Venezuela - US Conflict: News, Updates

They can. But it's highly unlikely IMO. They have enough issues at the moment dealing with Ukraine. I doubt they would provide systems to VE that are likely needed there.

Your question is a good one and certainly should be considered. But right now, from my perspective, I'm not seeing it.
But letting a few missiles loose wont hurt them….. they know they can do US v bad when it comes to anti ship capabilities and it is an opportunity for Russia itself to make this war expensive for US…. Also with new sanctions russia will def be in mood to do so
 
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The real reason Trump is preparing for war with Venezuela

Connor Stringer

13–17 minutes


Aim of new campaign against cartels is, in part, to rid America’s backyard of Chinese influence

The drone circled high above the Caribbean Sea as its target skipped across the waves below carrying another bounty of drugs bound for America.

A sudden flash and the boat was engulfed in flames, its cargo disintegrated and its 11 crew dead.

Donald Trump had just fired the opening shot of a new campaign against “terrorist” cartels in Latin America. The strike, he declared, was “only the beginning”.

By this week he had ordered his tenth strike on boats carrying drugs north, each one accompanied by a grainy video circulated far and wide.

This is Mr Trump’s war on narco-terrorism, packaged neatly for the nightly news bulletins and social media generation.

Yet behind the unclassified footage lies an intricate policy that fuses an 18th-century war-time law, spy craft, and trade deals that is fast re-establishing America’s sphere of influence.

The overall plan has been dubbed the “Donroe Doctrine” by insiders, and its aim, in part, is to rid America’s backyard of Chinese influence.

The Venezuela question

The strikes on drugs boats can be traced to one of the unusually large fleet of US warships, drones and troops that have converged off Venezuela’s coast in recent weeks.

Eight warships, including three destroyers, three amphibious assault ships, a cruiser and a smaller littoral combat ship now make up the largest US military presence in the region in decades.

They are joined by a squadron of F-35B Lightning II jets and a handful of Reaper drones, which are capable of flying long distances and carrying up to eight laser-guided missiles. B-2 bombers have also been spotted flying off the coast.

On Friday, Trump announced the USS Gerald Ford, the navy’s newest aircraft carrier, was also en route to the territory.

It is quite the counter-narcotics operation. The sheer scale of the fleet has convinced Venezuelans and many others that Trump is, in fact, preparing a ground assault.

“The deployment to the Caribbean is far beyond what you would need to conduct occasional strikes on vessels allegedly smuggling drugs,” Brian Finucane, a former state department lawyer who is now senior adviser at the International Crisis Group, explained.

“It is as a show of force, sabre rattling, gunboat policy intended to put pressure on Mr Maduro with the goal of forcing him to step down and convince him to step down and take a golden exit. If that fails emboldening those in his government, who might topple him.”

The aspiration for regime change is hardly hidden. The president has linked Mr Maduro’s regime with criminal cartels and approved the CIA to conduct covert missions in the hopes of toppling him.

“He doesn’t want to f--- around with the United States,” the president warned recently, a line as much for Caracas as for his many other adversaries.

US Navy warships docks in Panama City on August 30, 2025 Credit: MARTIN BERNETTI

Yet there is another layer to consider.

Some sources close to the Trump administration point out that assembling an invasion fleet may be helpful for Mr Trump to solve a separate policy headache: immigration.

Declaring war could help with the revival of the Alien Enemies Act, last used to intern Japanese, German and Italian nationals during World War Two, to detain and deport Venezuelan nationals en masse.

Under the 17th-century law, a president can target citizens of a hostile nation in times of declared war or if an enemy government mounts an “invasion or predatory incursion”.

Early in his second term, the president dusted off the war-time law but was later blocked by the court of appeal.

The two architects of the Venezuela campaign are Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, and, interestingly, Stephen Miller, the man known as “Trump’s Brain” on all things immigration.

Venezuela and the drug boats thus become a complex fusion of Trump’s great fixations; national security, immigration and the need to revive American dominance.

The Donroe Doctrine

Venezuela under Mr Maduro, who now has a $50m bounty on his head, has become something of an open shop for America’s adversaries.

China has poured millions into Venezuelan oil projects and loans while Russia has armed Mr Maduro with Sukhoi fighter jets, helicopters, tanks, and air defence systems.

Experts say Mr Trump’s push into the region is part of an attempt to revive the Monroe Doctrine, the 19th-century principle that views Latin America as America’s backyard and that declares the Western hemisphere as off limits to adversaries.

Project 2025, the Trump long-thought blueprint for his second term, calls it “re-hemisphering”.

It calls for the capture of supply chains in the region as a requirement of US economic security.

Mr Trump has signed off on economic punishment targeting Venezuelan oil with a broader goal of reasserting US dominance.

Meanwhile, he told his generals last month: “We’re restoring a needed focus on defeating threats in the Western Hemisphere.”

“All the adversaries we’ve got have a significant presence in Venezuela. And that’s why back in 2019 and today, removing Maduro is such a priority,” John Bolton, Mr Trump’s former national security adviser, said.

“It’s long overdue and in the case of Venezuela, it’s not just China, they’re the late comers,” Mr Bolton told The Telegraph.

The Donald Doctrine has become a rallying cry across the GOP base.

“I’m at least thrilled that we’re finally using military force in our own hemisphere against people that would have done harm against the American homeland,” popular conservative Charlie Kirk told his podcast a week before he was shot dead.

Beyond Venezuela

Venezuela, which has the biggest oil reserves in the world, is just the latest example; part of a pattern by the administration to pick off countries with ties with China.

Guyana and Suriname, small South American states adjacent to Venezuela, have newly discovered oil reserves which have attracted a large amount of Chinese investment.

Just four months into the job, Mr Rubio was dispatched on a Caribbean tour to ramp up engagement in the Western Hemisphere by promoting energy independence, curbing illegal migration and drug trafficking.

In Guyana, Mr Rubio signed a defence agreement that enhanced intelligence sharing and military-to-military cooperation.

Since ExxonMobil made its major oil discovery in Guyana in 2015, Venezuela has revived a century-old territorial dispute with Guyana and taken steps to annex the remote Essequibo region, which comprises about two-thirds of Guyana’s land mass.

Mr Rubio warned it would be a “very bad day” for Venezuela should that happen.

Meanwhile, China bristled at the strengthening ties. Beijing does $1.4bn in annual trade with Guyana and has invested in a string of major infrastructure projects that Chinese firms are undertaking.

By rallying a mini-coalition of neighbouring states, Mr Trump is isolating Mr Maduro and signalling to the rest of the hemisphere that aligning with the US can prove to be valuable and secure.

“It’s clearly a view of our enemies abroad that the Western Hemisphere is strategically important,” Andrés Martínez-Fernández, senior policy analyst for Latin America at the Allison Centre for National Security, said.

“The Trump administration recognises the importance of economic vitality and connectivity within our own hemisphere. For our national security, the rare earth minerals certainly are a core part of that.

“That is something President Trump is clearly trying to get Washington to wake up to that fact. And so I think that’s kind of undergirding the, what you could call a new Monroe Doctrine, or this is pivoting to our hemisphere.”

Just as Xi Jinping, the Chinese president, has managed to leverage his influence to expand his dominance, Mr Trump has sought to offer a lifeline to those in need of American intervention in return for loyalty.

In Buenos Aires, Mr Trump is planning to buy Argentine uranium in a deal with Javier Milei to counter China’s influence.

Scott Bessent, the treasury secretary, has pushed to expand US access to the country’s valuable uranium supply in return for a $40bn lifeline for Argentina’s flailing economy.

China has poured tens of millions into projects into the South American nation, becoming its second largest trading partner and the top buyer of its agricultural exports.

Mr Milei, who has sought to align himself with Mr Trump, has turned to the president for help with his country’s currency crisis after some of the world’s highest inflation rates and a government debt crisis saw the value of the peso plunge.

The approach, the administration says, is yielding results. After visits from Mr Rubio and Pete Hegseth, the defence secretary, Panama announced it would withdraw from Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative.

But critics argue that conditioning US friendship on ideological alignment risks undermining credibility in the region.

“This is much more partisan in its shape, and it’s much more politically punitive,” Christopher Sabatini, senior research fellow for Latin America at Chatham House, said.

The Global Pivot

Beyond the Americas, the White House’s strategic pivot includes strengthening ties with Africa’s 54 nations, which has become the new scene of competition between Washington and Beijing.

From the start of his second term, Mr Trump has pursued deal diplomacy, cutting international aid in favour of infrastructure and mining investments.

The focus has been on shoring up supply chains to rare earth minerals like cobalt and lithium which are vital to consumer electronics and the American tech industry.

China’s restrictions on the export of rare earth minerals in its tit-for-tat trade war with the United States has forced the administration to look elsewhere, namely Africa.

In June, Trump helped broker a peace agreement between the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Rwanda. It was not only pitched as a ceasefire but as a gateway to American investment.



Donald Trump in the Oval Office alongside Olivier Nduhungirehe, Rwanda’s foreign minister (far left) and Kayikwamba Wagner, Democratic Republic of the Congo foreign minister (second from right), as the peace deal was brokered Credit: Yuri Gripas

The deal aims to attract Western investment to a region rich in tantalum, gold, cobalt, copper, lithium and other minerals. According to Human Rights Watch, it is “a mineral deal first, an opportunity for peace second”.

Behind the scenes, US officials have flagged Africa as the next source of strategic increase in the ongoing technical rivalry with China.

A policy paper by Bookings, a non profit based in Washington DC, noted that Africa’s “critical minerals, human capital potential, untapped innovation, and fast growth make Africa essential to America’s economic future”.

“We will see how long it continues. I think people want to get the trade issue resolved, they want it settled,” Mr Bolton added.

“They don’t like the tariffs, but they fear the uncertainty more with good reason.”

Gunboats

In Latin America the airstrikes on drug boats keep coming.

On Wednesday, two targets were destroyed in the Pacific for the first time, with the US defence secretary calling the drug runners the “Al Qaeda of our hemisphere”.

There have been two survivors of attacks on drugboats.

They were picked up by the US military before being swiftly deported.

One left police custody in Ecuador this week after there was no evidence found of links to drug running.

Another lies in hospital in Bogota, critically injured.

Families of the killed have said their relatives were just fishermen. Reports in local media of their home countries have linked some of them at least to weapons trafficking.

Whether for show, or as part of a wider doctrine closing in on Latin America, the attacks remain controversial among legal scholars and some of the countries in America’s “backyard”.

Gustavo Petro, the president of Colombia, once at the centre of global drug trafficking, has called Mr Trump a “murderer”.

On Friday, he was sanctioned and added to “specially designated nationals list” over the country’s alleged drug trafficking.

Analysts point out there is a risk that elements of the policy could backfire as the US loses a key ally in the war on drugs.

“Under no circumstances can one justify that kind of threats and accusations that have no basis whatsoever,” Daniel Garcia-Pena, the Colombian ambassador, said after being recalled from the US following the latest drug boat attacks.

“There are elements that are unacceptable,” he said, visibly alarmed after being told what Mr Trump had said minutes before.

“At stake here is a historic relationship of more than 200 years that benefits both the United States and Colombia,” he said.
 
Trumpet's threats looks to be empty.

I guess they are pursuing a coup or regime change in Venezuela with these baseless accusations and empty threats.

Venezuela can easily target USN's warships within 800 Km range with anti ship ballistic missiles provided by Iran. The sole remaining threat is USN's submarines, not a major threat given USN needs them to counter China and Russian sub fleet. Russia has the strongest submarine force of the globe and if USA deploys them to attack Venezuela, the US mainland will be vulnerable to Russian submarines.

USA has already sacrificed its THAAD interceptors for sake of Israeli cancerous tumor. And if engaged with Venezuela, it will suffer huge blows. China will leave them behind economically.
 
Those missiles are not cheap, fuel and operational cost might be in the 10s of millions per week. They have no money to pay wages but have money for adventure.
 
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Trump has made the decision to strike Venezuela
 
this drug trafficking is old stuff

2008

Treasury Targets Venezuelan Government Officials Supporting the FARC​


September 12, 2008
(Archived Content)

HP-1132

Washington, DC--The U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) today designated two senior Venezuelan government officials, Hugo Armando Carvajal Barrios and Henry de Jesus Rangel Silva, and one former official, Ramon Rodriguez Chacin, for materially assisting the narcotics trafficking activities of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), a narco-terrorist organization.

"Today's designation exposes two senior Venezuelan government officials and one former official who armed, abetted, and funded the FARC, even as it terrorized and kidnapped innocents," said Adam J. Szubin, Director of OFAC. "This is OFAC's sixth action in the last ten months against the FARC. We will continue to target and isolate those individuals and entities that aid the FARC's deadly narco-terrorist activities in the Americas."

Hugo Armando Carvajal Barrios is the Director of Venezuela's Military Intelligence Directorate (DGIM). His assistance to the FARC includes protecting drug shipments from seizure by Venezuelan anti-narcotics authorities and providing weapons to the FARC, allowing them to maintain their stronghold of the coveted Arauca Department. Arauca, which is located on the Colombia/Venezuela border, is known for coca cultivation and cocaine production. Carvajal Barrios also provides the FARC with official Venezuelan government identification documents that allow FARC members to travel to and from Venezuela with ease.

Henry de Jesus Rangel Silva, the Director of Venezuela's Directorate of Intelligence and Prevention Services or DISIP, is in charge of intelligence and counterintelligence activities for the Venezuelan government. Rangel Silva has materially assisted the narcotics trafficking activities of the FARC. He has also pushed for greater cooperation between the Venezuelan government and the FARC.

Ramon Emilio Rodriguez Chacin, who was Venezuela's Minister of Interior and Justice until September 8, is the Venezuelan government's main weapons contact for the FARC. The FARC uses its proceeds from narcotics sales to purchase weapons from the Venezuelan government. Rodriguez Chacin has held numerous meetings with senior FARC members, one of which occurred at the Venezuelan government's MirafloresPalace in late 2007. Rodriguez Chacin has also assisted the FARC by trying to facilitate a $250 million dollar loan from the Venezuelan government to the FARC in late 2007. We cannot confirm whether the loan materialized.

On May 29, 2003, President George W. Bush identified the FARC as a significant foreign narcotics trafficker, or drug kingpin, pursuant to the Kingpin Act. In 2001, the State Department designated the FARC as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist pursuant to Executive Order 13224, and in 1997 as a Foreign Terrorist Organization.

This OFAC action continues ongoing efforts under the Kingpin Act to apply financial measures against significant foreign narcotics traffickers and their organizations worldwide. In addition to the 75 drug kingpins that have been designated by the President, 460 businesses and individuals have been designated pursuant to the Kingpin Act since June 2000.

Today's action freezes any assets the designated entities and individuals may have under U.S. jurisdiction and prohibits U.S. persons from conducting financial or commercial transactions involving those assets. Penalties for violations of the Kingpin Act range from civil penalties of up to $1,075,000 per violation to more severe criminal penalties. Criminal penalties for corporate officers may include up to 30 years in prison and fines of up to $5,000,000. Criminal fines for corporations may reach $10,000,000. Other individuals face up to 10 years in prison for criminal violations of the Kingpin Act and fines pursuant to Title 18 of the United States Code.







Apr 26, 2022
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Venezuela's Cocaine Revolution​



The Cartel of the Suns (Spanish: Cartel de los Soles) is an informal Venezuelan criminal organization allegedly headed by high-ranking members of the Armed Forces of Venezuela who are involved in international drug trade.[1][3] According to Héctor Landaeta – a journalist and the author of Chavismo, Narco-trafficking and the Military – the phenomenon began when Colombian drugs began to enter into Venezuela from corrupt border units and the "rot moved its way up the ranks."[4] Although the involvement in drug trafficking of high-ranking members of the Venezuelan Armed Forces and of the Chavista regime is widely documented,[5][6][7] the exact nature of the Cartel of the Suns is disputed. According to Johnson, the Cartel of the Suns is not a centrally coordinated cartel within the Venezuelan government, but rather a term for a loose network of competing drug-trafficking networks within state institutions.[8][9]

History:

In 1993, the term "Cartel de los Soles" or "Cartel of the Suns" was first used when allegations of two National Guard generals of the Anti-Drug National Command, Ramón Guillén Dávila and Orlando Hernández Villegas, were investigated for drug trafficking crimes.[1][10] The term came from the general emblems that looked like suns on their uniforms.[1]It was discovered that Guillén approved a cocaine shipment from Venezuela to the United States after the Central Intelligence Agency demanded that he do so which sought to infiltrate Colombian gangs trafficking cocaine into the United States.[11] Thor Halvorssen, the anti-drug commissioner in Venezuela, defended Guillén's innocence regarding the cocaine shipment.[12] Reports that members of the Venezuelan military were involved in drug trafficking began in 1998, though it was limited to taking payments and ignoring drug traffickers.[1] It was alleged that officers of Hugo Chávez's Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200 that planned the 1992 Venezuelan coup d'état attempts had created a group that participated in drug trafficking that was known as the "Cartel Bolivariano" or "Bolivarian Cartel".[1] Following the 1992 coup attempts, the Los Angeles Times noted that Venezuelan officers may have sought to take over the government since there was "money to be made from corruption, particularly in drugs".[13]
 
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Those missiles are not cheap, fuel and operational cost might be in the 10s of millions per week. They have no money to pay wages but have money for adventure.
These statements are completely absurd.
 
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Looks like US military operations against Venezuela are imminent
 
Trump has made the decision to strike Venezuela

But - why ? All these claims of drug stuff is h*rse sh*t, we all know it. So, what is the real purpose of attacking this country
 
But - why ? All these claims of drug stuff is h*rse sh*t, we all know it. So, what is the real purpose of attacking this country
Outside of regime change? Who knows?

Personally, I don't see anything outside of a few airstrikes on drug boats happening. There's a lot of firepower there but not enough for sustained operations. Would be curious to know if the MEU is fully equipped or not. Used to be the MEUs could operate independently for up to 90 days. Under the reorganization guidance that was implemented by Gen. Berger, doubt that is no longer the case.
 
But - why ? All these claims of drug stuff is h*rse sh*t, we all know it. So, what is the real purpose of attacking this country
Rubio, as a descendant of Cubans, a regime that helped install several leftist governments in Latin America—primarily Venezuela—wants to eliminate them one by one from what is called the São Paulo Forum.

Capturar.JPG
The right wing governs five countries in South America, while the left wing controls seven nations. The right-wing states are shown in blue, while the left-wing governments are shown in red.

The main left-wing governments opposing the current Trump administration in Latin America are those of Colombia (Gustavo Petro), Venezuela (Nicolás Maduro), and Brazil (Lula). This is not solely due to their left-wing stance, but also because of their completely anti-American position and their involvement in some way with drug cartels. Rubio, as a member of the Senate and attentive to Latin American issues, is aware of these connections and wants to eradicate the anti-American and left-wing governments in Latin America.

I will not detail the situation of each country, but Venezuela being a target is primarily to change the regime; the reasons related to drug trafficking are secondary factors.

Rest assured, Cuba will face something similar in the future.

The US treats Latin America as a strategic backyard (in foreign policy they call it hemispheric defense), and the main threat that poses any degree of opposition comes from leftist governments that embrace an alliance with China.
 
Outside of regime change? Who knows?

Personally, I don't see anything outside of a few airstrikes on drug boats happening. There's a lot of firepower there but not enough for sustained operations. Would be curious to know if the MEU is fully equipped or not. Used to be the MEUs could operate independently for up to 90 days. Under the reorganization guidance that was implemented by Gen. Berger, doubt that is no longer the case.
I think so. The entire ARG Iwo Jima force has been moved to the Caribbean. Although I don't think they'll actually invade, because the level of forces required for a full-scale invasion like in Iraq in 2003 would need to be at least 50,000, even considering the desertion of the Venezuelan army which is only armed on paper, because their level of military readiness is miserable.
 
Trumpet's threats looks to be empty.

I guess they are pursuing a coup or regime change in Venezuela with these baseless accusations and empty threats.

Venezuela can easily target USN's warships within 800 Km range with anti ship ballistic missiles provided by Iran. The sole remaining threat is USN's submarines, not a major threat given USN needs them to counter China and Russian sub fleet. Russia has the strongest submarine force of the globe and if USA deploys them to attack Venezuela, the US mainland will be vulnerable to Russian submarines.

USA has already sacrificed its THAAD interceptors for sake of Israeli cancerous tumor. And if engaged with Venezuela, it will suffer huge blows. China will leave them behind economically.
This is all a load of rubbish.
 
Rumors that the MQ-9 and F-35 have taken off.
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