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Tag: south america

  • Pentagon Orders Aircraft Carrier to the Caribbean

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    WASHINGTON—The Pentagon said it is sending the Navy’s most advanced aircraft carrier to the Caribbean in a major escalation of the Trump administration’s military campaign to target drug smugglers and threaten governments in Latin America.

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered the USS Gerald R. Ford carrier, which is currently deployed in the Mediterranean, to the Caribbean, bringing dozens more fighter and surveillance aircraft, along with other Navy warships that accompany a carrier, officials said.

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    Shelby Holliday

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  • Argentina’s Farmers Give Milei Vote of Confidence Before Midterms

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    BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -Argentine farmers are renewing their vote of confidence in President Javier Milei ahead of Sunday’s midterm elections, a crucial sector that the government relies on to generate much-needed foreign currency.

    Support from farmers in Argentina, a leading global food exporter, will be crucial for the radical libertarian president, who hopes to substantially increase his minority representation in Congress.

    Since taking office almost two years ago, Milei has enjoyed broad support from the agriculture sector, which shares his vision of unrestricted and deregulated markets.

    Milei’s government has moved in the direction of lowering unpopular export taxes. In July, the government reduced the export tax on soybeans and corn, the country’s two main crops, by 20%. Although the taxes remain high, 26% and 9.5% respectively, Milei has promised to eliminate them completely.

    “We need to give this government a vote of confidence,” Martín Doffo, a 51-year-old farmer from the town of 25 de Mayo, in the province of Buenos Aires, told Reuters. “He wants to take the necessary path: tax reduction, lowering export taxes, and labor reform, all things we’ve been needing.”

    The main opposition force is the Peronist party led by former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who during her presidency clashed with the agriculture sector over protectionist export quotas and price controls.

    “There are many producers who don’t want Kirchnerism to return,” said Horacio Deciancio, a 70-year-old cattle rancher from San Vicente, a rural town near Buenos Aires. He said that he is betting on Milei’s “market-based economic policies, where supply and demand can open markets to the world.”

    Farmers whom Reuters spoke to also said they support labor reforms to increase the formal workforce that Milei has said he would push through the next Congress. They say that under the current system, there is too much bureaucracy involved in hiring workers.

    Half of Argentina’s lower Chamber of Deputies, or 127 seats, as well as a third of the Senate, or 24 seats, are up for election on October 26.

    The Peronist opposition movement currently holds the largest minority in both houses and has about half of its seats in the lower house up for reelection. Milei’s relatively new party, La Libertad Avanza, has only 37 deputies and six senators.

    Political experts say that if Milei’s party clinches more than 35% of the vote, that would be seen as a positive sign of growing support.

    (Report by Maximilian Heath; Writing by Leila Miller Editing by Marguerita Choy)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Has Argentina Really Changed? Soon, We Will Find Out

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    BUENOS AIRES—The adage “The most dangerous words in investing on Wall Street are ‘It’s different this time’” could have been coined to describe Argentina. For 50 years, it repeatedly convinced international lenders it had changed its ways, only to slide back into default, instability and inflation.

    This Sunday, Argentines will demonstrate whether this time really is different. Midterm elections will decide whether President Javier Milei’s radical economic reform will continue.

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  • Exclusive | U.S. Sends B-1 Bombers Near Venezuela, Ramping Up Military Pressure

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    The U.S. flew Air Force B-1 bombers near Venezuela on Thursday, stepping up pressure on President Nicolás Maduro only days after other American warplanes carried out an “attack demonstration” near the South American country.

    Two B-1 Lancers took off from Dyess Air Force Base in Texas on Thursday and flew near Venezuela, though they remained in international airspace, according to a U.S. official and flight tracking data.

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    Shelby Holliday

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  • U.S. Widens Campaign Against Alleged Drug Boats With Eastern Pacific Strikes

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    The U.S. said Wednesday it had struck two suspected drug boats on the Pacific side of South America, widening its campaign against alleged drug trafficking and transnational crime.

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted videos of the strikes on X and said one took place Tuesday in the eastern Pacific Ocean and another Wednesday. The two attacks killed five people on board the boats, he said, without providing more details about the vessels or their precise locations except to say that the strikes occurred in international waters.

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    Shelby Holliday

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  • Exclusive | The U.S. Is Trying to Drive a Wedge Between Argentina and China

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    WASHINGTON—The Trump administration is pushing officials in Argentina to limit China’s influence over the distressed South American nation at the same time the U.S. and Wall Street banks are working on a $40 billion lifeline for Buenos Aires.

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has spoken in recent weeks with Luis Caputo, Argentina’s economic minister, about curbing China’s ability to access the country’s resources, including critical minerals. In addition, they have discussed granting the U.S. expanded access to the country’s uranium supply, according to people with knowledge of the conversations.

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    Brian Schwartz

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  • U.S. Official Made Clear That Decision on Colombia Tariffs Is Trump’s-Colombia Gov’t

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    BOGOTA (Reuters) -A meeting on Monday night between Colombia President Gustavo Petro, U.S. charge d’affaires John McNamara and Colombia’s recalled ambassador to the U.S. Daniel Garcia-Pena was a first step toward healing a bilateral impasse, Colombia’s foreign ministry said early on Tuesday.

    McNamara made clear that whether the U.S. imposes higher tariffs on Colombia, as threatened by President Donald Trump over the weekend, is Trump’s exclusive decision, the ministry added in a statement.

    (Reporting by Julia Symmes Cobb)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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    Reuters

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  • Trump Turns Up Heat on Latin America

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    President Trump’s vow to intervene against drug smugglers in Colombia widened a U.S. counternarcotics campaign in Latin America that began with military strikes on oceangoing boats but is increasingly focused on threatening governments in the region.

    His broadside against Colombia came in a social-media post Sunday morning that branded its president, Gustavo Petro, an “illegal drug leader,” vowing to halt U.S. aid to Bogotá, and to take unilateral action unless Petro closed “these killing fields immediately.”

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    [ad_2] Vera Bergengruen
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  • Trump Says U.S. Is Cutting Aid to Colombia Over Drugs

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    President Trump said the U.S. would stop aid payments to Colombia, for decades a close U.S. ally, because of the country’s drug production.

    Trump, in a social-media post Sunday, escalated tensions with Colombian President Gustavo Petro, calling him “an illegal drug leader.” He said Petro was encouraging drug production and the U.S. wouldn’t give any more payments or subsidies to the country, long the U.S.’s closest ally in the war on drugs.

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    Alyssa Lukpat

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  • Trump calls Colombia’s Petro ‘a drug leader,’ says US aid will end payments

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    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    President Donald Trump on Sunday said he will halt financial aid and subsidies to Colombia, citing the South American country’s failure to curb its growing cocaine production.

    Trump called Colombian President Gustavo Petro “an illegal drug leader” and accused him of “strongly encouraging the massive production of narcotics” across the country, adding that it “has become the biggest business’ in Colombia.

    TRUMP REFUSES TO RULE OUT STRIKING VENEZUELA. WHAT’S NEXT FOR TRUMP’S WAR ON DRUGS?

    This image shows President Donald Trump and Colombian President Gustavo Petro. (Getty Images)

    “Petro does nothing to stop it,” Trump wrote on Truth Social, adding that U.S. payments and subsides aimed at helping Colombia address drug production are “nothing more than a long-term rip-off of America.”

    “AS OF TODAY, THESE PAYMENTS, OR ANY OTHER FORM OF PAYMENT, OR SUBSIDIES, WILL NO LONGER BE MADE TO COLUMBIA,” Trump added.

    Trump warned that Colombian drugs are “causing death, destruction and havoc” as his administration steps up efforts to tighten the border and fight the nation’s ongoing drug epidemic.

    TRUMP ADMIN REVOKES COLOMBIAN PRESIDENT’S VISA OVER ALLEGED ‘RECKLESS AND INCENDIARY ACTIONS’

    Colombian President Gustavo Petro

    Colombian President Gustavo Petro is one of the most vocal critics of the Trump administration’s use of deadly strikes on boats in the Caribbean. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

    Trump also warned that Petro “better close up these killing fields immediately, or the United States will close them up for him, and it won’t be done nicely.”

    The Colombian Embassy in Washington, D.C., did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment, and the White House did not respond to a separate request for further comment.

    Last month, the Trump administration revoked Petro’s U.S. visa following “reckless and incendiary actions” in New York City. 

    TRUMP RELEASES VIDEO OF DRONE STRIKE ON ‘DRUG-CARRYING’ SUB

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    Petro has also strongly criticized the Trump administration for authorizing deadly strikes on boats in the Caribbean that U.S. officials said were transporting narcotics.

    The U.S. has issued sanctions against six men for allegedly trafficking cocaine into the country using narco subs.

    U.S. and Guyanese law enforcement seized approximately 5,200 pounds of cocaine from a self-propelled narco sub operating off the coast of Guyana on March 21, 2024. (U.S. Department of Treasury)

    “Criminal proceedings must be opened against those officials who are from the U.S. even if it includes the highest-ranking official who gave the order: President Trump,” Petro said during his speech at the U.N. General Assembly.

    He added that the boat’s passengers were not members of the Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang, as the Trump administration claimed after the first attack.

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  • How Venezuela’s Maduro Became Coup-Proof After Years of Military Purges

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    For years, Venezuelans fighting to unseat President Nicolás Maduro have hoped the country’s military would do the job for them. But even with a menacing U.S. Navy buildup currently offshore, the strongman is virtually coup-proof.

    The leftist leader has purged officers accused of conspiring against him, jailing and sending them into exile. The vaunted intelligence service of close ally, Cuba, has worked to identify plots and renegades, with intelligence officers placed in every unit.

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    Juan Forero

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  • U.S. to Repatriate Survivors of Strike on Suspected Drug Vessel

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    The U.S. is transferring two alleged drug traffickers to Colombia and Ecuador for detention and prosecution after they were briefly held on a U.S. Navy warship in the Caribbean, President Trump announced on Saturday.

    The two people survived an attack on a submersible Thursday and were rescued by the U.S. military. They were taken to the USS Iwo Jima, which has been operating in the region and has a full medical staff, according to defense officials.

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    Shelby Holliday

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  • Javier Milei’s libertarian experiment is in jeopardy. Argentina’s midterm elections will determine its fate.

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    Last week, the Trump administration stepped in with a $20 billion financial rescue for Argentina that could reach $40 billion, including a currency swap and a rare direct purchase of pesos to shore up the exchange rate. The intervention briefly steadied the markets, lifting Argentine bonds.

    But for Javier Milei, Argentina’s libertarian president who preaches the gospel of free markets, the need for a U.S. bailout has been a public relations disaster, and his political movement is in crisis. For libertarians, the stakes are high. If Milei succeeds, it will show that radical free market reform is possible in the most adverse political conditions. If he fails, critics will say libertarian policies are impossible to advance in the context of real-world politics. Nearly two years into his presidency, Milei’s political movement is struggling.

    Milei has been forced to trade ideological purity for political expedience. His party controls only a small fraction of the National Congress, forcing him into uneasy alliances with centrists and leftists who can stall or reshape his reform agenda at will. At the local level, he faces entrenched political machines built on decades of clientelism, which demand concessions in exchange for loyalty and votes.

    He staffed his administration with members of the same “political caste” that during the election he had vowed to purge. His chief of cabinet, Guillermo Francos, served under a Peronist administration; former Vice President Daniel Scioli is now the secretary of tourism, environment, and sports; and Patricia Bullrich, a veteran from the old guard, heads security. The revolution against the political class, it seems, is being staffed by it.

    The fervor that swept Milei into power has cooled as his administration has collided with congressional lawmakers hostile to his agenda. He has spent much of his presidency arguing that free-market policies could make Argentina the world’s most prosperous nation within a generation. Yet accomplishing his reforms now depends on expanding his slim legislative base.

    The midterm elections for the national legislature on October 26 will largely determine the fate of his reform agenda. Voters will elect half the Chamber of Deputies, the Argentine equivalent to the U.S. House of Representatives, and a third of the Senate. Currently, Milei‘s Freedom Advances party controls only 37 of 257 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 6 of 72 in the Senate. His capacity to advance reforms depends on cutting deals with factions whose incentives run directly counter to his goals. Politics, not economics, dictates the pace of change. For Milei, success would mean reaching a minimal threshold of roughly 86 seats in the Chamber of Deputies—enough to wield veto power.

    If Milei prevails, it will be yet another remarkable moment in a wildly improbable presidency. Since Argentina’s return to democracy in 1983, the country has been governed primarily by Peronism—a big government, populist movement named after its founder, Juan Domingo Perón, who served as president for nearly a decade starting in the late 1940s. Over the years, Peronism has become both deeply embedded in Argentine culture and highly amorphous and adaptable, capable of uniting even old-line union bosses with 21st-century activists for transgender rights. At its symbolic center stands former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who governed for eight years after her husband, former President Néstor Kirchner, passed away in 2010. Today, the label “Kirchnerism” refers to a progressive flavor of Peronism. Milei’s predecessor, former President Alberto Fernández—who governed with Cristina Fernández de Kirchner as her vice president—presided over its most chaotic phase.

    Milei didn’t take a traditional path into politics. He started out by speaking to student groups about free markets and individual liberty, winning over young audiences with his irreverent humor. He entered Argentina’s world of political infotainment—TV panels that blend news, gossip, and theatrics. On the popular show Intratables, Milei presented himself as a libertarian firebrand in black suits and leather jackets, his unruly hair earning him the nickname peluca (literally “wig”). He shouted down opponents, sometimes calling them “leftists sons of bitches,” and audiences couldn’t look away.

    In 2021, he won a seat in the Chamber of Deputies. From there, he led a small bloc of libertarian lawmakers during the final, disastrous years of Fernández’s presidency. 

    Disillusionment with Argentina’s political class deepened after the country imposed one of the world’s strictest COVID-19 lockdowns. (During a national ban on public gatherings, Fernández hosted a party at the presidential residence.) Milei channeled the public’s frustration into a broad movement. His campaign events, which could easily be mistaken for rock concerts, gave voice to voters’ anger and turned him into a presidential contender.

    By the time Milei was sworn in, Argentina’s economy was collapsing under the weight of years of Peronist overspending. Prices were rising at a dizzying pace, the peso had lost credibility, and government reserves were running dry.

    In the nearly two years since Milei took office, the Argentine economy has improved substantially. Inflation fell from 211 percent in 2023 to a projected 27 percent by the end of 2025. Poverty has also decreased dramatically, from 43 percent of households and 53 percent of individuals living below the poverty line in early 2024 to 24 percent and 32 percent, respectively, by mid-2025. 

    While he has succeeded at stabilizing macroeconomic indicators, inevitably, the process has caused significant turmoil, and Milei has failed at convincing the voting public to wait out the painful adjustment. In an interview on the Argentine news network A24, journalist Eduardo Feinmann recently confronted Milei: “Since you took office, 26 companies have been closing every day. Eighty percent of people can’t make it to the end of the month. Do you take that into account?”

    Milei insists that “the worst has passed” and is asking voters to stick it out. But this has made him highly vulnerable to his political enemies.

    Milei once vowed “to hammer the final nail into Kirchnerism’s coffin, with Cristina [Fernández de Kirchner] inside.” Kirchner is serving a six-year sentence in house arrest, and she’s barred for life from holding public office after being convicted on corruption charges. But her movement is experiencing a resurgence. In the province of Buenos Aires, home to 40 percent of the electorate and the beating heart of Peronist politics, Milei’s coalition suffered a crushing defeat in local elections last month, far worse than his advisers had anticipated. Axel Kicillof, Buenos Aires’ governor and Argentina’s former minister of the economy, engineered Milei’s electoral defeat in the province and is positioning himself as the new face of the movement

    Framing the election results as a broad rejection of Milei’s agenda, Kicillof declared: “The ballot boxes shouted that you can’t defund health care, education, universities, science, or culture in Argentina.” 

    He might be right. Recent polling suggests that Milei is broadly losing support. He may be a committed libertarian, but most of his supporters aren’t. Milei won the presidency because Argentina was desperate for change. 

    When fears of a Peronist comeback spread, the pesos plummeted, as investors sought refuge in U.S. dollars. The currency exchange rate nearly hit the ceiling set by Argentina’s deal with the International Monetary Fund earlier this year, prompting the Argentinian Central Bank to intervene, selling its reserves to contain inflation. But draining reserves carried its own risk: A further drop could have left the country unable to pay its debt, rekindling the specter of default. A close ally of President Donald Trump, Milei has since relied on U.S. backing to calm Argentina’s jittery markets.

    The Trump administration conditioned its support for Argentina on Milei’s victory in the October elections, saying, “If he wins, we are staying with him, and if he doesn’t win, we’re gone.”

    Some of Milei’s libertarian allies say that the need for a U.S. financial rescue could have been avoided had he fulfilled his campaign promise to dollarize the economy. As economist Nicolás Cachanosky notes, Argentina’s monetary instability is rooted in political volatility: The country swings between populist and nonpopulist regimes, each producing vastly different exchange-rate expectations. So even small shifts in the perceived odds of political change can trigger currency crises. Cachanosky says the only way to escape this trap is through dollarization.

    Milei’s movement has also been damaged by a string of political and corruption scandals. In February, he promoted a cryptocurrency called $Libra that collapsed after its founders cashed out at the peak. In August, leaked recordings implicated Diego Spagnuolo, former head of the National Disability Agency, in kickbacks allegedly linked to Milei’s sister and closest adviser, Karina Milei, whom Milei refers to as el jefe (the male boss). And Milei’s ally, José Luis Espert, was forced to resign after revelations of financial ties to an accused drug trafficker.

    According to a leading pollster, corruption ranks among voters’ top concerns—a first under Milei’s presidency. To voters, the scandals suggest that Milei’s “revolution” is starting to look like politics as usual. 

    If Milei can’t transform his outsider rage into coalition-building skills, stick to his libertarian ideals, prove he’s not yet another corrupt politician, and persuade skeptical centrists that their economic pain has a purpose, his movement may be what ends up in a coffin.

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    César Báez

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  • Navy Is Holding Survivors of Latest U.S. Strike Against Alleged Drug Boat

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    The U.S. is treating survivors from the latest attack on a suspected drug vessel in the Caribbean, according to two officials familiar with the matter. 

    The two survivors were rescued by the Coast Guard and transported to the USS Iwo Jima, which has a full medical staff. Others onboard the submersible died in the attack, the officials said.

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    Shelby Holliday

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  • As Trump Raises Pressure on Venezuela, Senators Hope to Lower Heat

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    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Democratic and Republican U.S. senators announced plans on Friday to force a vote on a resolution to prevent military action against Venezuela without congressional authorization, seeking to rein in President Donald Trump’s escalation of pressure on President Nicolas Maduro’s government.

    Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia, who is sponsoring the war powers resolution with fellow Democrat Adam Schiff of California and Republican Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, said he was responding to the repeated U.S. strikes on boats off Venezuela.

    There have been at least five such strikes, which the Trump administration says are part of a campaign against drug traffickers. They have killed at least 27 people.

    Kaine noted the U.S. constitutional requirement that only Congress, not the president, authorizes war, except for short-term strikes.

    The Trump administration’s campaign in the southern Caribbean has lasted for weeks. Trump has also dangled the possibility of land attacks against Venezuela. And he disclosed on Wednesday that he authorized the Central Intelligence Agency to conduct covert operations in Venezuela.

    “It’s clear there’s no congressional authorization for this action,” Kaine told reporters.

    The strikes have led some legal experts to question whether the U.S. is violating international law. Colombia, which has condemned the strikes, said one of the vessels was Colombian with Colombian citizens aboard. The Trump administration called that assertion “baseless.”

    The surprise announcement on Thursday that the admiral who heads U.S. military forces in Latin America will step down at the end of the year added to questions about the campaign.

    Venezuela has asked the United Nations Security Council to determine that the strikes are illegal, according to a letter seen by Reuters on Thursday.

    The Trump administration argues it is fighting Venezuelan narcoterrorists, making the strikes legitimate.

    Members of the U.S. Congress from both parties have complained they have received scant information, such as who was killed, evidence of trafficking, the buildup’s cost or the administration’s long-term Latin American strategy.

    “It’s a complete black hole,” Kaine said.

    He also said the administration has not explained why it needed to blow up the vessels, killing everyone on board, rather than intercepting them. Trump on Wednesday said interdicting drug boats was “politically correct” and had not stopped the drug trade.

    The Senate blocked a similar resolution last week by a narrow 51-48 vote, mostly along party lines, with two Republicans backing the resolution and one Democrat opposing it. Trump’s fellow Republicans said the president was merely keeping a campaign promise to attack drug cartels.

    Kaine said he hoped the new resolution, to bar military action against or within Venezuela without congressional approval, would garner a few more Republican votes.

    “The military is not to be used just so we can kill anyone we want anywhere in the world, as long as the president has put them on a secret list,” Kaine said.

    “I may be optimistic on this, but I think that there will be a point where more (Republicans) will say, ‘Hold on a second,'” he added.

    (Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Venezuela Mobilizes Troops and Militias as U.S. Military Looms Offshore

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    Venezuela is moving troops into position on the Caribbean coast and mobilizing what President Nicolás Maduro asserts is a millions-strong militia in a display of defiance against the biggest American military buildup in the Caribbean since the 1980s.

    The strongman’s regime has cranked up its propaganda machine. On state television, radio and social media, announcers are telling Venezuelans that the U.S. is a rapacious Nazi-like state that wants to dig its claws into the country’s oil wealth but that the Venezuelan military, the National Bolivarian Armed Forces, are positioning to repel any invasion.

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  • US, Brazil Say They Aim for Trump-Lula Meeting as Soon as Possible

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    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. and Brazilian officials held trade talks on Thursday that the two sides called positive and agreed to work to schedule a meeting between President Donald Trump and his counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva “at the earliest possible occasion”.

    In a joint statement, the delegations said they would “conduct discussions on multiple fronts in the immediate future and establish a working path forward,” though no timeline was given for the proposed Trump-Lula meeting.

    The talks in Washington, which included U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and Brazilian Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira, marks the latest diplomatic contact between the two countries in recent weeks after months of a frozen relationship.

    “This is an auspicious start to a negotiation process in which we will work to normalize and open new paths for bilateral relations,” Vieira told journalists in Washington.

    Trump increased tariffs on U.S. imports of most Brazilian goods to 50% from 10% in early August, linking the move to what he called a “witch hunt” against former President Jair Bolsonaro.

    Bolsonaro ended up being convicted in September by a Supreme Court panel to more than 27 years in prison for plotting a coup after he lost the 2022 election to Lula.

    Last week, Trump and Lula held a phone call, following a brief encounter at the United Nations in September, after which both said they came away with positive impressions.

    During the call, they agreed to meet in person, raising hopes for a thaw in bilateral relations that are at their lowest point in decades.

    Thursday’s talks were “great”, with a productive tone and focused on technical issues, Vieira said. The meeting lasted about an hour and included a 20-minute one-on-one session with Rubio, he added.

    (Reporting by Kanishka Singh and Ismail Shakil in Washington, Lisandra Paraguassu in Brasilia and Andre Romani in Sao Paulo; editing by Costas Pitas and Natalia Siniawski)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Milei’s Radical Overhaul of Argentina Meets Its Match in the Humble Peso

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    BUENOS AIRES—When he ran for president of Argentina, Javier Milei compared the country’s currency to excrement, telling Argentines to forget the peso and vowing to scrap it altogether.

    Now Milei’s government is using its precious few reserves of American dollars to buy pesos and prop up their value, a stark departure from his free-market overhaul of the country’s economy. And he is asking for billions of dollars from the Trump administration to keep the peso from sliding.

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  • Trump Authorizes CIA Covert Operations in Venezuela

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    President Trump has authorized the Central Intelligence Agency to conduct covert action in Venezuela, while also floating the idea of land strikes, in a broadening campaign against alleged drug trafficking.

    “I authorized for two reasons,” Trump said Wednesday at the White House, alleging Venezuelan leaders have “emptied their prisons into the United States of America” and “we have a lot of drugs coming in from Venezuela.”

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    [ad_2] Vera Bergengruen
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  • Milei Says Argentina, US in Talks Over Trade Deal

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    BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -Argentina’s government is in talks with the United States over a potential agreement that would grant the South American country trade advantages, President Javier Milei said on Wednesday.

    “There is an issue of trade advantages that the United States would be giving us; the U.S. has strongly favored Argentina,” Milei said in a television interview.

    The U.S. again purchased Argentine pesos in the open market, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told reporters earlier on Wednesday, adding that the department was working with banks and investment funds to create a $20 billion facility to invest in the South American country’s sovereign debt.

    Milei also said he would consider cabinet changes after October’s midterm elections in Argentina.

    The country is set to hold midterm elections on Oct. 26, a crucial test for Milei as he enters the second half of his term amid falling approval ratings and stalled legislation in an opposition-controlled Congress.

    U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that the United States would not “waste our time” with Argentina if Milei’s party loses the parliamentary elections.

    However, Milei said Trump had expressed support for the current government, which will remain in power until at least 2027.

    (Reporting by Eliana Raszewski and Natalia Siniawski; Editing by Brendan O’Boyle)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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