Trump Denies Venezuela Strike Reports Amid Pentagon Military Buildup

President Trump has denied reports that he's decided to launch military strikes inside Venezuela. This comes amid the Pentagon's largest Caribbean military buildup in three decades. US forces have already sunk 15 drug trafficking vessels, resulting in 61 deaths since September. The Senate is preparing to vote on a war powers resolution that would prevent military action against Venezuela.

Key Points: Trump Says No Decision Yet on Venezuela Ground Strikes

  • Trump denies media reports of imminent Venezuela military strikes decision
  • Pentagon's Caribbean military buildup reaches largest scale in 30 years
  • US forces sank 15 drug trafficking vessels, causing 61 deaths since September
  • Senate to vote on war powers resolution preventing Venezuela hostilities
2 min read

Trump says no decision yet on ground strikes inside Venezuela

President Trump denies reports of imminent Venezuela military strikes as Pentagon builds up Caribbean forces and Senate prepares war powers vote.

"No, it's not true - Donald Trump"

Washington, Nov 1

US President Donald Trump said that he has not yet decided whether the United States will launch ground strikes inside Venezuela, contradicting media reports of looming attacks on military facilities in the South American country.

"No, it's not true," Trump told reporters while boarding Air Force One when asked if he had made the decision.

Earlier in the day, the Miami Herald outlet reported that the Trump administration had decided to launch strikes against military installations within Venezuela that could come "in a matter of days or even hours."

Since September 2, US forces have sunk 15 vessels in international waters in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific alleged to be trafficking drugs, resulting in at least 61 deaths.

Pentagon officials admitted they do not know the identities of all the people killed in those attacks at a confidential briefing held Thursday by a panel at the House of Representatives, according to US media, citing Democratic lawmakers who attended.

Over the past weeks, the Pentagon's military buildup in the Caribbean has grown to its largest scale in three decades.

The US Senate is expected to vote on an updated war powers resolution aimed at preventing the US military from engaging in "hostilities" against Venezuela as soon as next week, less than a month after the Senate rejected a similar effort.

"The Trump administration has made it clear they may launch military action inside Venezuela's borders, and won't stop at boat strikes in the Caribbean," Democratic Senator Adam Schiff said in an October 17 statement.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has repeatedly condemned Washington's actions as attempts to overthrow his government and expand US military influence in Latin America. Earlier this month, Colombian President Gustavo Petro accused the US government of "murder" for killing drug suspects at sea.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
61 deaths and they don't even know who they killed? This is exactly why India has always advocated for peaceful resolutions. Military action should be the last resort, not the first option.
A
Aditya G
The contradiction between Trump's statement and media reports shows how unstable the situation is. Reminds me of how important it is for countries to have independent foreign policies like India does.
S
Sarah B
Living in India but originally from the US, I'm deeply troubled by this news. The Pentagon's largest military buildup in 30 years? This feels like history repeating itself. Hope cooler heads prevail.
K
Karthik V
Venezuela is halfway across the world from us, but such interventions affect global stability. India should use its diplomatic influence to encourage peaceful dialogue. Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam - the world is one family. 🙏
M
Michael C
While I understand the drug trafficking concern, military strikes inside another country's territory without proper intelligence is reckless. The Colombian President's "murder" accusation is strong but makes you think.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50