reuters

Similar Stories

https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/Year-on-year_growth_of_global_air_cargo_spot_rates_shows_to_38%25_in_June.jpeg
Soaring AI shipments invigorate air cargo’s resilience as global demand rises +7% in June
View Article
GEODIS achieves IATA CEIV Pharma certification in Hyderabad (India)

GEODIS achieves IATA CEIV Pharma certification for its Hyderabad site in India, validating its ability to handle pharmaceutical and healthcare shipments to the highest international standards.

View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/Air_India_Cargo_x_cargo.one_press_banner_FINAL_.png
Air India Cargo partners with cargo.one to power its strategic transition into digital sales 
View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/Condor_plane.png
Unilode and Condor strengthen partnership with Full ULD Management renewal
View Article
Global Aerospace Summit returns to the St. Louis Region August 19 – 20

Building on the success of the inaugural event last summer, the Global Aerospace Summit will return to the St. Louis region August 19–20, 2026.

View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/Kale%CC%81_Logistics_Solutions.jpg_copy_.png
Port of Maputo launches Mozambique’s first Port Community System initiative; Kalé selected as technology partner
View Article