Monday, December 1, 2025 - More than 10 US warships, including the country’s largest carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, are now stationed in the Caribbean amid escalating tensions between President Donald Trump and Venezuela.
A Marine Expeditionary Unit capable of an amphibious land
invasion has also been deployed as part of efforts to stem the flow of drugs
into the US from the socialist country.
“The military’s job is to defend the homeland,” Secretary of
the Navy John Phelan told Fox News. “That’s exactly what we’re
doing, and we’re using our best assets to defend the homeland.
“Drugs kill more Americans than we’ve ever lost in wars,” he
said. “So I think at the end of the day, the president has correctly identified
this as an attack on the country, which it is.”
Venezuela’s socialist president, Nicolas Maduro, is being
blamed for allowing narco vessels to set off from his country for the US.
Among the 11 warships currently in the Caribbean is the USS
Ford, which houses the Carrier Strike Group featuring nine carrier air wings,
or more than 70 aircraft, including squadrons out of Virginia, Florida, and
Washington state.
Other ships deployed to the region include the USS Iwo
Jamia, a Wasp-class amphibious assault vehicle capable of carrying up to six
Harrier II attack aircraft.
The USS Gravely and the USS Stockdale, two naval
guided-missile destroyers, are currently operating in the Caribbean along with
the larger guided-missile cruisers, the USS Lake Erie and the USS Gettysburg.
Up to 2,200 Marines, based out of Camp Lejeune and Marine
Corps Air Base New River in North Carolina, are also stationed in the
Caribbean.
In total, around 15,000 troops, including the Marines on
ships and about 5,000 personnel at bases in Puerto Rico, are now in the
region, the Conversation reported.
Roosevelt Roads naval base in Puerto Rico has been reopened
as part of the buildup.
“The president is very focused on shipbuilding. He has been
on me about it for a long time and continues to stay after me, which is great,
because he’s committed to it and it’s really important,” Phelan said during his
appearance on “My View with Lara Trump.”
“We hollowed out our manufacturing base in this country. And
it’s really important that we learn how to make things. We spent the last 10
years teaching people how to code. We’re gonna spend the next 10 years teaching
[people] how to use their hands, because those are going to be the important
skills,” he added.

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