

The United States has deployed military personnel and naval ships to the Caribbean to conduct anti-narcotics operations. President Trump has personally blamed Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro for his role in drug trafficking. In response, Maduro is talking tough and threatening to kill “Yankees” if his country is invaded.
Venezuela is now on high alert, though no one in Washington, or anywhere in the United States, seems particularly concerned.
The United States has deployed about 10,000 troops to the Caribbean, including three Navy destroyers, the cruiser USS Lake Erie, the amphibious assault ship USS Iwo Jima, and a nuclear-powered submarine, supported by F-35B fighters in Puerto Rico and B-52 bombers operating nearby.
Officially, the operation targets drug trafficking and cartels, but Washington has also linked the Maduro regime to “narco-terrorist” networks to justify potential intervention. Trump recently confirmed that he authorized CIA covert operations inside Venezuela and suggested U.S. activity could expand from sea to land.
The buildup follows a series of U.S. strikes, including a September 2 attack that sank a vessel allegedly tied to the Tren de Aragua gang, killing 11. In total, four suspected narcotics boats have been destroyed in recent weeks.
Maduro declared a state of external emergency, placing the country’s military on full wartime alert. He also announced the mobilisation of his militia forces under what he dubbed Plan Independencia 200, which had been launched earlier on September 11. Under this plan he activated some 284 “battlefronts” across Venezuela.
Maduro claimed his militia base now totals many millions: initially 4.5 million were deployed under the plan, and he later included additional enlistments to raise the figure as high as 12.7 million. Experts and analysts, however, caution that these numbers are highly inflated and cite weak training and equipment as major concerns.
While the militia build-up draws headlines, Venezuela’s conventional armed forces, roughly 123,000 personnel, are reportedly in poor condition, afflicted by severe maintenance shortfalls and described by analysts as being “in shambles.”
Despite these systemic problems, Venezuela has invested in advanced weapons systems, primarily from Russia and China. The country announced possession of about 5,000 Russian-made Igla-S surface-to-air missiles, which are shoulder-fired low-altitude systems capable of targeting helicopters, drones and low-flying aircraft. According to Russia’s export agency Rosoboronexport, the Igla-S has a range of about 6 km and a ceiling of 3.5 km. While independent verification is lacking, the system is known to form part of Venezuela’s arsenal.
In tandem, Venezuela has deployed air-defence systems such as the S-125 Pechora-2M and Buk-M2E, as well as Su-30 fighter jets armed with Kh-31 anti-ship missiles. Additionally, Russian radar systems and Chinese communications relays have been integrated to create a more contested electromagnetic environment, complicating any potential U.S. military operations.
The mobilisation strategy emphasises territorial defence and asymmetric warfare rather than conventional war-fighting. Some 468 militia units have been activated to protect critical infrastructure, electrical networks, fuel stations, water systems and food distribution points — particularly in urban areas such as the Caracas metropolitan region and the state of Miranda. These urban warfare drills simulate street-fighting scenarios to prepare for a potential U.S. intervention or proxy conflict.
On the political front, the regime frames the militia as a “war of all the people,” projecting mass mobilisation as both a deterrent and demonstration of sovereignty. Observers note that many public-sector workers have been pressured into registering with the militia, although actual operational readiness remains dubious.
An analysis of the two countries’ military strengths is absurdly one-sided. According to the 2025 Global Firepower Index, the United States ranks first out of 145 countries, with a Power Index score of 0.0744, while Venezuela ranks 50th with a score of 0.8882. In this system, a lower score reflects greater military capability, underscoring the enormous gap between the two.
The United States has approximately 1.33 million active-duty personnel, compared to Venezuela’s 109,000, roughly twelve times larger. Each year, 4.4 million Americans reach military age, compared with just 625,000 Venezuelans, meaning the U.S. produces more than seven times as many potential recruits annually.
The United States also spends $895 billion on defense, while Venezuela’s military budget is $3.9 million, only a fraction of that amount.
In terms of assets, the United States possesses about 13,000 aircraft, 440 warships, and a global deployment capacity unmatched by any other nation. The Global Firepower Index describes the numerical disparity between the two militaries as “staggering,” reflecting the overwhelming advantage the United States holds in every measurable category, from manpower and technology to logistics, reach, and funding.
Although the United States maintains overwhelming firepower, analysts emphasize that its Caribbean task force, designed for counternarcotics missions—lacks the logistics and ground support needed for a prolonged conflict against a state equipped with Russian anti-ship and air-defense systems. The Pentagon continues to insist that the deployment is focused solely on counter-drug operations, yet ongoing CIA activity, naval strikes on suspected narco-boats, and Venezuela’s mobilization of forces increasingly blur the line between interdiction and open confrontation.
Under Maduro, Venezuela has adopted a defensive strategy centered on asymmetric warfare rather than conventional battle. The country’s approach combines mass militia mobilization, investment in Russian weaponry, and extensive preparation for urban and guerrilla fighting, measures aimed at offsetting U.S. military superiority and raising the cost of intervention.
Frequent Venezuelan military drills and provocative flyovers near U.S. ships have heightened the risk of accidental conflict, where a single miscalculation, such as an overflight or an automated U.S. defensive response, could rapidly escalate into direct combat.
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