St. Croix, USVI

loader-image
St. Croix
11:20 pm, Nov 24, 2025
temperature icon 80°F

Activists warn Trump’s Caribbean boat strikes risk regional war 

Washington, DC – Dozens of United States-based human rights, faith and policy groups have criticised President Donald Trump’s expansion of military operations in the Caribbean, warning that his administration’s new campaign could result in “a full-blown limitless war with one or more countries in the region”.

In a letter written to Congress on Wednesday, the signatories condemned a series of recent US strikes on boats in the Caribbean, including at least three originating from Venezuela, that have killed more than 20 people since September. The strikes are the first lethal US military operations in the Caribbean in decades, part of what the Trump administration calls a fight against “narcoterrorism”.

list of 3 items

end of list

“The Trump administration has not provided any valid legal justification for these strikes or any evidence to substantiate its claims that the victims were an imminent threat to the security of the United States,” the letter said.

Signed by nearly 60 organisations – including Oxfam America, Human Rights First, Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns and the American Friends Service Committee – the letter called on members of Congress to block what it described as unauthorised and illegal uses of force.

“We fear, barring decisive action by members of Congress, there will be more strikes, more extrajudicial killings, and potentially a full-blown limitless war with one or more countries in the region, with likely devastating humanitarian and geopolitical consequences,” the letter said.

The appeal was issued before a War Powers Resolution introduced by Senators Tim Kaine and Adam Schiff was expected to reach the Senate floor on Wednesday. Schiff said he and Kaine will force a vote to block the government from carrying out lethal strikes against vessels in the Caribbean.

Advertisement

“If a president can unilaterally put people or groups on a list and kill them, there is no meaningful limit to his use of force,” Schiff said.

The measure seeks to halt unauthorised US military activity in the Caribbean and reassert Congress’s authority over the use of force.

Escalation and legal concerns

The New York Times reported in July that Trump signed a secret directive authorising the possibility of “direct military operations at sea and on foreign soil against cartels”.

Within weeks, US Navy warships and aircraft and more than 4,000 soldiers were deployed to the southern Caribbean. Two weeks later, the first of four strikes occurred.

To justify the escalation, the administration labelled certain regional groups like Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang as “foreign terrorist organisations” and “specially designated global terrorists”. However, legal experts noted these designations do not authorise the use of military force overseas.

Administration officials have defended the escalation as a counternarcotics mission, insisting that the targeted vessels were linked to drug trafficking and “terrorist organisations”.

But according to the Washington Office on Latin America and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, about 90 percent of US-bound cocaine transits the eastern Pacific and western Caribbean, not near Venezuela’s coast. The Drug Enforcement Agency likewise reported that fentanyl entering the US is produced in Mexico using precursor chemicals from China, not Venezuela.

At the Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia this week, Trump told reporters that if traffickers “aren’t coming by sea any more”, US forces might “move the fight onto land”.

FILE PHOTO: A combination image shows two screen captures from a video posted on the X account of The White House on September 15, 2025, depicting what U.S. President Donald Trump said was a U.S. military strike on a Venezuelan drug cartel vessel that had been on its way to the United States, the second such strike carried out against a suspected drug boat in recent weeks. The White House/Handout via REUTERS. THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. IMAGE BLURRED AT SOURCE Verification lines: Reuters checked the footage through our AI detection tool and found no evidence of manipulation. however, the footage is partly blurred, making it impossible to confirm if the video is manipulated. Thorough verification is an ongoing process, and Reuters will continue to review the footage as more information becomes available./File Photo
Two screengrabs from a video posted on the X account of the White House on September 15, 2025, depict what President Donald Trump says was a US military strike on a Venezuelan drug cartel vessel on its way to the US [Handout/White House via Reuters].

Regime change fears

As the administration’s rhetoric has increasingly blurred the line between targeting drug traffickers and targeting the Venezuelan state itself, civil society groups are arguing that the strikes are part of a broader strategy aimed at regime change in Venezuela. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who has long advocated for regime change there, has referred to Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s government as a cartel “masquerading as a government” and branded him a fugitive from US justice, offering up to a $50m reward for his capture.

However, internal documents obtained by the Freedom of the Press Foundation confirmed that US intelligence agencies acknowledged Maduro’s government is “not directing [Venezuela’s] Tren de Aragua’s operations in the United States”.

Advertisement

Alex Main, director of international policy of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, warned that Trump’s campaign “could soon be directed at Venezuela in an attempt to incite violent regime change” and other countries, such as Mexico or Panama, could also face US intervention with “potentially disastrous consequences” for the region.

Democrats on the Foreign Affairs Committee in the House of Representatives have also stated that “Trump and Rubio are pushing for regime change in Venezuela,” adding: “The American people don’t want another war – and Congress can’t let any president start one illegally or unilaterally. That’s not how the Constitution works.”

Elizabeth Tregaskis Gordon, senior policy advisor for LAC at Oxfam America, told Al Jazeera that many Venezuelans are already “living through crisis” and warned that an increase in US military would disrupt humanitarian work in the country.

“Many cannot access basic necessities to survive, while they face rising prices for consumer goods and increasing food insecurity,” she said. “Worsening of the humanitarian crisis will only lead to more chaos and disruption; current US military action is unconstitutional, violates the UN charter, and should cease immediately. ”

Faith communities take a stand

“War is always a defeat,” Susan Gunn, director of the Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns, told Al Jazeera. “When such killing is aimed at civilians with no due process, it violates the sacredness of human life and undermines basic human rights and the rule of law.”

The letter her group and others wrote to Congress also warns that further escalation could worsen Latin America’s largest modern displacement crisis, deepening the suffering of millions of people who have already fled Venezuela.

The signatories urged Congress to reverse the military build-up, investigate civilian deaths and pursue diplomacy.

The Friends Committee on National Legislation’s general secretary, Bridget Moix, added: “War is not the answer at home or abroad.”

“In these unprecedented times,” the letter concluded, “it is critical that the US Congress reclaim its constitutional powers.”

 

Read More

British Caribbean News

Virgin Islands News - News.VI

Share the Post:

Related Posts

Virgin Islands News

Waste Management Authority Launches New Customer Care Portal, Discuses Infrastructure Needs

On Monday, the Virgin Islands Waste Management Authority Board of Directors met to address operational challenges and discuss major infrastructure needs in the face of ongoing financial pressures.
Chairman Derek Gabriel opened the hybrid meeting by commending staff for their recent outreach efforts. “It has been a very ambitious… 30 days,” he said, noting the team’s presence at town halls and its work to strengthen the Authority’s relationship with the community.
The board approved new mechanical equipment for wastewater pump stations on St. Thomas and St. John, part of a wider effort to overhaul and standardize the territory’s system. Pump stations are essential infrastructure, moving sewage and stormwater from lower to higher elevations for treatment, and the Authority hopes that switching to uniform equipment will streamline repairs, simplify staff training, and reduce long-term maintenance costs.
“We have 31 pump stations in the territory… We want to standardize, so when we walk into a pump station anywhere, it’s the same equipment,” said Keith Smith, director of operations. Board members emphasized the importance of planning for operations, maintenance, and spare parts as part of any future equipment orders.
The board also approved funding for urgent wastewater and sewer repairs, including the replacement of an 800-foot sewer line that came in well above engineering estimates. While directors agreed the fix could not be delayed, they noted that these emergencies reflect the cumulative impact of years of deferred maintenance and the Authority’s limited resources.
Several board members called for a pivot from reactive, crisis-driven spending to a more strategic approach. They pushed for flexible, long-term contracting tools and clearer criteria for prioritizing projects, emphasizing the need for transparency and deliberate planning to focus on recurring infrastructure failures.
Even as they authorized the emergency expenditures, directors underscored that the Authority must move toward a system that anticipates infrastructure needs rather than constantly scrambling to address them once they reach critical stages.
The VIMWA is facing an escalating financial crunch as millions in expected government funds remain unpaid. Chief Financial Officer Daryl Griffith told the board that as of the end of September, the agency is still owed $9.8 million in outstanding allotments, including money intended for anti-litter programs, sewage maintenance, and tourism-related services. He warned that delays in government payments are directly affecting the Authority’s ability to make repairs, pay contractors, and keep critical operations running.
The board also ratified several prior poll votes, including a 25-year lease extension for the Anguilla landfill, necessary for maintaining federal regulatory compliance, and contract amendments tied to ongoing infrastructure work.
In an effort to modernize public service and tighten internal coordination, Executive Director Hannibal Ware announced the launch of the Authority’s new centralized customer service system. “We created what we’re terming the V.I. Waste Management Authority Customer Care Portal,” Ware said. “We have the full internal capacity and capability to now handle these emergencies as they’re called in to the agency. We have a single point of contact that will go out and ensure… things are addressed when they pop up.”
Ware said the portal will help streamline how complaints and emergencies are logged and tracked, improve communication with residents, and create a clearer sense of what issues require immediate attention. “Everything just cannot be a priority, otherwise, nothing is a priority,” he added, emphasizing the need for disciplined, transparent triage as the Authority navigates its growing workload.
Ware also stressed that long-term progress hinges on changing community behavior, pointing to public education as a crucial tool in addressing littering and illegal dumping. “Education… is critical to changing cultures, mindsets and everything else,” he said. The Authority plans to expand its school-based outreach as part of a broader push to strengthen community engagement and promote responsible waste practices.
Griffith detailed several grant awards that will help bolster equipment and infrastructure investments. The agency has secured $350,000 from the U.S. Department of Interior to purchase two new garbage trucks, along with grant applications submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency for recycling efforts and to the U.S. Department of Agriculture for tire disposal.
The Authority also expects to receive $46 million in Community Development Block Grant funding to support major landfill closures and expansions across the territory. Construction on new convenience centers is expected to begin soon, with architectural and engineering work nearing completion. The board also advanced procurement for underground utility work and new emergency generators.
As the meeting wrapped up, Gabriel praised the board and staff for their recent progress and emphasized the importance of continued training and professional development. “It is important… to continue education, not just for staff, but also for our members, so that we’re able to assist with executing the vision and strategic planning,” he said.

Read More