Minnesota officials weigh options as federal regulators threaten to rescind partnership between Delta Air Lines, Aeromexico

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Emilia Gonzalez Avalos hails, originally, from Mexico City, but she’s made a life for herself in Minnesota, including 11 years as executive director of Unidos MN, a nonprofit that organizes Latinos from its Lake Street offices in Minneapolis. After resolving a residency issue, the four-hour Aeromexico flight she took from Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport to visit family she hadn’t seen in decades was “incredibly personal to me,” she said.

Also incredibly personal to her is the prospect of losing that airline access.

The U.S. Department of Transportation gave its blessing eight years ago to an airline partnership that makes room for Delta Air Lines at Aeromexico terminals in Mexico City, Monterrey and Guadalajara. The same joint cooperation agreement allows Aeromexico to coordinate fleets and schedules while gaining a footprint at all of Delta’s majors passenger hubs, including Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, New York, Atlanta and beyond. In April, they added Boston’s Logan Airport.

In January, the DOT signaled that it will soon rescind its anti-trust permission for what’s been billed as the largest joint venture between a Mexican and U.S. airline. Federal regulators have accused the Mexican government of backsliding on promises to maintain cargo slots for U.S. carriers at Benito Juarez International Airport outside Mexico City, and Delta officials have maintained that they’re caught in the middle, if not being used as leverage, unjustly punished for a trade dispute that has nothing to do with their passengers.

More than 350,000 passengers

The prospect of losing easy access between the Twin Cities and major destinations in Mexico has alarmed Minnesota’s Mexican-American community, business advocates and lawmakers from both major parties. More than 350,000 passengers traveled through MSP on Delta/Aeromexico trips last year, including more than 86,000 passengers who flew direct between MSP and Benito Juarez International, according to Delta.

Eliminating the joint venture threatens the viability of some two-dozen airline routes between the two countries. Mexico is the nation’s largest trading partner, and Minnesota’s second largest trading partner. Since 2016, the joint cooperation agreement has facilitated trips for some 45 million passengers.

“It’s about real people with real ties who migrated to Minnesota,” Gonzalez Avalos said. “There’s a perception that the dispute only centers (on) businesses and business practices, and not actual people whose lives will be interrupted. This flight is four hours. I wake up early, get the kids ready, and I’m having lunch with my relatives at the local market in Mexico City. The alternative is at least eight hours, and it can get up to 12 hours, with layovers. I wouldn’t be traveling once a year with kids and my elderly mother if this changes. It would be just so hard.”

A spokesman for the DOT last week said he could not comment on the legal process except to say nothing has been finalized and no set timeline for implementation has been disclosed.

Elected MN officials weigh in

Delta, which has announced that it will pursue legal action if the DOT terminates the venture, has found growing support from elected officials in Minnesota, including Gov. Tim Walz, both U.S. senators, the entire Congressional delegation and St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey.

Kurt Zellers, a former Minnesota House speaker and Republican lawmaker, has repeatedly reached out to the U.S. Department of Transportation on behalf of the Minnesota Business Partnership, which he runs. Agricultural companies in Minnesota have special reason to be wary, he said.

“Just this week I sent a longer letter to (DOT) Secretary Buttigieg,” said Zellers on Friday. “I’ve heard from a number of our members — especially the new NAFTA members — ‘this would be very bad for our business.’ If you’re going to be doing a regular round of business down there, you want to have access to those routes.”

Carter sounded a similar tune in a letter to the DOT in April.

“Mexico is our state’s second-largest trade partner, actively supporting 91,000 jobs and $2.8 billion in revenue,” wrote the mayor. “Our office is united with local and state leaders in wanting to prevent negative repercussions from the potential loss of the Delta-Aeromexico partnership.”

Two St. Paul-area state representatives — Rep. Maria Isa Perez-Vega and Rep. Samakab Hussein, both DFLers — met with the Mexican consulate in St. Paul last month to discuss the matter and have written separate op-eds, which have appeared in Twin Cities media.

“In response to infractions of the U.S.-Mexico air services agreement by the government of Mexico, the DOT is taking the unprecedented step of retaliating against U.S. consumers, jobs, air service and the strength of our economy by potentially terminating the (joint cooperation agreement),” wrote Perez-Vega, in an op-ed published in the Minnesota Daily in April. “The DOT should not remove the chalks on this decision without understanding the full scope of the ramifications.”

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In Grand Forks visit, Air Force general raises concerns about counter-UAS capabilities

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GRAND FORKS – U.S. Air Force Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach came to Grand Forks earlier this week with a question about drones: how to do a better job of knocking them out.

In two roundtable discussions Tuesday with aerospace experts at UND’s John D. Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences and at GrandSky aviation park, the commander of Air Combat Command repeatedly raised concerns about the use of unmanned aerial systems against the U.S. military.

“We’re seeing a proliferation of UAS being used and we’re seeing difficulty with countering that,” Wilsbach told the Herald. “We ought to take it seriously now, before it becomes a crisis in our country.”

Wilsbach was in Grand Forks at the invitation of Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., to discuss current and future Air Force operations in the Red River Valley.

“The Red River Valley is home to essential Air Force and Air Guard operations, as well as a robust UAS industry with research, development, testing and training capabilities unmatched by anywhere else in the world,” read a statement attributed to Hoeven.

Drone incursions pose an increasing problem for the military, particularly on domestic bases, where proximity to civilians limits the options base commanders have to disable drones.

Wilsbach said domestic military bases rely heavily on electronic jamming, but that those systems can be unreliable and require Federal Aviation Administration authorization that doesn’t always come, since electronic interference has the potential to interfere with commercial aircraft. Using missiles and bullets to shoot down drones is also a no-go, since it could potentially create unsafe conditions on the ground, or unintentionally hit another aircraft.

“What we need is kit that works. We don’t have that,” Wilsbach said at UND. “Once we have that, then we need the authority to use it. We also don’t have that.”

The problem drones are often small, inexpensive vehicles – oftentimes they’re hobbyists who may not know they’re flying in restricted airspace – that can be hard to detect or disable.

Even when the military is free to use guns and missiles overseas, the military still expends millions of dollars in ordinance to shoot down much less expensive drones.

Wilsbach compared drones to the proliferation of IEDs in Iraq and Afghanistan for their potential to cause disproportionate damage at relatively little cost.

A senior defense official told reporters that domestic military bases see two to three drone incursions a week, per a May 8 report from Air and Space Forces Magazine.

Col. Tim Monroe, wing commander of the 319th Reconnaissance Wing at Grand Forks Air Force Base, told the Herald the air base had firsthand experience with the issues Wilsbach described.

“Our story is exactly as he described in that we have technology that sometimes works and sometimes we’re not allowed to use it,” Monroe said.

The incursions have become a significant concern for the Senate Armed Services Committee, the chair and ranking Republican of which penned an April opinion piece in the Washington Post calling for a “master plan” to confront drone use amid Cold War-era technology and significant red tape.

Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., who accompanied Wilsbach for his visits to UND and GrandSky and is a member of the Senate committee, said the lack of counter-UAS measures leaves bases open to espionage or attack.

A working group in the Defense Department has been set up to address the issue, but Cramer feels its progress has been slow and believes the issue may need Congressional intervention.

“There are a lot of ways (our enemies) test us and sometimes we fail, and in the drone area we’ve been failing,” Cramer said.

Researchers at UND Aerospace are working on several UAS and counter-UAS projects with military applications, including predictive technology to anticipate where in-flight drones are headed and “drone swarms” that could be used offensively.

Last summer, UND and the Northern Plains UAS Test Site tested a laser weapon that could be used to shoot down drones by targeting and overheating the vehicle’s motor or battery. Wilsbach viewed video footage of one such test during his visit to GrandSky.

Further tests are planned at Camp Grafton in July: Cramer said he is working to send a staff delegation from Washington to view the tests on behalf of the Armed Services Committee.

“The opportunity to work this out at GrandSky and over at Camp Grafton is remarkable,” Cramer said.

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Saints rally behind Brooks Lee’s three doubles for eighth straight win

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Brooks Lee hit a career-high three doubles as the Saints rallied from two deficits to beat the Mud Hens on Wednesday, 8-7, in front of an announced crowd of 7.248 at CHS Field.

The Saints have won eight straight games, tying a franchise record set June 5-14, 2002, and are .500 (35-35) for the first time since they were 7-7 on April 14.

Lee, the Twins’ top shortstop prospect, was 3 for 5 with three doubles, two RBIs and a run scored. Catcher Jair Camargo hit a two-out, three-run home run in the third, his fifth of the season, to give St. Paul a 5-2 lead.

The Saints trailed 2-0 after two innings, and 7-5 in the sixth — the second deficit courtesy of a solo home run by Eddys Leonard, who became just the second Class AAA player to homer over the CHS batter’s eye in center field.

The last to accomplish the feat was Joe Dunnigan of the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks, who did it on Opening Night of the ballpark, May 21, 2015.

Nick Wittgren (1-0) pitched the sixth and seventh innings, giving up a run on three hits, to earn the victory. Kody Funderburk struck out the side in the ninth for his third save.

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Rifts seem to appear between Israel’s political and military leadership over conduct of the Gaza war

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By JOSEF FEDERMAN and ELENA BECATOROS (Associated Press)

JERUSALEM (AP) — The Israeli army’s chief spokesman on Wednesday appeared to question the stated goal of destroying Hamas in a rare public rift between the country’s political and military leadership.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has insisted Israel will pursue the fight against Hamas, the group running the besieged Gaza Strip, until its military and governing capabilities in the Palestinian territory are eliminated. Hamas has been designated a terrorist group by the U.S., Canada, and European Union.

But with the war now in its ninth month, frustration has been mounting with no clear end or postwar plan in sight.

“This business of destroying Hamas, making Hamas disappear — it’s simply throwing sand in the eyes of the public,” Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, the military spokesperson, told Israel’s Channel 13 TV. “Hamas is an idea, Hamas is a party. It’s rooted in the hearts of the people — whoever thinks we can eliminate Hamas is wrong.”

Netanyahu’s office responded by saying that the country’s security Cabinet, chaired by the prime minister, “has defined the destruction of Hamas’ military and governing capabilities as one of the goals of the war. The Israeli military, of course, is committed to this.”

The military quickly issued a clarification, saying it was “committed to achieving the goals of the war as defined by the Cabinet” and that it has been working on this “throughout the war, day and night, and will continue to do so.”

Hagari’s comments, it said, “referred to the destruction of Hamas as an ideology and an idea, and this was said by him very clearly and explicitly,” the military statement added. “Any other claim is taking things out of context.”

There have already been open signs of discontent over the handling of the war by Netanyahu’s government, a coalition that includes right-wing hard-liners who oppose any kind of settlement with Hamas. Months of internationally mediated truce talks, including a proposal floated this month by President Joe Biden, have stalled.

Benny Gantz, a former military chief and centrist politician, withdrew from Netanyahu’s war Cabinet earlier this month, citing frustration over the prime minister’s conduct of the war.

And early this week, Netanyahu expressed displeasure with the army’s decision to declare a “tactical pause” in the southern Gaza city of Rafah to help deliver humanitarian aid to the besieged territory. An aide said Netanyahu was caught off guard by the announcement, and Israeli TV stations quoted him as saying “we have a country with an army, not an army with a country.”

Israel attacked Gaza in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 cross-border attack into southern Israel, which killed some 1,200 people and took 250 hostage.

Israel’s war effort initially enjoyed broad public support, but in recent months wide divisions have emerged. While Netanyahu has pledged “total victory,” a growing array of critics and protesters have backed a cease-fire that would bring home the roughly 120 hostages still in Gaza. The Israeli military has already pronounced more than 40 of them dead, and officials fear that number will rise the longer the hostages are held.

Inside Gaza, the war has killed more than 37,100 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between combatants and civilians. The war has largely cut off the flow of medicine, food and other supplies to Palestinians, who are facing widespread hunger.

The United Nations said Wednesday that its humanitarian workers were once again unable to pick up aid shipments at the Kerem Shalom border crossing from Israel because of a lack of law and order.

U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said that although there were no clashes along the route where Israel has declared a daily pause in fighting, the lawlessness in the area prevented U.N. workers from picking up aid. This means that no trucks have been able to use the new route since Israel announced the daily pause on Sunday.

In recent weeks, Israel’s military has concentrated its offensive in the nearby city of Rafah, which lies on the border with Egypt and where it says Hamas’ last remnants are holding out.

More than half of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million people had earlier taken shelter in Rafah to escape fighting elsewhere in the territory, and the city is now nearly empty as the Israeli military carries out airstrikes and ground operations.

The Israeli military says it has killed over 500 fighters and inflicted heavy damage on Hamas’ forces, but officials expect the operation to continue for at least several more weeks.

Israel also has taken over a 14-kilometer (8-mile) corridor along Gaza’s border with Egypt, including the Rafah border crossing. Footage circulating on social media shows the crossing blackened and destroyed, with only the former passenger terminal remaining intact. Before Israel moved into the area, the crossing was used to deliver humanitarian aid and to allow Palestinians to leave the territory.

The head of the Rafah municipality, Ahmed al-Sufi, said Wednesday that Israeli strikes have destroyed more than 70% of the facilities and infrastructure. He accused Israeli forces of systematically targeting camps in Rafah, adding that entire residential areas in one neighborhood have been destroyed. Al-Sufi didn’t immediately respond to a request for additional information.

In a separate incident, 11 people were killed in an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, said Dr. Saleh al-Hamas of the nearby European Hospital. There were no further details and the Israeli military had no immediate comment.

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Becatoros reported from Athens, Greece. Associated Press journalists Wafaa Shurafa in Deir al-Balah, Gaza Strip; Natalie Melzer in Nahariya, Israel; and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.