A U.S. Navy guided missile destroyer arrived in the capital of Trinidad and Tobago on Oct. 26 to take part in a joint military exercise amid heightened tensions between the United States and Venezuela.
U.S. Embassy Chargé d’Affaires Jenifer Neidhart de Ortiz said on Oct. 24 that the two nations are working together to tackle “shared threats like transnational crime” and build resilience.
Counter-Narcotics Operations
This comes just a day after the Pentagon announced the deployment of the USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier to the Southern Command area of responsibility—which encompasses Central America, South America, and the Caribbean—in support of counter-narcotics operations in the region.Venezuela accused Trinidad of engaging in a “military provocation” in coordination with the CIA and alleged that a false flag attack was underway in the waters between Trinidad and Venezuela.
The Venezuelan government also claimed to have captured “a mercenary group with direct information from the U.S. intelligence agency.”
A false flag operation is an act carried out with the intent to make it appear as though the other party was responsible.
Venezuela said the alleged false flag attack was intended to “generate a full military confrontation” against it, but it did not provide any details to support its claim.
The Epoch Times reached out to the CIA for comment but did not receive a response by publication time.
“They have emptied their prisons into the United States of America. ... They came in through the border. They came in because we had an open border,” he told reporters in the Oval Office on Oct. 15.
Trump has accused Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro of involvement in drug trafficking, which Maduro and Venezuela’s ruling regime have rejected.
Since September, the U.S. military has conducted lethal strikes against boats in the Caribbean Sea that U.S. officials said were carrying illegal drugs to the United States.







