Venezuela Deploys 25,000 Troops As U.S. Patrols Tighten Around Caribbean Trade Routes
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Venezuela has moved 25,000 soldiers to its borders and coasts, a surge ordered by President Nicolás Maduro and confirmed by his defense minister. The government frames the move as protection of sovereignty.
The troops now patrol frontier states with Colombia, including Táchira and Zulia, and coastal zones from La Guajira and Falcón in the west to Nueva Esparta, Sucre, and Delta Amacuro in the east.
Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López says the forces bring drones, naval and river craft, and expanded air and land patrols.
Official announcements stress two areas: the Perijá range, where Colombian armed groups and traffickers move, and Venezuela 's oil-rich coast, home to the Paraguaná Refining Center in Falcón.
That site, which houses the Amuay and Cardón refineries, remains one of the largest complexes in the hemisphere. U.S. Energy Information Administration data confirm its size and note its long-term under-utilization, making it both strategic and vulnerable.
The trigger comes from the sea. U.S. naval and Coast Guard units recently intercepted drug shipments northeast of Venezuela and north of Bonaire, with record seizures reported in Florida ports.
Washington describes these missions as anti-narcotics operations, but Caracas sees them as provocations that threaten its territory. The story behind the story is about more than flags and patrols.
Venezuela is locking down the same corridors that move oil, refined fuels, and legal trade, as well as contraband. The U.S. is pressing the same waters with interdictions that disrupt trafficking networks but also slow wider maritime flows.
For businesses, this means the key routes linking Venezuela's oil sector, Caribbean markets, and cross-border commerce with Colombia now face heavy scrutiny from two sides.
This is not just a military standoff. It is a contest over who controls some of the busiest and most sensitive trade lanes in the region.
The numbers-25,000 soldiers, a refining center processing hundreds of thousands of barrels per day, and record U.S. drug seizures-show why the stakes stretch well beyond Venezuela's borders.
The troops now patrol frontier states with Colombia, including Táchira and Zulia, and coastal zones from La Guajira and Falcón in the west to Nueva Esparta, Sucre, and Delta Amacuro in the east.
Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López says the forces bring drones, naval and river craft, and expanded air and land patrols.
Official announcements stress two areas: the Perijá range, where Colombian armed groups and traffickers move, and Venezuela 's oil-rich coast, home to the Paraguaná Refining Center in Falcón.
That site, which houses the Amuay and Cardón refineries, remains one of the largest complexes in the hemisphere. U.S. Energy Information Administration data confirm its size and note its long-term under-utilization, making it both strategic and vulnerable.
The trigger comes from the sea. U.S. naval and Coast Guard units recently intercepted drug shipments northeast of Venezuela and north of Bonaire, with record seizures reported in Florida ports.
Washington describes these missions as anti-narcotics operations, but Caracas sees them as provocations that threaten its territory. The story behind the story is about more than flags and patrols.
Venezuela is locking down the same corridors that move oil, refined fuels, and legal trade, as well as contraband. The U.S. is pressing the same waters with interdictions that disrupt trafficking networks but also slow wider maritime flows.
For businesses, this means the key routes linking Venezuela's oil sector, Caribbean markets, and cross-border commerce with Colombia now face heavy scrutiny from two sides.
This is not just a military standoff. It is a contest over who controls some of the busiest and most sensitive trade lanes in the region.
The numbers-25,000 soldiers, a refining center processing hundreds of thousands of barrels per day, and record U.S. drug seizures-show why the stakes stretch well beyond Venezuela's borders.

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