Aircraft carrier arrives in the Caribbean in major buildup near Venezuela
The USS Gerald R. Ford leads a 12,000-troop buildup aimed at disrupting drug trafficking and narco-terrorism in the Caribbean, amid rising regional tensions.
- On Sunday, the USS Gerald R. Ford arrived in the Caribbean Sea, a high-profile deployment the Trump administration calls a counterdrug operation but critics see as pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth called the deployment Operation Southern Spear, completing the largest U.S. buildup in generations with around 12,000 troops on nearly a dozen Navy ships.
- Since early September, U.S. strikes on small boats have killed at least 80 people in 20 attacks tied to drug transit routes in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific Ocean, but officials have released no evidence those killed were `narcoterrorists`.
- Venezuela's government recently touted a `massive` mobilization of troops and civilians, while Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro says the U.S. is `fabricating` a war, stoking regional anxieties.
- Senate Republicans recently rejected legislation limiting attacks on Venezuela without U.S. Congress authorization, while experts disagree on strikes against land targets inside Venezuela and the administration aims to `stop the drugs coming in by land`.
398 Articles
398 Articles
Data and other key aspects about the huge military vessel deployed by the U.S. Navy on coasts close to Venezuela and Colombia
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Ford carrier adds to US military buildup in Caribbean, near Venezuela
U.S. Navy’s most advanced aircraft carrier enters Caribbean as regional tension rises
The USS Gerald R. Ford entered the Caribbean Sea on Sunday, marking the most significant U.S. military buildup in the region in decades. The Navy confirmed the carrier strike group’s arrival as it moved through the Anegada Passage near the British Virgin Islands, completing what officials describe as a sweeping deployment under “Operation Southern Spear.” With the aircraft carrier’s entry, roughly 12,000 U.S. personnel and nearly a dozen Navy ve…
The US is concentrating military forces in the Caribbean - allegedly to combat drug smuggling, which is also to come from Venezuela. Not only for this reason is tensions between countries increasing.
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