About our US/Venezuela relations news
Latest news on US-Venezuela relations, covering military tensions, Maduro regime, Trump administration, drug cartels, Caribbean strikes, and diplomatic crisis.
Relations between the United States and Venezuela have reached their most critical juncture in decades, as the Trump administration maintains an unprecedented military presence in the Caribbean. With over 10,000 personnel deployed, including the USS Gerald R Ford aircraft carrier strike group, Washington has positioned formidable firepower off Venezuela's coast whilst accusing President Nicolás Maduro of leading the Cartel of the Suns, a drug-trafficking organisation allegedly embedded within the Venezuelan military.
Since September 2025, US forces have conducted at least 14 strikes on vessels in Caribbean waters, killing more than 60 people whom Washington labels as narco-terrorists affiliated with groups including Tren de Aragua. The administration doubled the reward for Maduro's capture to $50 million, the largest such bounty ever offered. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have indicated that land strikes within Venezuelan territory could be imminent, marking a potential major escalation. However, legal experts and lawmakers from both parties have questioned the strikes' legality, with UN officials warning of mounting risks to regional peace.
Venezuela has responded by declaring a state of emergency and mobilising its National Bolivarian Militia, with Maduro claiming 4.5 million members stand ready to defend the nation. The Venezuelan leader has called the US actions "fabricated aggression" and denies all drug-trafficking allegations, noting that Venezuela does not produce cocaine. Meanwhile, opposition leader María Corina Machado, recently awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, has expressed support for increased US pressure, viewing it as the final opportunity to facilitate a peaceful transition of power.
The current crisis stems from long-standing tensions that intensified after Venezuela's disputed July 2024 presidential election, which international observers widely believe Maduro stole. The Trump administration designated Tren de Aragua and the Cartel of the Suns as terrorist organisations, creating legal justification for military action. This builds upon decades of deteriorating relations, including US recognition of opposition leader Juan Guaidó as interim president during Trump's first term, economic sanctions that have devastated Venezuela's economy, and the exodus of millions of Venezuelan refugees.
For comprehensive, constantly updated coverage of US-Venezuela developments, including military movements, diplomatic negotiations, humanitarian concerns, and regional implications, the NewsNow feed provides reliable information from multiple authoritative sources. Whether you're tracking potential military escalation, monitoring the evolving political landscape, or understanding the complex drug-trafficking allegations at the heart of this crisis, this feed delivers essential news as events unfold in this critical situation affecting millions across Latin America and the Caribbean.