The US has ramped up its military presence in the Caribbean in recent weeks amid what the Trump administration is calling “an armed conflict” with drug cartels and growing escalations with Venezuela’s military.
US warships and aircraft have been sent to international waters near Venezuela as part of the deployment, the most significant in the region in recent history.
There has been a series of deadly strikes on vessels off the coast of Venezuela, which, according to President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, were trafficking drugs to the US.
The administration has not provided evidence to lawmakers that the boats were carrying drugs, and lawmakers and Venezuelan officials have questioned the attacks’ legal justification.
In September, Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro — who faces charges of narcoterrorism in the US, which he has denied — called the US military buildup “an extravagant, immoral, and bloody threat.” The country has also begun mobilizing troops and enlisting militia members.
On Wednesday, Republican senators blocked a resolution that would have required the president to seek congressional approval for future strikes in the region.
“Every American should be alarmed that their president has decided he can wage secret wars against anyone he calls an enemy,” said Rhode Island Democratic Sen. Jack Reed, an Army veteran who retired as a major, and member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, the Associated Press reported.
Col. Chris Devine, a senior spokesman for the Department of Defense, told Business Insider in a statement that the deployed warships are part of an effort to support the president’s “directive to dismantle Transnational Criminal Organizations (TCOs), Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs), and counter narco-terrorism to defend the homeland.”
From destroyers packed with missiles to ships carrying Marines and aircraft, see 10 US Navy ships that have been deployed in the region.
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