U.S. Deploys Warships to Venezuela in Trump’s Cartel Crackdown

The United States has deployed three Aegis guided-missile destroyers to waters off Venezuela as part of President Trump’s escalating campaign against Latin American drug cartels, U.S. officials confirmed this week.

According to an official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to the Associated Press, the USS Gravely, USS Jason Dunham, and USS Sampson will operate in the region over the coming months in support of counter-narcotics missions. The deployment marks one of the largest U.S. naval shows of force in the Caribbean in recent years.

The move underscores President Trump’s strategy of using the military to pressure cartels he blames for flooding U.S. communities with fentanyl and fueling violence through cross-border trafficking and smuggling networks. Trump has argued that traditional law enforcement and diplomatic measures have failed to stop the cartels, vowing instead to “take the fight directly to them.”

The president has also increased pressure on Mexico, warning President Claudia Sheinbaum that the U.S. military could be deployed inside Mexican territory if her government fails to rein in cartel activity. Sheinbaum has firmly rejected the idea of U.S. intervention but has pledged to intensify Mexico’s anti-cartel operations.

In February, the U.S. formally designated Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua, El Salvador’s MS-13, and six major Mexican cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. The designations give federal agencies expanded authority to pursue their members, finances, and global networks.

The crackdown also ties into Trump’s broader immigration agenda. The Department of Homeland Security reports that more than 324,000 illegal immigrants have been deported since the start of the year — about 70 percent with criminal records or cartel ties. Another 1.2 million individuals are estimated to have left the U.S. voluntarily under the administration’s stepped-up enforcement measures.

At sea, the U.S. Coast Guard has tripled its presence along the southern maritime approaches, focusing on detecting and interdicting drug and human smuggling ventures. Officials say the addition of the destroyers will expand surveillance and interdiction capabilities, creating what amounts to a layered defense against cartel networks operating in the Caribbean and South America.

The deployment of U.S. warships near Venezuela is expected to strain Washington’s already tense relationship with Caracas, which has long accused the U.S. of using counternarcotics operations as a pretext for intervention. Still, U.S. officials maintain the mission is focused squarely on dismantling trafficking pipelines, not sparking new conflict.

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