US airlines warn over pause in two key travel programs amid DHS shutdown

The PreCheck program allows approved passengers through ⁠a dedicated, ⁠faster security lane at US airports and is designed to reduce wait times and streamline screening. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 22 February 2026
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US airlines warn over pause in two key travel programs amid DHS shutdown

  • A similar shutdown last fall caused losses of $6.1 billion across the travel industry and related sectors
  • The PreCheck program allows approved passengers through a dedicated, faster security lane at US airports

A grouping of major US airlines said the US Department of Homeland Security gave travelers scant warning ahead of the temporary ​suspension of its PreCheck and Global Entry programs from Sunday, amid a shutdown of much of the agency.

The halt in the programs run by the DHS will begin from 6 a.m. ET (1100 GMT), after the partial shutdown began last week, following the failure of Republicans and Democrats to clinch a deal on immigration enforcement reforms.

“Airlines for America is deeply concerned ‌that … the traveling ‌public will be, once again, used ​as ‌a ⁠political football ​amid another ⁠government shutdown,” Chief Executive Chris Sununu said.

News of the suspensions came at “extremely short notice to travelers, giving them little time to plan accordingly,” he added in a statement, urging Congress to “get a deal done.”

A similar shutdown last fall caused losses of $6.1 billion across the travel industry and related sectors, he said.

“TSA ⁠and Customs and Border Protection are prioritizing the general ‌traveling population at our airports ‌and ports of entry and suspending courtesy ​and special privilege escorts,” ‌Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said.

“We are making tough but ‌necessary workforce and resource decisions to mitigate the damage,” she added in a DHS statement to Reuters.

The pause in programs is among the emergency measures DHS is taking to redirect staffing more than a week ‌after Congress failed to send it more money, the Washington Post said.

PreCheck had more than ⁠20 million ⁠active members, the TSA said in 2024, while total vetted airline passengers in the DHS’ traveler programs, including Global Entry, exceeded 40 million.

The PreCheck program allows approved passengers through a dedicated, faster security lane at US airports and is designed to reduce wait times and streamline screening.

Global Entry expedites US customs and immigration clearance for pre-approved, low-risk international travelers entering the United States.

Sunday’s moves follow orders from the Trump administration last week to another constituent of the DHS, the Federal Emergency Management ​Agency, to suspend deployment ​of aid workers to disaster-affected areas due to the shutdown.


Trump says school strike that killed 150 people ‘done by Iran’

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Trump says school strike that killed 150 people ‘done by Iran’

  • Tehran has blamed the US for the strike, which happened in southern Iran’s Hormozgan province on Feb. 28
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE: President Donald Trump on Saturday blamed Iran for what the country’s authorities said was a deadly strike on a school in the southern town of Minab.
“We think it was done by Iran. Because they are very inaccurate, as you know, with their munitions. They have no accuracy whatsoever,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One.
According to Iranian authorities, a strike hit a girls’ elementary school last Saturday, killing more than 150 people, mostly students.
Israel and the United States have not claimed responsibility for the reported attack — with US officials saying it remains under investigation — while Iran has blamed Washington for the strike.
AFP has neither been able to access the site in order to verify the incident, nor to obtain independent confirmation of a toll.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said Friday they had targeted a US base in the UAE that they alleged had been used as a launchpad for the strike.
“Al-Dhafra air base, belonging to American terrorists in the region, was targeted using drones and precision missiles,” the Guards said in a statement broadcast on state TV.
The Pentagon has confirmed it is investigating, while Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said the US would “not deliberately target a school.”
The New York Times newspaper reported Thursday that US military statements indicating forces were attacking naval targets near the Strait of Hormuz, where a Revolutionary Guards’ base is located, “suggest they were most likely to have carried out the strike.”
An analysis of social media posts from the time of the attack, as well as photos and videos from witnesses, indicated that the school had been struck at the same time as Guards’ naval base sites, the Times said.