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The Real Target: Trump’s Escalating Military Action in Latin America

by Emma Walker – News Editor

U.S. Strikes‍ Raise ​Questions About True ​Target in Venezuela interdiction

WASHINGTON – Recent U.S. military actions against vessels suspected of drug trafficking off the Venezuelan coast are prompting scrutiny over whether the ‌stated mission is the complete picture, with some observers suggesting a broader strategic objective linked to the Maduro regime. The first U.S. strike,in September,targeted a boat carrying eleven individuals – a number considered unusually high for a typical drug-running operation,according to former government officials.

The incidents unfold​ against a backdrop of escalating⁣ political⁣ tensions and a complex ​relationship‍ between Washington and Caracas. while the U.S. officially ‌frames the operations‍ as part of a counternarcotics effort, the ​context includes Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s authoritarian rule, the country’s economic​ collapse which has spurred mass migration – nearly eight million people have fled in the past decade – and accusations of harboring terrorist groups and criminal organizations.

Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado,recently⁣ awarded the Nobel Peace Prize on October 10th,has actively sought U.S. intervention to oust Maduro, even dedicating⁤ her prize ‌to former President Donald Trump. “We all know that the​ head of Tren de⁢ Aragua is Maduro,” Machado told Donald Trump, Jr., in February, further alleging the regime “created, promoted, and financed” the criminal group. She also accused Maduro’s government of providing⁢ refuge for “terrorists, drug cartels, and‍ groups like Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas, and China.”

The unusual number⁤ of people aboard the intercepted vessel has raised eyebrows among those familiar with ​drug trafficking patterns.”There’s almost always three or⁢ four: a navigator, a pilot, and ‌a person ‌to put gas in the boat,” explained former official Story. “There are never eleven people on a drug boat because each person is drugs⁢ that you can’t transport.” ⁣

The intercepted boat was located near San Juan de Unare, a Venezuelan fishing town known as a transit point for cocaine and ​marijuana ⁢smuggling. Following the bombing, families of those killed initially shared testimonials on social media,​ but the Venezuelan government reportedly pressured them to ⁢remove the posts, according to Venezuelan crime journalist Ronna Rísquez. “Both governments”-the ​U.S.and Venezuela-“like to lie,”⁤ she stated.

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