These Are the US Ships and Aircraft Massing off Venezuela: Washington Post – Al-Manar TV Lebanon
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Saturday - November 1, 2025

These Are the US Ships and Aircraft Massing off Venezuela: Washington Post

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The large-scale buildup of U.S. military forces and assets in the Caribbean suggests that the Trump administration is preparing to expand operations in the region — escalating tensions between Washington and Caracas and raising the possibility of the first U.S. strikes on Venezuela, according to the Washington Post.

U.S. forces in the Caribbean include eight Navy warships, a special operations vessel and a nuclear-powered attack submarine. When the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford arrives in the Caribbean next week, it will bring with it three more warships and more than 4,000 additional troops.

In addition to the Naval buildup, the Pentagon has flown bombers along Venezuela’s coastline in a show of force and moved assets to U.S. bases in the area, including one in Puerto Rico that is now housing F-35 fighter jets, according to Washington Post analysis of satellite images.

President Donald Trump has indicated that he is planning for increased operations against Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, but when asked on Friday whether he is considering military strikes inside Venezuela, he replied “no.”

The Pentagon has acknowledged carrying out more than a dozen strikes on alleged drug boats, killing at least 61 people since September.

From the beginning, the Pentagon’s buildup in the Caribbean has far exceeded what was needed for a counternarcotics operation, suggesting the mission was always “set to evolve,” said Ryan Berg, the director of the Americas Program and the Center for Strategic & International Studies.

But Berg said the addition of the carrier strike group could indicate that the expanded operations are imminent. “The competition for these vessels is tremendous,” he said, because only three are deployed at any one time. Once the Ford arrives in the Caribbean next week, “It’s going to start a clock ticking and Trump will have about a month or so to make a major decision on a strike before he has to move” the vessel elsewhere.

In Washington, Democratic lawmakers say they are increasingly frustrated with the lack of transparency surrounding the operations.

Democrats in congress have accused the Trump administration of failing to share the legal justification for the strikes.
In a statement Friday, the United Nations human rights chief condemned the strikes, saying the attacks violate international law and amount to “extrajudicial killing,” because the Trump administration has failed to produce information that “the individuals on the targeted boats appeared to pose an imminent threat to lives of others.”

Source: The Washington Post