GOP lawmakers rally behind Trump's Venezuela strikes
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U.S. forces carried out another strike on a suspected drug trafficking vessel in the Caribbean, killing three people, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed. The operation, part of Trump’s expanded anti-narcotics campaign,
Russia has previously provided Venezuela with Buks and S-300VMs. It has also received 21 Su-30MK2 Flanker fighters that are capable of air defense missions, but they can also sling supersonic anti-ship missiles, as well as flying other types of missions.
Dating back to early September, the Trump administration has reported well over a dozen such strikes in the waters of the Caribbean and eastern Pacific Ocean off South America.
From Sucre to South Florida, Venezuelans have mixed feelings about whether a threatened U.S. military incursion against drug traffickers will affect their desperate situation — and their brutal dictatorship.
The Ford had spent the past days resupplying and regrouping with its strike group elements in the Mediterranean Sea, according to ship-tracking data, ahead of its retasking to the Caribbean Sea, where the United States is staging a major military campaign against drug cartels in Venezuela.
The fictional story about the Navy striking Thomas' yacht spread as the U.S. government ordered strikes on boats carrying what U.S. President Donald Trump described as "narcoterrorists" with connections to the designated foreign terrorist organization Tren de Aragua, the country of Venezuela or Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
President Donald Trump has made the decision to strike multiple Venezuela military installations, according to a new report from Miami Herald.
The Trump Administration has made the decision to attack military installations inside Venezuela and the strikes could come at any moment, sources with knowledge of the situation told the Miami Herald,