Maduro Turns U.S. Naval Operation Into 'Nuclear Threat' Narrative
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro accused the United States of threatening his country with a“nuclear submarine” near the Caribbean coast.
He claimed the move violated the 1967 Treaty of Tlatelolco, which established Latin America and the Caribbean as a nuclear-weapon-free zone.
The vessel he referred to, the USS Newport News , is not nuclear-armed. It is a nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine, meaning it uses a nuclear reactor for propulsion but carries only conventional weapons.
Since 1991, only U.S. ballistic-missile submarines deploy nuclear warheads at sea, and nuclear Tomahawk cruise missiles were retired in 2011.
The treaty Maduro invoked explicitly bans nuclear weapons but does not prohibit nuclear propulsion. Article 5 clarifies that nuclear reactors used for transport or energy are not weapons.
Maduro's claim therefore misrepresents both the submarine's capabilities and the treaty's provisions. The United States said its deployment of eight warships, including the USS Newport News and the USS Lake Erie, is part of an anti-narcotics mission.
The force also includes three amphibious ships with around 4,500 sailors and Marines. Washington recently doubled its reward for information leading to Maduro's capture to 50 million dollars, citing narcotics trafficking charges.
Maduro Frames U.S. Naval Presence as Nuclear Threat to Venezuela
Maduro has presented the operation as unprecedented aggression, declaring that no Latin American country had ever been threatened with a“nuclear submarine.”
By equating nuclear propulsion with nuclear weapons, he dramatizes the situation to depict Venezuela as the target of extraordinary hostility.
Caracas called for urgent consultations with OPANAL, the body overseeing the nuclear-free treaty, and announced it will send larger Venezuelan naval vessels into the Caribbean.
Officially, this deployment also targets drug trafficking, but politically it reinforces the narrative of resistance to U.S. pressure. The contrast is clear. On one side, Washington describes a regional anti-drug mission.
On the other, Maduro frames the same deployment as a nuclear threat, despite the absence of nuclear arms. This strategy allows him to rally domestic support, shift attention from Venezuela's economic crisis, and position himself as a defender of sovereignty.
For international observers, the episode highlights the political use of military language. A nuclear-powered submarine is not a nuclear weapon, but in Maduro 's rhetoric it becomes one.
By blurring this line, he manufactures alarm and casts himself as a victim of unlawful escalation, even when the facts do not support that claim.
He claimed the move violated the 1967 Treaty of Tlatelolco, which established Latin America and the Caribbean as a nuclear-weapon-free zone.
The vessel he referred to, the USS Newport News , is not nuclear-armed. It is a nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine, meaning it uses a nuclear reactor for propulsion but carries only conventional weapons.
Since 1991, only U.S. ballistic-missile submarines deploy nuclear warheads at sea, and nuclear Tomahawk cruise missiles were retired in 2011.
The treaty Maduro invoked explicitly bans nuclear weapons but does not prohibit nuclear propulsion. Article 5 clarifies that nuclear reactors used for transport or energy are not weapons.
Maduro's claim therefore misrepresents both the submarine's capabilities and the treaty's provisions. The United States said its deployment of eight warships, including the USS Newport News and the USS Lake Erie, is part of an anti-narcotics mission.
The force also includes three amphibious ships with around 4,500 sailors and Marines. Washington recently doubled its reward for information leading to Maduro's capture to 50 million dollars, citing narcotics trafficking charges.
Maduro Frames U.S. Naval Presence as Nuclear Threat to Venezuela
Maduro has presented the operation as unprecedented aggression, declaring that no Latin American country had ever been threatened with a“nuclear submarine.”
By equating nuclear propulsion with nuclear weapons, he dramatizes the situation to depict Venezuela as the target of extraordinary hostility.
Caracas called for urgent consultations with OPANAL, the body overseeing the nuclear-free treaty, and announced it will send larger Venezuelan naval vessels into the Caribbean.
Officially, this deployment also targets drug trafficking, but politically it reinforces the narrative of resistance to U.S. pressure. The contrast is clear. On one side, Washington describes a regional anti-drug mission.
On the other, Maduro frames the same deployment as a nuclear threat, despite the absence of nuclear arms. This strategy allows him to rally domestic support, shift attention from Venezuela's economic crisis, and position himself as a defender of sovereignty.
For international observers, the episode highlights the political use of military language. A nuclear-powered submarine is not a nuclear weapon, but in Maduro 's rhetoric it becomes one.
By blurring this line, he manufactures alarm and casts himself as a victim of unlawful escalation, even when the facts do not support that claim.

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