Venezuela Fires Back
Venezuela isn't taking President Donald Trump's airspace closure lying down. The government issued a blistering statement calling the move an "extravagant, illegal, and unjustified aggression against the people of Venezuela." More specifically, they're framing it as a "colonialist threat" that tramples on national sovereignty—strong words that signal how seriously Caracas is taking this escalation.
What Trump Actually Announced
Over the weekend, Trump took to X and declared that Venezuelan airspace would be closed. His message was blunt: pilots, airlines, drug traffickers, and human traffickers should stay completely away from "THE AIRSPACE ABOVE AND SURROUNDING VENEZUELA." The all-caps approach suggests he means business.
This represents a clear escalation in U.S. pressure on President Nicolás Maduro's regime. Maduro has been accused of leading the Cartel de los Soles, which the United States officially designated as a foreign terrorist organization. During Trump's first term, officials actually ran war-game exercises exploring what might happen if Maduro's government collapsed.
Constitutional Questions From Capitol Hill
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer isn't buying Trump's authority to make these moves unilaterally. He pointed out that only Congress holds the constitutional power to declare war, and "Congress has not authorized the use of military force against Venezuela." Schumer warned the actions are pushing America toward "another costly foreign war."
He's calling for bipartisan congressional action to reclaim war declaration powers from the executive branch. Last week, Schumer also pressed Secretary of State Marco Rubio to brief the Senate on these escalating operations.