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erronis

(21,903 posts)
Wed Nov 5, 2025, 06:09 PM Nov 5

Exploding cigars and false flags redux? -- Digby

https://digbysblog.net/2025/11/05/exploding-cigars-and-false-flags-redux/



Aaaaah. I should have known:

With 10 naval vessels and 10,000 troops already deployed to the Caribbean—the largest military buildup there since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis—and a carrier strike group led by the USS Gerald R. Ford taking up position, some sort of military attack on Venezuela appears imminent. U.S. President Donald Trump’s rationale for this aggressive military action is that Venezuela is a hub of drug trafficking and that supplying drugs to U.S. consumers is the equivalent of an armed attack on the United States, justifying a military response.

But the real aim is to overthrow Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s government and then, by cutting off the flow of Venezuelan oil to Cuba, fulfill the Republican right’s decades-long dream of collapsing the Cuban government. It’s a strategy that John Bolton, national security advisor in the first Trump administration, tried without success in 2019, but Secretary of State and National Security Advisor Marco Rubio now intends to try again.


This explains Rubio’s obsession. But their plan may not work any better than all the ones that came before:

If Washington manages to unseat Maduro, then his successor would very likely cut off oil shipments to Havana, striking another blow to an already reeling Cuban economy. U.S. success in Venezuela could also threaten Cuba’s national security if the Trump administration, intoxicated with the win, decided to expand its aggressive military interventionism.

But Havana is no longer as dependent on Venezuela as it was a decade ago.

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Exploding cigars and false flags redux? -- Digby (Original Post) erronis Nov 5 OP
It's always about the drugs. Have they intercepted any in the last 10 years? bucolic_frolic Nov 5 #1

bucolic_frolic

(53,228 posts)
1. It's always about the drugs. Have they intercepted any in the last 10 years?
Wed Nov 5, 2025, 06:22 PM
Nov 5

Tariffs help to regulate the flow of goods across international borders. Or do they just assess the importer without inspection? Who audits the bills of lading?

Who's regulating the smuggled goods? Why have they caught so little? Do they make the successes public? Asking because I just haven't heard anything about it.

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