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Trump Leaves Option Of Troops In Venezuela And Strikes In Mexico On The Table
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) “I don't rule anything out.” With that line, delivered at a World Cup 2026 briefing in the Oval Office, Donald Trump turned a conversation about football visas into a signal that the United States may be willing to fight Latin American drug cartels with bombs and troops, not just police and judges.
Trump said he would consider sending U.S. forces into Venezuela and even launching strikes inside Mexico if that was, in his words, what it took to stop the flow of narcotics into the United States.
He added that he would be“proud” to hit drug factories in Mexico and Colombia, while also saying he is open to talks with Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro.
These threats do not come out of nowhere. Since early September, the U.S. military has carried out more than 20 airstrikes on small boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific under Operation Southern Spear, killing over 80 people the Pentagon calls“narco-terrorists.”
At the same time, Washington is designating Cartel de los Soles – a loose network of Venezuelan officers long accused of running cocaine – as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, and has already slapped that label on gangs like Tren de Aragua.
US Cartel Policy Sparks Regional Tensions
That terrorism tag gives the White House a legal path to treat cartel members like enemy fighters, not ordinary criminals. Trump frames all of this as a hard response to America's overdose crisis.
Around 80,000 people died from overdoses last year, many linked to synthetic opioids that U.S. authorities say move through Mexican and Caribbean routes.
For his supporters, talk of strikes and deployments sounds like long-overdue seriousness after years of weak border control and corrupt regimes in the region.
Across Latin America, the reaction is sharply different. Mexico's government insists it will never accept foreign missiles on its soil. Venezuela has mobilised forces and accuses Washington of using drugs as a pretext for regime change and control of oil.
Regional analysts warn that once the U.S. normalises cross-border strikes in the name of fighting cartels, no country – including Brazil – can be sure its sovereignty is safe.
Trump said he would consider sending U.S. forces into Venezuela and even launching strikes inside Mexico if that was, in his words, what it took to stop the flow of narcotics into the United States.
He added that he would be“proud” to hit drug factories in Mexico and Colombia, while also saying he is open to talks with Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro.
These threats do not come out of nowhere. Since early September, the U.S. military has carried out more than 20 airstrikes on small boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific under Operation Southern Spear, killing over 80 people the Pentagon calls“narco-terrorists.”
At the same time, Washington is designating Cartel de los Soles – a loose network of Venezuelan officers long accused of running cocaine – as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, and has already slapped that label on gangs like Tren de Aragua.
US Cartel Policy Sparks Regional Tensions
That terrorism tag gives the White House a legal path to treat cartel members like enemy fighters, not ordinary criminals. Trump frames all of this as a hard response to America's overdose crisis.
Around 80,000 people died from overdoses last year, many linked to synthetic opioids that U.S. authorities say move through Mexican and Caribbean routes.
For his supporters, talk of strikes and deployments sounds like long-overdue seriousness after years of weak border control and corrupt regimes in the region.
Across Latin America, the reaction is sharply different. Mexico's government insists it will never accept foreign missiles on its soil. Venezuela has mobilised forces and accuses Washington of using drugs as a pretext for regime change and control of oil.
Regional analysts warn that once the U.S. normalises cross-border strikes in the name of fighting cartels, no country – including Brazil – can be sure its sovereignty is safe.
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