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Jamaicans are lining up for food, water and cash days after Hurricane Melissa slammed the Caribbean island. Meanwhile, some American tourists are still trying to make their way home.
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Jamaicans are lining up for food, water and cash days after Hurricane Melissa slammed the Caribbean island. Meanwhile, some American tourists are still trying to make their way home.
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VIDEOS: Hurricane Melissa, a monster Atlantic storm, makes landfall in Jamaica with record strength
Updated: 1:57 AM EDT Oct 29, 2025
Hurricane Melissa made landfall in Jamaica on Tuesday as a monstrous Category 5 hurricane, bringing fierce 185 mph winds, heavy rain and flooding, life-threatening storm surge, and power outages.Hurricane Melissa is one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes on record and is the most intense storm to hit Jamaica since records began being kept 174 years ago.As of early Wednesday morning, the hurricane was bearing down on Cuba, and videos of the storm’s intensity and the damage it had caused in Jamaica have been emerging. Here is a look at some of that footage. Police station turned into a shelter in a hard-hit area of JamaicaCNN reports that a police station in Jamaica’s southwestern city of Black River has been turned into a temporary shelter amid reports of extensive damage. Video from Jamaica Constabulary Force shows some of the damage. See the video in the player above.“The Black River Police Station has become a refuge for residents whose houses have been flooded,” Jamaica’s Constabulary Force posted on X Tuesday. “We are sticking close to the community as we weather Hurricane Melissa together,” the force added.In the player below: Video released by the Jamaica Constabulary Force shows police in Black River surveying damageStrong nighttime winds in JamaicaKingston, Jamaica, was experiencing difficult weather conditions into the night on Tuesday amid Hurricane Melissa.Heavy rain in Kingston Downtown Kingston, Jamaica, saw heavy rain after Hurricane Melissa made landfall.Flooding in St. Thomas, JamaicaSt. Thomas, Jamaica, saw heavy flooding, and TVJ in Jamaica and CNN were reporting that residents were being urged to remain cautious as rising waters continued to pose a flooding risk in the area.Strong winds hit St. JamesSt. James, Jamaica, saw heavy winds ahead of the landfall of Hurricane Melissa____CNN contributed to this report
Hurricane Melissa made landfall in Jamaica on Tuesday as a monstrous Category 5 hurricane, bringing fierce 185 mph winds, heavy rain and flooding, life-threatening storm surge, and power outages.
Hurricane Melissa is one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes on record and is the most intense storm to hit Jamaica since records began being kept 174 years ago.
As of early Wednesday morning, the hurricane was bearing down on Cuba, and videos of the storm’s intensity and the damage it had caused in Jamaica have been emerging. Here is a look at some of that footage.
CNN reports that a police station in Jamaica’s southwestern city of Black River has been turned into a temporary shelter amid reports of extensive damage. Video from Jamaica Constabulary Force shows some of the damage. See the video in the player above.
“The Black River Police Station has become a refuge for residents whose houses have been flooded,” Jamaica’s Constabulary Force posted on X Tuesday. “We are sticking close to the community as we weather Hurricane Melissa together,” the force added.
In the player below: Video released by the Jamaica Constabulary Force shows police in Black River surveying damage
Kingston, Jamaica, was experiencing difficult weather conditions into the night on Tuesday amid Hurricane Melissa.
Downtown Kingston, Jamaica, saw heavy rain after Hurricane Melissa made landfall.
St. Thomas, Jamaica, saw heavy flooding, and TVJ in Jamaica and CNN were reporting that residents were being urged to remain cautious as rising waters continued to pose a flooding risk in the area.
St. James, Jamaica, saw heavy winds ahead of the landfall of Hurricane Melissa
____
CNN contributed to this report
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A U.S. warship docked in Trinidad and Tobago‘s capital on Sunday as the Trump administration boosts its military pressure on neighboring Venezuela and President Nicolás Maduro.
The arrival of the USS Gravely, a guided missile destroyer, in the capital of the Caribbean nation joins the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford, which is moving closer to Venezuela. Maduro criticized the movement of the carrier as an attempt by the U.S government to fabricate “a new eternal war” against his country.
President Trump has accused Maduro, without providing evidence, of being the leader of the organized crime gang Tren de Aragua.
Government officials from the twin-island nation and the U.S. said the massive warship will remain in Trinidad until Thursday so both countries can carry out training exercises.
Robert Taylor / AP
A senior military official in Trinidad and Tobago told The Associated Press that the move was only recently scheduled. The official spoke under the condition of anonymity due to a lack of authorization to discuss the matter publicly.
Kamla Persad-Bissessar, the prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago, has been a vocal supporter of the U.S. military presence and the deadly strikes on suspected drug boats in waters off Venezuela. The Trump administration has said the U.S. is in a “non-international armed conflict” with drug cartels, arguing that the narcotics they smuggle kill tens of thousands of Americans every year, constituting an “armed attack.”
The wife of Alejandro Carranza, one of the more than 30 people killed in the strikes, claimed he left home on Colombia’s Caribbean coast to fish in open waters and denied he had any link to drug trafficking.
In an interview aired Sunday on CBS News’ “Face the Nation,” Sen. Lindsey Graham said land strikes in Venezuela are a “real possibility” amid rising tensions.
“I think President Trump’s made a decision that Maduro, the leader of Venezuela, is an indicted drug trafficker, that it’s time for him to go. That Venezuela and Colombia have been safe havens for narco terrorists for too long,” the Republican senator told Margaret Brennan. “And President Trump told me yesterday that he plans to brief members of Congress when he gets back from Asia about future potential military operations against Venezuela and Colombia.”
U.S. Embassy Chargé d’Affaires Jenifer Neidhart de Ortiz said in a statement that the exercises seek to “address shared threats like transnational crime and build resilience through training, humanitarian missions, and security efforts.”
The visit comes one week after the U.S. Embassy in Trinidad and Tobago warned Americans to stay away from U.S. government facilities there. Local authorities said a reported threat against Americans prompted the warning.
People in Trinidad and Tobago have criticize the warship’s docking in town at a recent demonstration outside the U.S. Embassy. David Abdulah, the leader of the Movement for Social Justice political party, said Trinidad and Tobago should not have allowed the warship into its waters.
“This is a warship in Trinidad, which will be anchored here for several days just miles off Venezuela when there’s a threat of war,” said Abdulah, who is also the leader of the Movement for Social Justice political party. “That’s an abomination.”
Caricom, a regional trade bloc made up of 15 Caribbean countries, has called for dialogue. Trinidad and Tobago is a member of the group, but Persad-Bissessar has said the region is not a zone of peace, citing the number of murders and other violent crimes.
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If safety is at the top of your vacation checklist, one tiny Caribbean island just earned top honors for peace, calm beaches — and a world-class food scene.
Anguilla, a British Overseas Territory just north of St. Maarten and east of the Virgin Islands, was named the safest destination in the Caribbean, according to a 2025 ranking from World Population Review, which evaluates crime, policing and political stability based on data from the Global Peace Index.
“Anguilla crime rates are the lowest in the Caribbean, with very few violent or petty crimes to mar its reputation as a tropical oasis,” the report found. “Tourists can feel safe and at ease in tranquil Anguilla.”
URGENT ADVISORY FOR EXOTIC DESTINATION WARNS OF ‘CRIMINAL GANGS’ AND ‘VIOLENT CRIME’
While the review noted that drug-related offenses are “moderate,” it added that such crimes rarely affect visitors.
Anguilla, a British territory in the eastern Caribbean, was named the region’s safest destination in new global rankings. (iStock)
The U.S. Department of State also lists Anguilla at a Level 1 travel advisory — the lowest possible risk level — advising tourists to simply exercise normal precautions.
“Here, peace isn’t found, it’s felt,” the Anguilla Tourist Board wrote on social media after the report was released. “From 33 beaches to the warmth of our community, safety is simply part of island life on Anguilla.”
AMERICA’S WEALTHY ARE QUIETLY BUYING THEIR WAY OUT WITH ‘GOLDEN’ VISAS
Following Anguilla in the World Population Review’s safety ranking were Barbados, St. Barts, Martinique, the Cayman Islands and Aruba.
John Rose, chief risk adviser for ALTOUR, a global travel management company, said Anguilla’s ranking stems from several distinct advantages. “Its isolation and limited access points also reduce cross-border criminal activity, and tourism is managed in a more controlled, boutique environment,” Rose told Fox News Digital.
The designation is a meaningful recognition not only for traveler confidence but also from a tourism economics perspective, he added.
AMERICANS IN ONE VACATION HOT SPOT MAY SEE MORE MILITARY THAN MARGARITAS
It’s also not the first time Anguilla has earned international praise for its appeal.

Crystal-clear water and powdery beaches make Anguilla a vacation favorite. (Slim Aarons/Hulton Archive)
Anguilla was also recognized by Travel + Leisure’s 2025 World’s Best Awards as one of the top islands globally — and the highest-ranked in the Caribbean — earning praise for its friendly hospitality, diverse cuisine and luxury resorts.
Experts and travel blogs often highlight Anguilla as a remote, exclusive escape free of shopping malls, cruise ships and high-rises where travelers can soak up crystal-clear waters, white sand beaches and fresh seafood feasts.
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According to Encyclopedia Britannica, the island “is noted for its easy-going atmosphere and magnificent beaches and waters.”
Erin Schroeder, an Atlanta-based travel adviser and founder of Major Traveler, told Fox News Digital she agrees that Anguilla stands out as one of the best destinations in the Caribbean.

Anguilla is beloved for its white-sand beaches and turquoise waters. (iStock)
“The island of Anguilla being named the safest country in the Caribbean is an incredible win,” Schroeder told Fox News Digital. “Safety in the Caribbean is a top-three deciding factor when travelers are weighing various islands.”
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In addition to safety, travelers also seek destinations that offer easy transportation and walkability — both of which Anguilla has, she added.
“I personally love the ability to walk along the beach at night to local restaurants, or exercise on the island’s flat roads, knowing that it’s safe to do so,” Schroeder said.
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She noted that Anguilla’s exclusive, off-the-beaten-path appeal also makes it a little harder to reach, with only one direct flight option from the United States. “There’s a high price of entry, as travelers have to fly to St. Maarten and take a boat, which costs about $115 per person each way for a shared ferry,” she said.

Peaceful shores and welcoming locals have helped Anguilla earn the title of the Caribbean’s safest destination. (iStock)
Rose offered additional travel tips — take a “layered” approach to safety by reviewing local advisories, checking with hosts or advisers for up-to-date information, and practicing common-sense precautions such as limiting displays of wealth and using registered transportation.
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“Safety is dynamic, not static,” he said. “The best travelers prepare by gathering accurate information before they go, monitoring while they’re there and staying ready to respond if something changes. That’s how you travel smart, not scared.”
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The U.S. struck another alleged drug vessel Tuesday night, this time on the Pacific side of South America, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth confirmed Wednesday.
In what is the eighth known U.S. attack on a boat since Sept. 2, two individuals aboard the vessel were killed, Hegseth said. The other seven strikes targeted vessels in the Caribbean.
Hegseth wrote on social media that the Defense Department conducted the strike at President Trump’s direction and alleged the vessel was operated by a “designated terrorist organization and conducting narco-trafficking in the Eastern Pacific.”
He continued: “The vessel was known by our intelligence to be involved in illicit narcotics smuggling, was transiting along a known narco-trafficking transit route, and carrying narcotics. There were two narco-terrorists aboard the vessel during the strike, which was conducted in international waters.”
Hegseth said no U.S. forces were harmed in the strike. He also shared a video of the strike, in which viewers see a vessel moving through the water, and then hit and engulfed in flames.
Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona said Sunday on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” “We want to keep fentanyl out of the United States, … but those routes through the Caribbean on boats are predominantly used to bring cocaine to Europe,” not to the U.S. And fentanyl tends to be transported to to the U.S. “from a different way,” Kelly added.
The Pentagon has not yet responded to a request for information about the nationalities of the individuals on the boat.
Kelly also told “Face the Nation” that when administration officials briefed Congress on the drug vessel strikes, they “had a very hard time explaining to us the rationale, the legal rationale for doing this and the constitutionality of doing it.” He said lawmakers were told there is “a secret list of over 20 narco organizations, drug trafficking cartels,” but U.S. officials did not share the list with Congress.
At least 34 people have been killed in U.S. strikes on alleged drug boats. The Trump administration has told Congress the U.S. is in a “non-international armed conflict” with drug cartels, arguing that the narcotics they smuggle kill tens of thousands of Americans every year, and this constitutes an “armed attack.”
Two men survived a U.S. strike on a suspected drug-trafficking submersible vessel in the Caribbean last week, and the U.S. repatriated the men, one from Ecuador and one from Colombia. Ecuador released the man, identified as Andrés Fernando Tufiño, after authorities said they had found no evidence that he had committed a crime.
The Colombian citizen remains hospitalized after his repatriation. Interior Minister Armando Benedetti said he “arrived with brain trauma, sedated, drugged, breathing with a ventilator.” Authorities there said he would face prosecution. Two other men were killed in the strike on the submersible vessel.
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The U.S. Embassy in Trinidad and Tobago is cautioning Americans to stay away from American government facilities in the twin-island nation amid the growing tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela.
The alert is based on threats directed at American citizens in the Caribbean nation, with U.S. authorities saying “it could be linked” to ongoing tensions in the region, Trinidad and Tobago’s minister of homeland security, Roger Alexander, told The Associated Press.
Venezuela is located just miles away from Trinidad, where people in one community are mourning the disappearance of two local fishermen believed killed in a U.S. strike on Tuesday.
Tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela are at an all-time high over deadly U.S. strikes in Caribbean waters targeting suspected drug traffickers.
There have been six known boat attacks in the area since last month. The most recent, on Thursday, targeted a submarine carrying mostly fentanyl and other illegal narcotics, President Trump said on Saturday.
“Under my watch, the United States of America will not tolerate narcoterrorists trafficking illegal drugs, by land or by sea,” Mr. Trump said in a Truth Social post.
He said two survivors – from Ecuador and Colombia – will be repatriated for “detention and prosecution.”
At least 19 people have been killed in the six strikes.
Authorities in Trinidad and Tobago have responded to the threats by implementing security measures to deal with any situations that may arise, Alexander said.
However, local authorities declined to share specific details about the reported threats.
The tense situation in the region was mentioned by U.S. officials in a briefing with authorities in Trinidad and Tobago, Alexander said.
The Trump administration has said it considers alleged drug traffickers as unlawful combatants who must be met with military force.
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A U.S. military drone strike in the Caribbean against a drug smuggling vessel Thursday left two to three survivors, a U.S. official tells Fox News.
The U.S. military launched search and rescue assets, including a rescue helicopter, but it is not clear if any of the survivors were rescued, the official said. The extent of their injuries was not immediately known, the official added.
TRUMP’S WAR ON CARTELS ENTERS NEW PHASE AS EXPERTS PREDICT WHAT’S NEXT
President Donald Trump has targeted Venezuelan drug boats with military strikes. (@realDonaldTrump via Truth Social/AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
As Reuters first reported, Thursday’s incident marks the first known instance of survivors since U.S. forces began its campaign of lethal strikes against suspected drug boats.
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It is not clear how many crewmembers were on board.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
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Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth on Friday announced the creation of a new “counter-narcotics Joint Task Force” which has been ordered to “crush the cartels” believed to be smuggling drugs into the United States that are operating out of Latin America and the Caribbean.
Newsweek contacted the Department of Defense for comment on Saturday via email outside of regular office hours.
The Donald Trump administration has vowed to crackdown on drug smuggling into the U.S. Drug overdoses were responsible for 105,000 deaths across the country in 2023, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The creation of a new task force indicates the administration could step up military operations against cartels following a series of airstrikes on alleged drug-smuggling boats off the coast of Venezuela that have killed at least 21 people.
On Friday, Secretary Hegseth wrote on X that “at the President’s direction” the Pentagon had launched a new “counter-narcotics Joint Task Force in the U.S. Southern Command area of responsibility to crush the cartels, stop the poison and keep America safe.” The U.S. Southern Command covers the Caribbean, Central America and South America.
According to a press release published by the U.S. Southern Command, the new task force combines personnel from the II Marine Expeditionary Force (II MEF) “with Joint Force and U.S. interagency partners, represented by the Homeland Security Task Force.”
Lt. Gen. Calvert Worth, commanding general of II MEF, has been appointed as the new Joint Task Force’s commander
The U.S. Southern Command press release said the new Joint Task Force would have a number of responsibilities including “identifying narcotics trafficking patterns to interdict illegal shipments of narcotics before they reach the U.S.,” intelligence fusion between the U.S. military and federal law enforcement and “enhancing partner-nation counter narcotics operations.”
In recent weeks, the U.S. military has redeployed significant resources to the Caribbean sparking speculation strikes could be launched against suspected cartel targets in Venezuela, though the Venezuelan government has accused Washington on intimidation and “military harassment.”
Trump has labeled a number of drug-trafficking groups as terrorist organizations and informed Congress the U.S. is in a state of “noninternational armed conflict” against them. According to the Washington D.C.-based Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank over 10 percent of deployed U.S. naval assets are now operating under the U.S. Southern Command in the Caribbean, the highest level since the Cold War.
What People Are Saying
Hegseth wrote on X : “At the President’s direction, the Department of War is establishing a new counter-narcotics Joint Task Force in the @SOUTHCOM area of responsibility to crush the cartels, stop the poison, and keep America safe. The message is clear: if you traffic drugs toward our shores, we will stop you cold.”
Adm. Alvin Holsey, commander of the U.S. Southern Command, said: “Transnational criminal organizations threaten the security, prosperity, and health of our hemisphere.
“By forming a JTF [Joint Task Force] around II MEF headquarters, we enhance our ability to detect, disrupt, and dismantle illicit trafficking networks faster and at greater depth—together with our U.S. and partner-nation counterparts.”
Lt. Gen. Worth commented: “This is principally a maritime effort, and our team will leverage maritime patrols, aerial surveillance, precision interdictions, and intelligence sharing to counter illicit traffic, uphold the rule of law, and ultimately better protect vulnerable communities here at home.”
What Happens Next
It remains to be seen whether the creation of a new counter-narcotics Joint Task Force, and the U.S. military buildup, will lead to an intensification of the Trump administration’s anti-cartel campaign amid speculation airstrikes could be extended to the Venezuelan mainland.
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Chances are, you’ve never heard of Miches in the Dominican Republic; most head straight to Punta Cana. But on the country’s northeastern coast, just south of Samaná Bay, lies Playa Esmeralda, a turquoise ocean like the Caribbean before mass tourism. Until recently, Miches was little more than a fishing village sustained by cacao, coconut, and livestock farming. Now, this secluded stretch has the debut of two new all-inclusive resorts: the family-friendly Dreams Playa Esmeralda and the adults-only Secrets Playa Esmeralda.
The Public Square, a lively hub of shops, dining, and entertainment, connects the two properties. Adult guests have access to both resorts, featuring over 20 dining venues, multiple pools, a water park, and bars. Secrets Playa Esmeralda is also the only adults-only resort in the area.
Junior Suite King- RENDER
The highest level of stay is at the Preferred Club, which includes a private lobby, exclusive pool and lounge, upgraded suites, and butler-level service. I stayed in the Preferred Club Master Suite Ocean Front at Secrets, a 1,184-square-foot space featuring a king-size bed, a separate living area with a sofa bed, and a kitchenette.
Preferred Club Master Suite Ocean Front Bedroom
After a red-eye flight and a tight connection, I arrived at the resort exhausted and starving. Instead of heading to one of the restaurants, I was able to unwind in my suite thanks to an extravagant welcome amenity: a generous charcuterie board, a lavish chocolate spread with white- and milk-chocolate–dipped strawberries, and a chilled bottle of champagne. The all-inclusive rate also meant my refrigerator was restocked daily with sodas, juices, and light snacks.
Preferred Club Master Suite Ocean Front Living Room
With so many dining options, you won’t likely get to them all, but make sure to check out these standouts:
Casava with avocado mousse
Named after the Virgin of Altagracia, the patron saint of the Dominican Republic, the design aesthetic at Doña Altagracia showcases the Caribbean warmth. At the same time, the menu celebrates the country’s distinctive specialties. Try the cassava and avocado mousse served atop cassabe (crisp flatbread made from yuca), recognized by UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage and a legacy of the indigenous Taíno people. The braised goat risotto, cooked slowly with Dominican oregano and wine, is another highlight.
Market Café buffet lunch seafood spread
Other standouts included:
Meraki: Secrets’ Mediterranean-Asian fusion restaurant.
Bluewater: Dreams’ poolside grill with salads, meat, and vegetarian options.
Capers: a classic Italian trattoria at Dreams.
Coco Café & Dolce: espresso, cappuccinos, and Dominican ice cream flavors like dulce de leche, best enjoyed as an affogato.
Himitsu: Dreams’ asian à la carte restaurant with Teppanyaki grills.
Piano Bar: At night, many gather at the Piano Bar for live jazz, piano, and expert cocktails, including a Dominican twist on a Negroni made with Mamajuana, the local elixir of rum, wine, honey, and herbs.
Secrets Spa RENDER
Resort activities go far beyond the pool. At the Secrets Entertainment Center, sign up to paint a faceless doll (a traditional Dominican craft). I created jewelry from larimar, the rare blue stone found only in the Dominican Republic. Guests were invited to choose a larimar cut and a selection of accompanying beads to make necklaces or bracelets. I opted to make an anklet. The Secrets Spa offered Natura Bissé treatments, a hydrotherapy pool, cold plunge, sauna, steam room, salon, and massages. I also took a scrub-making class, where we created our own custom body scrubs to use immediately in the shower before our massages.
Aerial Infinity Pool and Beach View
At the beach, snorkeling with schools of bright fish and small octopuses. Further offshore, you might encounter sea turtles and manatees. Playa Esmeralda serves as a protected turtle nesting sanctuary, and during nesting season, guests can participate in the release of turtles. Unlike many Caribbean beaches, this coastline is nearly free of the sargassum blooms plaguing other beachy destinations.
Sunsets here sometimes create what’s called the Divided Sky, when the mountains partially block the horizon, splitting it into glowing light on one side and shadow on the other.
Families love the Dreams Water Park, where the tallest tower offers panoramic views of Playa Esmeralda and Montaña Redonda behind it.
Montaña Redonda views
We joined an excursion with El Cedro Eco Tours, exploring the region’s agricultural roots, which included a stop at a coconut plantation with fresh coconut juice tastings.
Cacao tour
Along the Cacao Route, we learned every step of chocolate-making, from planting and fermentation to tasting the finished treats. Finally, we visited Montaña Redonda, where 360° views of Miches and Samaná Bay offered plenty of Instagram-worthy moments with specially built swings and photographers on-site. Nearby attractions include Los Haitises National Park and whale-watching season in Samaná Bay.
Luxury development has arrived in the once-sleepy town of Miches, yet it remains an incredibly special place: a Caribbean beauty minus the crowds, an increasingly rare find. Visit now, before the secrets out.
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WASHINGTON — The F-35 is the most advanced fighter jet on the planet, capable of waging electronic warfare, of dropping nuclear weapons, of evading the surveillance and missile defenses of America’s most fearsome enemies at supersonic speeds.
Ten of them are being deployed by a newly branded War Department to Puerto Rico to combat drug traffickers in dinghies.
It is the latest example of the Trump administration using disproportionate military force to supplement, or substitute for, traditional law enforcement operations — first at home on the streets of U.S. cities and now overseas, where the president has labeled multiple drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations and has vowed a “tough” response.
On Tuesday, that response began with an inaugural “kinetic strike” targeting a small vessel in the Caribbean allegedly carrying narcotics and 11 members of Tren de Aragua, one of the Venezuelan gangs President Trump has designated a terrorist group. Legally designating a gang or cartel as a terrorist entity ostensibly gives the president greater legal cover to conduct lethal strikes on targets.
The operation follows Trump’s deployment of U.S. forces to Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., for operations with dubious justifications, as well as threats of similar actions in San Francisco, Chicago and New Orleans, moves that a federal judge said last week amount to Trump “creating a national police force with the President as its chief.”
Trump has referred to both problems — urban crime and drug trafficking — as interlinked and out of control. But U.S. service members have no training in local law or drug enforcement. And experts question a strategy that has been tried before, both by the United States and regional governments, of launching a war against drugs only to drive leaders in the trade to militarize themselves.
U.S. drug policy “has always been semi-militarized,” said Jeremy Adelman, director of the Global History Lab at Princeton University. Trump’s latest actions simply make more explicit the erasure of a line “that separates law enforcement from warfare.”
“One side effect of all this is that other countries are watching,” Adelman said. “By turning law enforcement over to the military — as the White House is also doing domestically — what’s to stop other countries from doing the same in international waters?
“Fishermen in the South China Sea should be worried,” he added.
The Trump administration has not provided further details on the 11 people killed in the boat strike. But officials said the departure of a drug vessel from Venezuela makes Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s dictatorial president labeled by the White House as a top drug kingpin, indirectly responsible.
“Let there be no doubt, Nicolás Maduro is an indicted drug trafficker in the United States, and he’s a fugitive of American justice,” Marco Rubio, Trump’s secretary of State and national security advisor, said on a tour of the region Thursday, citing a grand jury indictment in the Southern District of New York.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks during a news conference Wednesday in Mexico City.
(Hector Vivas / Getty Images)
The president’s war on drug cartels will continue, Rubio said, adding that regional governments “will help us find these people and blow them up.”
Maduro has warned the strike indicates that Washington seeks regime change in Caracas. The Venezuelan military flew two aircraft near a U.S. vessel in international waters Thursday night, prompting an angry response from Pentagon officials and Trump to direct his Defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, to “do what you want to do” in response.
“Despite how dangerous this performance could be, because of its political consequences, it can’t be taken seriously as a drug policy,” said Lina Britto, an expert on Latin America and the Caribbean at Northwestern University with a focus on the history of the drug trade. “It lacks rigorousness in the analysis of how drug trafficking operates in the hemisphere.”
Most drugs entering the U.S. homeland from South America arrive in shipping containers, submarines and more efficient modes of transportation than speedboats — and primarily come through the Pacific, not the Caribbean, Britto said.
Trump has flirted with military strikes on drug cartels since the start of his second term, working with Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, to coordinate drone strikes over Mexican territory for surveillance of cartel activity.
But Sheinbaum has ruled out the use of force against cartels, or the deployment of U.S. forces within Mexico to combat them, warning that U.S. military action would violate Mexican sovereignty and upend collaboration between the two close-knit trade and security partners.
Girls walk in front of a politically charged mural near the Bolivar Square in the center of Caracas, Venezuela, on Aug. 25. The Iranian Forest vessel depicted in the right side of the mural arrived in Venezuela during fuel shortages in 2020.
(Andrea Hernández Briceño / For The Times)
In comparison, Venezuela offers Trump a cleaner opportunity to test the use of force against drug cartels, with diplomatic ties between the two governments at a nadir. But a war with Maduro over drugs could create unexpected problems for the Trump administration, setting off a rare military conflict in a placid region and fueling further instability in a country that, over the last decade, already set off the world’s largest refugee crisis.
Ryan Berg, director of the Americas Program and head of the Future of Venezuela Initiative at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said that Trump’s use of foreign terrorist designations changes the rules of engagement in ways that allow for action “where law enforcement solutions failed in the past.”
“What we are witnessing is a paradigm shift in real time,” Berg said. “Many of Latin America’s most significant criminal organizations are now designated foreign terrorist organizations. The administration is demonstrating that this is not only rhetorical.”
But Paul Gootenberg, a professor at Stony Brook University and author of “Andean Cocaine: The Making of a Global Drug,” characterized Trump’s military operation as a “simplistic” approach to complex social problems.
“This is more a performative attack on the Venezuelan regime than a serious attempt at drug policy,” Gootenberg said.
“Militarized drug policy is nothing new — it was tried and intensified in various ways from the mid-1980s through 2000s, oftentimes under U.S. Southern Command,” he added. “The whole range and levels of ‘war on drugs’ was a long, unmitigated policy failure, according to the vast, vast majority of drug experts.”
Times staff writer Ana Ceballos contributed to this report.
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(CNN) — The deployment of US warships in the Caribbean to counter drug-trafficking could simply divert the problem to the Pacific, experts in the region warn.
While much attention has focused on the political tension between the United States and Venezuela – even more so after a strike on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat on Tuesday – security specialists warn that the focus on Caribbean trafficking routes by American ships could have serious, unintended consequences for countries struggling to prevent drug flows on the Pacific corridor – such as Ecuador, Peru and Colombia.
“What’s going to happen is that, by blocking this Caribbean corridor, drug traffickers will avoid continuing to transport drugs through that route, because it’s more dangerous, and they’ll incur greater losses. They’ll redirect the flow of drugs,” former Ecuadorian Army Intelligence chief Mario Pazmiño told CNN.
Ecuador is one of the most violent countries in Latin America due to transnational organized crime and has the third-highest drug seizures after the United States and Colombia, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.
Various drug trafficking routes operate from the South American country to Central America, the United States and Europe, where a series of Ecuadorian, Colombian, Mexican and European criminal networks converge.
Pazmiño thinks these routes will get only more popular with traffickers as the Caribbean routes are squeezed off.
“This flow of drugs will no longer leave through Colombia or Venezuela. They will try to use Ecuadorian ports, which are one of our country’s greatest weaknesses and through which drugs are constantly leaving,” he warned.
Indeed, Pazmiño believes this effect is already in play.
On August 25, Ecuador’s Guayaquil Port Authority declared a state of emergency due to rising insecurity and constant extortion threats, which it claims are putting the integrity of the port infrastructure and personnel at risk.
“The facilities of the Guayaquil Port Authority, as well as the personnel working there, are in imminent danger, given that threats have been made to kidnap the crew and pilots and attack vessels,” it said.
Pazmiño believes the situation is closely linked to the military tension in Caribbean waters, and shows the ability of transnational crime to divert its trafficking routes.
The Ecuadorian Navy recently reported that it has intensified its patrols and military operations against drug traffickers.
On August 24, authorities seized 10 tons of drugs with the help of the US Coast Guard, which is providing support under military agreements signed in 2023.
Daniel Pontón, an expert in criminal policy and crime control at Ecuador’s Institute of Advanced National Studies, said that controlling the Pacific corridor was becoming a much more complex task.
“Drug traffickers know how to take advantage of any moment or vulnerability. Ecuador and other countries in the region need capabilities and cooperation. Joint action is required because the Navy’s capacity is limited,” Pontón added.
Meanwhile, Michelle Maffei, a researcher on international organized crime, conflict, and violence, warned that militarizing the fight against criminal gangs could have the opposite effect to what is intended.
“What this will force is another political conflict. It won’t be a strategy against organized crime. The United States is focused on the Maduro government (in Venezuela). While they’re focused on removing Maduro, the illegal and criminal economy will move more drugs, using semi-submersible vessels or contaminated containers with greater vigor, because they know their focus is on something else,” warns Maffei.
Maffei said authorities should instead focus on fighting corruption.
“We need to implement a radical reform of the judicial system in Ecuador. We have prosecutors who don’t work, judges who are bought off, and lawyers who are also bought off by organized crime groups. If this doesn’t happen in Ecuador, nothing good will come of it,” she added.
Pazmiño also had suggestions for how to combat the problem: “Strengthening the northern border with Colombia, creating a joint task force to cover the entire northern border and making it difficult and impossible for cocaine to spill into Ecuadorian territory.”
Even without increased drug flows, Ecuador is experiencing severe internal violence and recently reported record homicide numbers amid fighting between organized crime gangs. So far this year, the Ministry of the Interior has recorded 5,268 intentional homicides. In 2024, the year ended with 7,062 violent deaths. In 2023, there were 8,248.
The Daniel Noboa administration has called on the international community to support the fight against transnational crime.
But while the region’s eyes are focused on the Caribbean Sea, experts hope this will not lead to an increase in violence and mafia activity in the key areas of cocaine trafficking in the Pacific.
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Ana Maria Canizares and CNN
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