President Donald Trump let slip on Friday that his administration had “knocked out” a “big plant or a big facility” in Venezuela. It was an admission of sorts that the U.S. military had conducted its first land strike on Venezuelan soil. Yesterday, he expanded on the announcement, saying the strike was on an “implementation area” for alleged drug smuggling.
Trump’s revelation, made during a radio interview with John Catsimatidis, comes amid rising aggression toward the South American nation by the White House. The administration has bombed boats it claims are Venezuelan drug smuggling vessels in international waters. But unlike those strikes, which the White House has enthusiastically promoted across social media, the details of this alleged mainland attack have remained largely mysterious since Trump first raised the subject. Independent reports have identified the attack as a CIA drone strike with zero casualties, but the typically braggadocious Trump administration has been conspicuously tight-lipped.
What did the commentators say? The White House and CIA “declined to comment” on Trump's ambiguous claims, while military officials said they had “no information to share” about the strike, said The New York Times. Trump’s “vague comments” left “questions about which part of the U.S. government acted and what target was hit,” said Reuters.
The alleged drone strike is “largely symbolic,” since it hit “just one of many port facilities used by drug traffickers leaving Venezuela,” an anonymous U.S. official said to CNN. The strike also “appeared to attract little to no attention, even inside the country, in real time.”
An attack on a Venezuelan mainland facility would “cross a red line” and could potentially prompt acts of self-defense from Venezuela, said Just Security Editor-in-Chief Ryan Goodman to Axios. Given those constraints, it may be covert to “minimize blowback from the international community, including our allies.”
What next? The White House has been promising land strikes on Venezuela for weeks as part of its “intensifying pressure campaign” against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, said the Times. Ultimately, it “should not be a mystery for days” to determine “whether or not their president has just bombed a new sovereign nation, without any declaration of war,” said Zeteo. Not in a “modern, free and truly democratic society.” |