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    Home»USA News

    Venezuela’s president pleads for peace after Trump sends in CIA

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    By News Team on October 16, 2025 USA News
    Venezuela’s president pleads for peace after Trump sends in CIA
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    TL;DR – The situation raises legal and geopolitical concerns

    • President Maduro of Venezuela accuses the US of attempting a coup following Donald Trump‘s approval of CIA operations to combat alleged drug trafficking from Venezuela.
    • Trump confirmed the targeting of drug boats, resulting in recent military strikes and the deaths of multiple individuals, claiming it is part of a strategy to counter narcotics.
    • The situation raises legal and geopolitical concerns, with critics arguing that this militarised approach risks violating international law and escalating tensions with Venezuela.

    Venezuela’s president pleads for peace after Trump sends in CIA | World News

    Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro has accused the US of a coup attempt after Donald Trump approved CIA operations in the country to tackle alleged drug trafficking.

    Mr Trump confirmed his decision, first revealed by The New York Times, as he said large amounts of drugs were entering the US from Venezuela – much of it trafficked by sea.

    “We are looking at land now, because we’ve got the sea very well under control,” he said.

    When asked why the coastguard wasn’t asked to intercept suspected drug trafficking boats, which has been a longstanding US practice, Mr Trump said the approach had been ineffective.

    “I think Venezuela is feeling heat,” he said.

    Maduro hits back

    He declined to answer whether the CIA has the authority to execute Mr Maduro, who denies accusations from Washington that he has connections to drug trafficking and organised crime.

    The US has offered a $50m (£37m) reward for information leading to his arrest.

    “How long will the CIA continue to carry on with its coups?” he asked after Mr Trump’s comments on Wednesday evening, saying calls for regime change harkened back to “failed eternal wars” in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    In a message to the American people, he said in English: “Not war, yes peace. The people of the US, please.”

    US targets ‘drug boats’

    Mr Trump also alleged Venezuela had sent a significant number of prisoners, including individuals from mental health facilities, into the US, though he did not specify the border through which they reportedly entered.

    On Tuesday, he announced America had targeted a small boat suspected of drug trafficking in waters off the Venezuelan coast, resulting in the deaths of six people.

    According to the president’s post on social media, all those killed were aboard the vessel.

    Footage of the strike was released by Donald Trump on social media

    The incident marked the fifth such fatal strike in the Caribbean, as the Trump administration continues to classify suspected drug traffickers as unlawful combatants to be confronted with military force.

    War secretary Pete Hegseth authorised the strike, according to Mr Trump, who released a video of the operation.

    The black-and-white footage showed a small boat seemingly stationary on the water. It is struck by a projectile from above and explodes, then drifts while burning for several seconds.

    Mr Trump said the “lethal kinetic strike” was in international waters and targeted a boat travelling along a well-known smuggling route.

    There has also been a significant increase in US military presence in the southern Caribbean, with at least eight warships, a submarine, and F-35 jets stationed in Puerto Rico.

    ‘Bomb the boats’: Bold move or dangerous overreach?

    It’s a dramatic – and risky – escalation of US strategy for countering narcotics.

    Having carried out strikes on Venezuelan “drug boats” at sea, Trump says he’s “looking a” targeting cartels on land.

    He claims the attacks, which have claimed 27 lives, have saved up to 50,000 Americans.

    By framing bombings as a blow against “narcoterrorists”, he’s attempting to justify them as self-defence – but the administration has veered into murky territory.

    Under international law, such strikes require proof of imminent threat – something the White House has yet to substantiate.

    Strategically, Trump’ss militarised approach could backfire, forcing traffickers to adapt, and inflaming tensions with Venezuela and allies wary of US intervention.

    Without transparent evidence or congressional oversight, some will view the move less like counterterrorism and more like vigilantism on the seas.

    The president’s “bomb the boats” rhetoric signals a shift back to shock and awe tactics in foreign policy, under the banner of fighting drugs.

    Supporters will hail it as a bold, decisive move, but to critics it’s reckless posturing that undermines international law.

    The strikes send a message of strength, but the legal, moral and geopolitical costs are still being calculated.

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