U.S. bolsters Caribbean forces as Trump warns Venezuela action possible

U.S. bolsters Caribbean forces as Trump warns Venezuela action possible



President Trump says U.S. military action in Venezuela remains possible as the Pentagon boosts forces in the Caribbean, with 15,000 service members and the USS Gerald R. Ford deployed.

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5 thoughts on “U.S. bolsters Caribbean forces as Trump warns Venezuela action possible

  1. Chalk that as a suicide mission. Venezuela is 3 times larger than Vietnam, covered in Tropical jungle and impassable mountains (Like Afghanistan). Venezuelan Army won´t fight US Army one-o-one, simply get into the jungle and do target practice on US soldiers.

  2. War?
    Trump has a big army behind him. He don’t need Congress or the Legal system. He has expensive lawyers that win in Supreme Court with three Justices Trump picked and a possible two more before 2026. No filibuster for vetting judges properly since Senator McConnell voted to have it removed in 2020.
    Beware Of Darkness

  3. What Trump Is Doing With the Netherlands Against Curaçao
    What is happening now between the U.S., the Netherlands, and Curaçao goes far beyond “policy.” This feels like a deep-rooted power game — a race for control, resources, and influence — all justified under the familiar excuse of “fighting drugs.”
    They talk about pressure, borders, inspections, restrictions. But where is the transparency?
    Where are the receipts?
    We were told Afghanistan was about security and stability. Yet no clear accounting was ever shown. No full answers. But somehow, the world did see images of buses filled with gold. That wasn’t hidden. That wasn’t denied.
    Now Curaçao is again placed under a magnifying glass, treated as a problem instead of a partner. Decisions are made over the heads of the people who live there. Power speaks, islands listen — or are expected to.
    This is not about drugs alone.
    This is about leverage.
    This is about who controls the narrative, the routes, the money.
    If this was truly about justice and safety, there would be honesty. There would be balance. There would be real accountability — not selective pressure on small nations while bigger players walk away without questions.
    Curaçao deserves respect, not suspicion.
    Transparency, not pressure.
    Truth, not convenient stories.

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