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Trump Shifts Caribbean Drug Offensive Toward Land Targets As Russia Backs Venezuela
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) President Donald Trump said the United States struck another suspected drug-smuggling boat off Venezuela on Saturday night and warned that traffickers will now try to move narcotics over land, signaling the next phase of the campaign.
He spoke Sunday to sailors in Norfolk, Virginia, as the Navy marked its 250th anniversary, framing the operation as part of a wider push against cartels in the Caribbean.
The latest strike follows an attack on Friday that killed four men aboard a small craft near Venezuela , at least the fourth operation in recent weeks.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said he has“every authorization needed” for the missions, pointing to the administration's view that major cartels can be treated as foreign terrorist organizations and to the president's war powers.
The White House has also told Congress the United States is in a“non-international armed conflict” with cartels. Washington has not publicly presented evidence that the destroyed vessels were carrying drugs.
Moscow lined up behind Caracas. After the Friday strike, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov conveyed“full support and solidarity” to his Venezuelan counterpart and warned that U.S. actions risk destabilizing the Caribbean. Venezuela denounced the attacks as aggression and vowed to defend its sovereignty.
U.S. Cocaine Route Shift Could Bring Conflict Ashore
The story behind the story is about routes and risks. For years, most cocaine bound for North America has traveled by sea through the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific, where U.S. interdiction missions are common.
A declared pivot from sea to land would push the fight into border zones and transit corridors across northern South America and the Caribbean's island states-areas with fragile policing and a history of corruption pressure.
It also raises legal and diplomatic stakes: treating cartels like wartime enemies could broaden where and how the U.S. uses force, complicate relations with neighbors, and increase the chance of a dangerous incident when outside powers, including Russia, are watching closely.
In plain terms, this matters because it could shift crime-and conflict-closer to towns, highways, and ports across the region.
The next few days will show whether Washington releases evidence about the strikes and how far it is willing to go if the battlefield moves from open water to the shore.
He spoke Sunday to sailors in Norfolk, Virginia, as the Navy marked its 250th anniversary, framing the operation as part of a wider push against cartels in the Caribbean.
The latest strike follows an attack on Friday that killed four men aboard a small craft near Venezuela , at least the fourth operation in recent weeks.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said he has“every authorization needed” for the missions, pointing to the administration's view that major cartels can be treated as foreign terrorist organizations and to the president's war powers.
The White House has also told Congress the United States is in a“non-international armed conflict” with cartels. Washington has not publicly presented evidence that the destroyed vessels were carrying drugs.
Moscow lined up behind Caracas. After the Friday strike, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov conveyed“full support and solidarity” to his Venezuelan counterpart and warned that U.S. actions risk destabilizing the Caribbean. Venezuela denounced the attacks as aggression and vowed to defend its sovereignty.
U.S. Cocaine Route Shift Could Bring Conflict Ashore
The story behind the story is about routes and risks. For years, most cocaine bound for North America has traveled by sea through the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific, where U.S. interdiction missions are common.
A declared pivot from sea to land would push the fight into border zones and transit corridors across northern South America and the Caribbean's island states-areas with fragile policing and a history of corruption pressure.
It also raises legal and diplomatic stakes: treating cartels like wartime enemies could broaden where and how the U.S. uses force, complicate relations with neighbors, and increase the chance of a dangerous incident when outside powers, including Russia, are watching closely.
In plain terms, this matters because it could shift crime-and conflict-closer to towns, highways, and ports across the region.
The next few days will show whether Washington releases evidence about the strikes and how far it is willing to go if the battlefield moves from open water to the shore.

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