Thousands Of Americans Stuck Across Caribbean

Thousands Of Americans Stuck Across Caribbean



Thousands of Americans find themselves stuck across the Caribbean following the fallout from the US raid in Venezuela. Hundreds of flights have been cancelled. Cameron Buttrick, who lives in New York, and her dad Brian, are trying to get back to the US from the island of Curacao. They spoke with Inside Edition’s Alison Hall. American Airlines said it added 7,000 extra seats to try to ease the backlog. Delta added 2,600. United and Southwest said they are also working on adding more flights.

28 thoughts on “Thousands Of Americans Stuck Across Caribbean

  1. Crazy how regular everyday Americans don't seem to realize that a lot of countries hate us….They don't separate everyday Americans from our governments acts…They see Americans as America…So just be aware of that people and be safe.

  2. I love how everyone everyone’s getting mad at the people that are on vacation not thinking logically. People have lives to come back to jobs kids animals responsibilities. The whole point of vacation is you’re leaving temporarily to come back. Also, it’s not fun to be on vacation when you check out of your hotel and everywhere is booked up so you’re basically homeless waiting to get a flight home that sounds like a nightmare.

  3. Don’t feel sorry for them one bit, there are people living paycheck to paycheck or homeless, and they’re spending big bucks on exorbitant vacations. They’re a different class, highly unrelateable percentage of the population who usually lacks empathy for others. Eat the rich.

  4. Not one of those people will be in any danger of any kind, and they will never be traded for a top 10 most dangerous terrorist in the world, and you will never see the most disgusting and soulless unthinkable decisions of our previous administration that left American citizens in Afghanistan to rot!!!!!!!! And you are not going to get any Olympic participants in custody of the other countries that was just for their breaking the law, but they will never be there for any length of time and will not be traded to get our citizens in these cases to be returned very quickly

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