US Warship Docks in Trinidad and Tobago, Puts More Pressure on Venezuela
- On November 01, 2025, the U.S. military increased its Caribbean presence, deploying 10,000 troops, two Amphibious Ready Groups with over 4,500 Marines, jets, and drones to Puerto Rico targeting Maduro.
- On August 7, U.S. officials accused Maduro of being 'one of the largest narco-traffickers' and linked him to Cartel de los Soles, with the administration doubling the bounty to $50 million.
- On September 2, U.S. forces struck an alleged drug-smuggling boat, with maritime and air strike operations killing at least 57 people; B-1 Lancer bombers flew near Venezuela, and Trump authorised a covert CIA operation.
- Despite U.S. pressure, Nicolás Maduro remains in power with military support and militias, while María Corina Machado leads a right-wing opposition endorsing U.S. sanctions this year.
- The administration's regional political moves and lack of public evidence shape long-term implications as a U.S. intelligence memo found no link to Tren de Aragua, and analysts describe corruption over hierarchy.
324 Articles
324 Articles
Dick Cheney's ghost has a playbook for war in Venezuela
Former vice president Richard Cheney, who died a few days ago at the age of 84, gave a speech to a convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in August 2002 in which the most noteworthy line was, “There is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction.” The speech was essentially the kickoff of the intense campaign by the George W. Bush administration to sell a war in Iraq, which it would launch the following March. The campai…
U.S. supercarrier to reach Caribbean next week amid military buildup | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
The U.S. Navy’s newest and most powerful aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, is expected to reach the Caribbean early next week, marking a dramatic escalation in the American military buildup near Venezuela amid growing speculation over possible U.S. strikes against Nicolás Maduro’s regime.
Trump denies imminent attack on Venezuela
US President Donald Trump on Friday denied that his administration was planning military attacks against Venezuela, contradicting reports from major US media outlets in this regard citing anonymous sources.
The U.S. Armed Forces deployed the USS Gettysburg missile launcher (CG-64) in the Caribbean, as defense journalists report this Friday, while U.S. President Donald Trump denies reports of imminent attacks on Venezuela.The USS Gettysburg arrived in the Caribbean on Thursday from Norfolk, Virginia, adding to the USS Lake Erie (CG-70) missile launcher, according to journalist Dan Lamothe of The Washington Post, which was also reported by the specia…
The u.s. Appears to Increase Military Pressure in the Caribbean and Fears of Venezuela’s Attack Grow
Washington, Oct 31 (EFE).- Several reports published this Friday point out that the U.S. is further increasing its military deployment in the Caribbean or that it is even planning attacks against targets in Venezuela, which increases the fear of a Washington offensive against the government of Nicolás Maduro even though Donald Trump himself denied that possibility today.According to defense journalists, the U.S. Armed Forces have already deploye…
The United States' deployment in the Caribbean began with warships: destroyers, cruisers, a submarine and, more recently, a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.
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