CARACAS — President Nicolas Maduro on Friday hit out at the US deployment of three warships off the coast of Venezuela as part of efforts to curb drug trafficking, calling the operation an “illegal” attempt at regime change.
Maduro hits ‘illegal’ US troops deployment , This news data comes from:http://otgy-pmok-mlil-vtns.052298.com
President Donald Trump’s administration has stepped up the pressure on Maduro, doubling its bounty to million earlier this month on drug charges against the leftist strongman.
Maduro hits ‘illegal’ US troops deployment
Earlier this week, a US source confirmed to AFP that three Aegis-class guided missile destroyers were heading to international waters off the South American country. US media reported that 4,000 Marines could also be deployed.
“What they’re threatening to do against Venezuela — regime change, a military terrorist attack — is immoral, criminal and illegal,” Maduro told lawmakers.
“This is a matter of peace, of international law, for Latin America and the Caribbean. Anyone who commits an act of aggression against a country in Latin America is attacking all countries,” he said.
In 2020, during Trump’s first term in office, Maduro and other high-ranking Venezuelan officials were indicted in US federal court on several charges, including participating in a “narco-terrorism” conspiracy.
The US Justice Department accused Maduro of leading a cocaine trafficking gang called “The Cartel of the Suns” that shipped hundreds of tons of narcotics into the United States over two decades, earning hundreds of millions of dollars.
Washington does not recognize Maduro’s last two election victories.
- President Marcos launches HD Hyundai Shipyard in Subic
- Comelec: Postponed village, youth elections not in 2026 budget
- Modi: India, Japan to 'shape the Asian century'
- Dizon to abolish DPWH internal special investigation team created to look into the flood control anomalies
- Macron's decision to recognize Palestinian state angers Israel and the US
- Puno seeks probe of anomalous projects ‘funders’
- COA launches sweeping audit of flood control projects
- DoJ to begin preliminary investigation into missing cockfighting enthusiasts
- India to probe giant zoo run by son of Asia's richest person
- Police general suspended for ‘obstruction’ of evidence in case of missing sabungeros