As Battle Group off Venezuela Awaits Orders, a New Commander Takes the Helm

Air Force Lt. Gen. Evan Pettus succeeds Navy Adm. Alvin Holsey as acting commander of U.S. Southern Command as the military post becomes a top Trump priority.
As Battle Group off Venezuela Awaits Orders, a New Commander Takes the Helm
Air Force Lt. Gen. Evan Pettus salutes Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Air Force Gen. Dan Caine (R) and U.S. Southern Command commanding officer Navy Adm. Alvin “Bull” Holsey as he arrives at a “relinquishment of command” ceremony to succeed the retiring admiral in Doral, Fla., on Dec. 12, 2025. Air Force Staff Sgt. Christoper Bermudez/US Southern Command
John Haughey
John Haughey
Reporter
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DORAL, Fla.—The largest United States naval force to prowl the Caribbean in decades is steaming off Venezuela’s coast; President Donald Trump says the nation is engaged in a “non-international armed conflict” against narco-terrorists; and there’s debate on the airwaves, across social media, and in Congress about whether this is a war, what it all means, and where it’s going.

But at the Department of War’s Southern Command outside Miami on Dec. 12, there was only reverent praise for the retiring Navy admiral leading those forces and assurances that the Air Force lieutenant general succeeding him is ideally suited to assume the helm.

Adm. Alvin “Bull” Holsey relinquished his duties as commander of U.S. Southern Command to Lt. Gen. Evan Pettus in a ceremony marked by humor but no hubris in a transition of leadership between combat veterans who hinted at, but never addressed, events unfolding 1,500 miles to the south.
Pettus, an Air Force officer for more than 30 years and F-15 pilot with extensive combat experience, takes command of the 14.5-million-square-mile command, which spans 31 Central and South American nations and, pending adoption of the proposed $901 billion fiscal year 2026 defense budget, Mexico.

One of 11 Pentagon commands spanning the globe, Southern Command was considered a lower priority for a century, with the nation’s strategic and economic interests centered on Europe and Asia.

But in his second presidential term, Trump has determined the United States will shift its focus south, issuing a Jan. 20 executive order that states that Mexican and South American drug cartels smuggling fentanyl, cocaine, and other narcotics are waging “a campaign of violence and terror throughout the Western Hemisphere that has not only destabilized countries with significant importance for [U.S.] national interests but also flooded the United States with deadly drugs, violent criminals, and vicious gangs.”
Trump has also accused Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro of trafficking narcotics. In August, the administration offered a $50 million bounty for information leading to his arrest. Maduro was indicted in the United States on drug charges, including narcoterrorism, in 2020.
The U.S. State Department on Nov. 24 designated Venezuela’s Cartel de los Soles, which it claims is led by Maduro, a terrorist organization.
Last month, Trump issued a new national security strategy to “reassert and enforce the Monroe Doctrine to restore American preeminence in the Western Hemisphere,” framing it as the “Trump Corollary” to President James Monroe’s 1823 policy that declared the Western Hemisphere a distinct U.S. sphere of influence.
The “Trump Corollary” is the first Monroe Doctrine update since 1904, when President Theodore Roosevelt declared that the United States would intervene as an “international police power” in Latin America to prevent European agitation.
According to the Trump administration, the president can authorize the Pentagon to engage in “non-international armed conflict” with terrorists, and because Maduro doesn’t represent Venezuela’s legitimate government, such action isn’t war with a nation state requiring congressional endorsement. Some members of Congress from both major parties disagree.

Since September, Southern Command forces led by Holsey have been destroying speedboats allegedly smuggling drugs in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific with Hellfire missiles and drones, killing at least 80 in more than 20 strikes.

On Dec. 10, U.S. forces seized a tanker off Venezuela that the administration maintains was smuggling oil on behalf of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. More seizures are planned, Trump has said, hinting that air—and, perhaps, ground—attacks inside Venezuela are on the table.
Waiting for orders are at least 12,000 sailors and Marines in an Operation Southern Spear task force led by the USS Gerald Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, and the USS Iwo Jima, an amphibious assault ship—the biggest Navy battle group to ply the Caribbean since 1965 and the U.S. military’s most significant action in the region since invading Panama in 1989.
Navy Adm. Alvin “Bull” Holsey is “piped ashore” for the last time as he retires after 37 years in the sea service during a “relinquishment of command” ceremony at U.S. Southern Command in Doral, Fla., on Dec. 12, 2025. (Air Force Staff Sgt. Christoper Bermudez/US Southern Command)
Navy Adm. Alvin “Bull” Holsey is “piped ashore” for the last time as he retires after 37 years in the sea service during a “relinquishment of command” ceremony at U.S. Southern Command in Doral, Fla., on Dec. 12, 2025. Air Force Staff Sgt. Christoper Bermudez/US Southern Command

His Watch Is Over

But there was little mention of all that from the podium Holsey and Pettus shared with Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Air Force Gen. Dan Caine in what was not a formal change of command but a “relinquishment of command” and retirement ceremony for Holsey after 37 years of service.

Pettus is serving as acting commander and has not yet been officially nominated by the Pentagon and confirmed by the Senate to assume the command.

At the Dec. 12 event, Caine praised Holsey as the scion of a family rooted in service to the nation. His father was a Korean War veteran, six uncles served in the military, including three in Vietnam, and a son is a Navy helicopter pilot who is “out there flying BlackHawks off USS Abraham Lincoln in the Pacific, continuing the watch.”

The military’s highest-ranking officer said Holsey demonstrated bravery, repeatedly “landing a helicopter on the pitching deck of a ship.” But he displayed the most bravery during two instructor tours training helicopter pilots and surviving without his students “killing” him, Caine joked.

Caine said on behalf of all of the active-duty Americans serving in the nation’s armed forces, including the sailors and Marines “in the fleet afloat right now” off Venezuela, it was an honor to leave cold, gray Washington to officiate his retirement ceremony in the “awesome” Miami weather.

Pettus said the three years he worked with Holsey at Southern Command before their November 2024 ascensions to commander and deputy commander were a privilege, calling the admiral’s professionalism, commitment, and capability “unimaginable.”

Following in Holsey’s shadow will be daunting, he said, but he’s ready.

“The challenges we face are complex, but working together, and with our partners, we can and will make a lasting impact,” Pettus said. “I’m looking forward to the adventure. God bless you all, and God bless the United States of America.”

“Those we lead don’t follow words, they follow courage,” Holsey said, which makes Pettus the “right person to take the lead” of the command.

He described himself as “a young boy from a small town in Georgia who dreamed of being [an] aviator even though he had never been on [an] airplane,” who came to realize “God had a purpose” for those dreams.

Holsey told the joint force assembly of soldiers, airmen, sailors, Marines, federal agents, and military officers from dozens of nations: “[It] has been a tremendous honor to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with you. You are the finest among us. Your dedicated efforts will shape this region for years to come. Your vision must be an enduring, secure, free, and prosperous hemisphere.

“I only ask for one thing: your personal best. You have everything you need to succeed—each other.”

And with that, Holsey was “piped ashore” for the last time—his watch over, a sailor no more.

“My mom wanted to be here,” he said, “but I told her, ‘This time, I’ll be home for Christmas.’”

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John Haughey
John Haughey
Reporter
John Haughey is an award-winning Epoch Times reporter who covers U.S. elections, U.S. Congress, energy, defense, and infrastructure. Mr. Haughey has more than 45 years of media experience. You can reach John via email at [email protected]
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