US flexes its military power, but regime change in Venezuela wouldn’t be easy

The Navy’s most advanced aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, and its battle group of warships is on its way to the Caribbean in a striking escalation of U.S. military force in the region.

The Trump administration has said that its arrival in the coming days will help disrupt narcotics trafficking. So, too, it argues, will U.S. strikes on some 14 vessels in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean, resulting in at least 57 deaths and raising legal questions about the fate of service members ordered to carry out what some argue are extrajudicial killings.

The administration has said the strikes are justified because the nation is in armed conflict with drug cartels.

Why We Wrote This

A rising U.S. military presence near Venezuela has stirred questions around whether the goal is a drug crackdown or regime change. An effort to oust President Nicolás Maduro would carry risks – with or without U.S. troops on the ground.

Others see the rumblings of regime change with the aim of ousting Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, whom the White House calls an illegitimate leader.

In fact, aircraft carriers are not particularly well-suited for drug interdiction. But they are highly proficient at carrying out airstrikes and as a jumping-off point for troops, vehicles, and supplies bound for hostile shores.

Mr. Maduro probably gets the gist: Venezuelan troops have begun large-scale defense drills. Mr. Maduro has also announced the mobilization of 4.5 million militia members, although experts question that Mr. Maduro has a civilian armed force of this magnitude.

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