President Donald Trump on Sept. 3 sent a warning to Venezuela after the U.S. military earlier this week struck what the administration says was a boat carrying drugs in the Caribbean.
“We have to protect our country and we’re going to. Venezuela has been a very bad actor,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday. “They’ve been sending millions of people into the country. Many of them are Tren de Aragua, some of the worst people anywhere in the world.”
On Wednesday, Trump said that the boat was carrying massive amounts of drugs and “we have tapes of them speaking about it.”
“There are massive amounts of drugs coming into our country to kill a lot of people,” the president said. “You see bags of drugs all over the boat. A lot of other people won’t be doing it again after seeing that video.”
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, speaking in Mexico City, said similar strikes will happen again.
The Pentagon has not released further details about the boat or the strike on Tuesday.
Rubio told reporters that “a boat full of cocaine or fentanyl” was an immediate threat to the United States and that Trump had the right to “eliminate” it “under exigent circumstances.”
“We’re not going to sit back anymore and watch these people sail up and down the Caribbean like a cruise ship. It’s not going to happen. It’s not going to happen anymore,” Rubio said.
Earlier this week, Maduro told reporters that he believes the Trump administration is seeking regime change in Venezuela and that in response, he “declared maximum preparedness for the defense of Venezuela.”
Previously, Venezuela’s government and Maduro have denied U.S. claims that the country and its leadership play a key role in major international drug trafficking, saying Tren de Aragua was eliminated in 2023.







