Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has issued a dire warning to his nation, claiming that a U.S. naval force consisting of “eight warships carrying 1,200 missiles, along with a nuclear submarine,” is “targeting Venezuela.” The statement, made on state television, is the latest in a series of highly charged accusations as tensions in the Caribbean reach a fever pitch. Maduro’s claim, however, significantly exaggerates the confirmed details of the U.S. military presence in the region, which has been described by the Pentagon as a “counter-narcotics operation.”
According to multiple reports from international news outlets, including the Financial Times and the Associated Press, the U.S. has indeed deployed a substantial naval force, but its composition and purpose are different from Maduro’s description. The confirmed deployment includes at least seven U.S. Navy vessels, among them three guided-missile destroyers, the guided-missile cruiser USS Lake Erie, an amphibious assault ship, and a nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine. While this is a formidable force, it does not match Maduro’s claim of “eight warships” or “1,200 missiles.” The number of missiles a U.S. naval group can carry varies, but it is not publicly confirmed to be in the thousands.
Maduro’s hyperbolic claim appears to be part of a broader strategy to rally domestic support and frame the U.S. operation as a direct threat of invasion. He has repeatedly accused Washington of seeking to topple his government and has called for his country’s militia to prepare for what he calls an “imperialist” attack. “There’s no way they can enter Venezuela,” Maduro vowed in a speech, asserting that his country is “well prepared to defend its peace, sovereignty, and territorial integrity.”
The U.S. government maintains that the naval deployment is a direct response to drug trafficking, which it accuses the Maduro regime of facilitating. The Trump administration has placed a $50 million reward on Maduro’s head, accusing him of being the head of a major drug cartel. The military buildup, while officially for counter-narcotics, is widely seen by analysts as a form of “gunboat diplomacy” designed to put maximum pressure on the Venezuelan government and its armed forces.
The discrepancy between Maduro’s claims and the verified facts highlights the information warfare being waged by both sides. While the U.S. has refrained from issuing public threats of invasion, the scale of its deployment is unprecedented for an anti-drug operation. For his part, Maduro is using the real-world military presence to fuel a nationalist narrative of resistance against a foreign threat. As the U.S. fleet patrols the Caribbean, the political and military tensions in the region remain on a knife’s edge.
Footage Charlie Kirk has been shot
Charlie Kirk has been shot










