USS Gerald Ford moves into Caribbean as Venezuela mobilizes forces

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USS Gerald Ford moves into Caribbean as Venezuela mobilizes forces

The world’s largest aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford, has entered waters near Latin America, marking one of the largest U.S. military buildups in the Caribbean in decades. The Pentagon says the deployment is part of the Trump administration’s expanding campaign against drug cartels.

But the move has prompted an aggressive response from Venezuela, which accuses Washington of preparing for regime change.

Venezuela mobilizes

Venezuela’s Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez announced what he called a “massive mobilization” of troops, weapons and equipment in response to what Caracas described as an “imperialist threat.”

The order, he said, came directly from President Nicolas Maduro and involves land, air, naval, and reserve forces — along with the civilian Bolivian Militia — conducting large-scale drills through Wednesday.

Padrino said the exercises are designed to “optimize command, control and communications” and ensure the defense of the nation.

Military in the Caribbean

The Ford carrier strike group, which includes three destroyers and more than 4,000 sailors and Marines, is now operating under U.S. Southern Command, just north of the Caribbean Sea.

The Pentagon said the carrier will help disrupt narcotics trafficking and dismantle transnational criminal groups.

It joins a growing array of U.S. assets already in the region — including surveillance drones, F-35 fighters and at least one attack submarine based out of Puerto Rico.

Mission or message?

Since September, the administration said it has carried out 19 strikes on suspected drug-running boats, killing at least 76 people. Administration officials call it a crackdown on cartels.

But the buildup has renewed speculation that it could also be aimed at Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the mission is strictly counter-narcotics, while President Trump has openly said Maduro’s days are numbered.

Analysts say the arrival of a nuclear-powered carrier strike group — typically used for high-end combat operations — suggests Washington is at least signaling it’s prepared to escalate far beyond the drug war.

The post USS Gerald Ford moves into Caribbean as Venezuela mobilizes forces appeared first on Straight Arrow News.

Ella Rae Greene, Editor In Chief

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