Washington escalates fight against Venezuelan crime syndicate
President Donald Trump confirmed Tuesday that American forces carried out a deadly strike on a suspected smuggling vessel linked to Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua cartel, killing 11 people. The operation unfolded in the southern Caribbean, in international waters, officials said.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated the targeted vessel had departed from Venezuela and was following a well-used trafficking route northward.
Direct message to traffickers
Trump announced the action on Truth Social: “Earlier today, under my orders, US military assets launched a strike against confirmed Tren de Aragua narcoterrorists inside SOUTHCOM’s area of responsibility.” He accused the group of operating under Nicolás Maduro’s protection while orchestrating killings, drug shipments, and human trafficking across the hemisphere.
“This is a warning to anyone considering moving drugs into the United States. You will be stopped,” Trump wrote.
In February, Washington officially labeled Tren de Aragua both a foreign terrorist organization and a specially designated global threat.
Rubio vows ongoing campaign
Ahead of a diplomatic trip to Mexico and Ecuador, Rubio signaled that such missions would continue. “We’re going to confront the cartels that are poisoning American communities,” he said. Asked about legal authority for such strikes, Rubio responded only that “all the necessary steps were taken.”
Trump later told reporters that the military had “just destroyed a drug boat,” adding: “This won’t be the last — there’s more to come.”
Expanded US deployments
A senior defense official confirmed the strike as a “precision operation” but declined to provide further detail. CNN previously reported that over 4,000 Marines and sailors had been deployed around the Caribbean and Latin America as part of the administration’s expanded anti-cartel strategy.
Defense analyst Tom Karako of the Center for Strategic and International Studies noted that open acknowledgment of such actions is rare. “It wouldn’t surprise me if multiple similar operations have taken place quietly,” he said.
Maduro pushes back
Venezuela’s president condemned the US posture, calling it “barbaric and criminal.” Maduro said Monday that his government had prepared for “maximum readiness” in response to what he described as Washington’s “maximum pressure.”
The Trump administration has offered a $50 million reward for Maduro’s capture on drug-trafficking charges.
The strike highlights a sharp escalation in US policy — treating cartels as terrorist entities and authorizing direct military force against them in Latin America.

