El Paso International Airport cameras are still live
AP News: Rep. Veronica Escobar, a Democrat whose district includes El Paso, urged the FAA to lift the restrictions in a statement Wednesday morning. There was no advance notice given to her office, the city of El Paso or airport operations, she said.
“The highly consequential decision by FAA to shut down the El Paso Airport for 10 days is unprecedented and has resulted in significant concern within the community,” Escobar said. “From what my office and I have been able to gather overnight and early this morning there is no immediate threat to the community or surrounding areas.”
8:47: When asked if the ban was related to U.S. military operations, the Pentagon referred comment to the FAA in an email.
8:51: El Paso borders Mexico’s Ciudad Juárez
Ciudad Juárez is home to about 1.5 million people. Like many border-spanning communities, some residents are accustomed to using facilities like airports on both sides of the border, depending on where they are traveling.
The city exploded in size in recent decades as free trade agreements spurred a boom in assembly plants that offer less-expensive labor and the advantage of easy access to the U.S. market. Nearly 97% of the goods produced in Juarez’s plants go to the United States, according to Mexico’s Economic Ministry. That easy access to the U.S. has also made Juarez, like other border cities, attractive to Mexico’s drug cartels that seek control in order to safeguard their smuggling routes for drugs and migrants headed north and cash and guns coming south.
Context:
The action barring flights at a single U.S. airport appear unprecedented, government officials said. After the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, the FAA barred all civilian flights across the United States for several days.
9:00: Official FAA twitter account says closure of airspace is lifted. Flights will resume as normal
Nothing to see here folks…
9:05: AP Confirms
9:18: Reporting has cooled off for the moment. Questions still remain:
Why was the airspace shutdown so suddenly for 10 days? Just for the testing of “counter-drone technology”?


Not all airspace, only from ground level to 18 000ft. So you can fly over El Paso at medium to high altitudes. My guess is that they’re performing some kind of anti drone/cruise missile test at Fort Bliss/White Sands to do with electromagnetic interference and can’t guarantee the safety of civilian flight below 18 000ft, or they don’t want anyone to see what is going on at fort Bliss for OPSEC reasons.
18 000ft isn’t an arbitrary number, anything above 18 000ft is Class A airspace in the United States. That requires an IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) flight plan filed, VFR (Visual Flight Rules) is not allowed in Class A. They wanted to make sure that they could positively identify any aircraft so that they didn’t accidentally zap a civilian airliner or military transport. Also drones/cruise missiles/UAS will really struggle/be impossible to get that high depending on the type of drone/missile.
10 days is probably a placeholder timeframe.