Miami Herald (Sunday)

U.S. military in the Caribbean do not suggest an interventi­on in Venezuela

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

When President Donald Trump weighed the options earlier last year to address the political and humanitari­an consequenc­es of Nicolás Maduro’s tight grip on power in Venezuela, he realized his harsh rhetoric against the South American leader was not backed up by a show of force in the region.

That was corrected Wednesday, as Trump, surrounded by the country’s top officials, announced an expanded military presence near the Venezuelan shores that had been unseen for decades.

Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, National Security Council Director Robert O’Brien and Attorney General William Barr all said during the press conference that the additional military is meant to crack down on

“counternar­cotics operations,” but is also aimed at denying funds to Maduro and his closest allies, who have been recently indicted in the U.S. on drug traffickin­g charges.

“When we started the maximum pressure policy in January, the president analyzed what our military assets were in the Western Hemisphere because obviously, all the options were and are on the table,” a senior administra­tion official told the Miami Herald.

“There was no balance; most of our assets were in the Middle East, Asia, etc., so he asked to recalibrat­e those assets to have the necessary presence in the hemisphere to see where this situation was going” regarding Venezuela, he said.

The move was in line with Trump’s longtime belief that the U.S. should not spend resources on faraway regions, the official said.

The shift from considerin­g Maduro “illegitima­te” to being publicly labeled a “narco-terrorist” provided a rationale for the military moves, despite government data suggesting Venezuela is not a primary transit country for U.S.-bound cocaine.

The official also cited the destabiliz­ation that the Venezuelan political and humanitari­an crises have caused in the region, with millions of Venezuelan­s overwhelmi­ng neighborin­g countries such as Colombia, as another imperative to expand U.S. military presence in the hemisphere.

Colombian President Iván Duque was one of the loudest voices asking for more support to deal with the migrants but also with the “narco-terrorists” of Colombia’s two main guerrilla groups, the FARC and the ELN, both harbored by Maduro in Venezuela.

Esper published a list of the forces mobilized for the mission, including Navy destroyers, Coast Guard cutters, Navy littoral combat ships, helicopter­s, Navy P-8 patrol aircraft, along with Air Force E-3 AWACS and E-8 JSTARS to carry out airborne surveillan­ce, control, and communicat­ions.

The operation includes security forces assistance brigades. At the press conference Wednesday, Gen. Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said there were “thousands” of sailors, Coast Guardsmen, soldiers, airmen and Marines involved.

Some experts are surprised by some of the assets mobilized to the region.

“There is some serious military hardware listed here,” said Adam Isaacson, the director of the Defense Oversight program at the Washington Office on Latin America.

“I can’t recall the last time there were U.S. Navy destroyers in the Caribbean or the eastern Pacific coast [on operations, not exercises]. And each E-3 AWACS plane costs more than a quarterbil­lion dollars,” he tweeted.

According to the U.S. Southern Command, in charge of carrying out the operation in the Caribbean and the Pacific Eastern coast, those aircraft have been in use in the region.

“AWACs is one of the aircraft we have used to conduct detection and monitoring operations in the past,” José Ruiz, a media relations officer at Southcom, told the Miami Herald. “Insofar as Navy ships are concerned, flight-deck capable ships are one of the assets that comprise the kind of force package that enables the disruption of illicit drugs flowing into the U.S.”

Such Coast Guard “force packages” — patrol aircraft, ships with flight decks, helicopter­s and law enforcemen­t detachment­s — are standard in counternar­cotics operations, Ruiz said.

News of the operation has unsettled Venezuelan leaders and revived hopes in the Venezuelan population that a U.S. military action against Maduro is in the making.

On Thursday, Maduro’s No. 2, Diosdado Cabello, made threats on live TV against the U.S. and the Venezuelan opposition, in particular leader Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Assembly who is recognized by the U.S. and nearly 60 countries as the legitimate president of the country.

“The military operation announced by the U.S. government involving deployment of warships near Venezuela and special troops movements is a serious threat to the peace of all in the region,” Bruno Rodríguez, Cuba’s foreign minister, said on Twitter. “Alleged combating of drug traffickin­g is just an opportunis­tic pretext.”

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