Two Venezuelan fighter jets swoop on US warship days after Trump unleashed full-scale war on drugs and killed 11 narcos

TWO Venezuelan fighter jets descended on a US warship – just days after Trump declared all-out war against drug cartels.

The tension-hiking move was branded “highly provocative” by the White House amid teetering relations between the US and Venezuela.

F-16 Fighting Falcon in flight.
wikicommons

Venezuela flew two F-16s over USS Jason Dunham (stock)[/caption]

US Navy destroyer at sea.
US Navy

The destroyer is currently located in Latin American waters as part of efforts to combat drug smuggling[/caption]

Donald Trump gesturing at a meeting.
Splash

Donald Trump is ramping up efforts against drug smuggling cartels[/caption]

Illustration of a clash at sea: Venezuelan F-16A jets over a US destroyer, USS Jason Dunham; specifications for both are included.

The menacing flyover saw two F-16 fighter jets swoop down just above the American naval destroyer USS Jason Dunham, according to the White House.

The Defence Department said: “Today two Maduro regime military aircraft flew near to a US Navy vessel in international waters.

“This highly provocative move was designed to interfere with our narco terror operations.”

They also warned the cartel to back down and not pursue any further attempts to obstruct their military presence to combat cartels.

The F-16 can reach blistering speeds of up to 1,319mph, and carry deadly missiles as well as a six-barrel cannon.

Meanwhile its opponent in this case, USS Jason Dunham, weighs a hulking 9,200 tons and is over 500ft long – also equipped with missiles and a naval gun.

It comes three days after the Don blitzed a narco boat killing 11 on board – all of whom he claims were drug-smuggling gangsters heading for American shores.

The President said the substance-running vessel was carrying members of the infamous Tren de Aragua gang – which is designated as a “terrorist organisation” in the US.

Trump said of the strikes: “There was massive amounts of drugs coming into our country to kill a lot of people, and everybody fully understands that.

“Obviously, they wont be doing it again. And I think a lot of other people wont be doing it again.

“When they watch that tape, they’re going to say, Let’s not do this.”

Meanwhile Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth warned following the attack: “We’ve got assets in the air, assets in the water, assets on ships.

“Because this is a deadly serious mission for us, and it won’t, it won’t stop with just this strike.”

Legal experts have raised questions about the boat blitz – but Trump has defended his action, arguing his designation of the group as a terror organisation gives him authority.

Washington also ordered the deployment of more than 4,000 soldiers and three US naval destroyers to the waters around Latin America and the Caribbean as part of boosted efforts to win Trump’s new war on drugs.

Nicolás Maduro at a press conference.
Getty

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro deployed two F-16 jets[/caption]

Night vision footage of a U.S. military strike on a smuggling vessel.
X/@clashreport

It comes days after Trump blitzed a narco boat killing 11 on board[/caption]

Salvadoran police officers shaving the heads of handcuffed prisoners.
Reuters

Salvadoran police officers cut the hair of alleged members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua[/caption]

Sitting on the edge of Venezuela’s territorial waters are USS Gravely, USS Jason Dunham and USS Sampson.

Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro is actively backing and funding drug cartels, Trump claims.

Maduro has hit back claiming Trump is seeking regime change, declaring: “In the face of this maximum military pressure, we have declared maximum preparedness for the defence of Venezuela.”

What is Trump’s war on drugs?

by Harvey Geh

DONALD Trump has launched his full-scale war on drugs – favouring missiles over law enforcement.

The first day of Trump’s second term kicked off with the designation of narcotraffickers as terrorists – giving him the right to kill them before they can reach American shores.

This is the argument he has used in the face of law experts warning that his decision to strike a suspected drug-smuggling boat on Tuesday was illegal.

Washington-watchers claim that the gangsters should have been arrested – but the White House says that law enforcement is ineffective.

Trump vowed after the blitz: “There’s more where that came from.”

The US President has long spoken of his desire to enact force to take on drug cartels, which he accuses Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro of actively backing.

Maduro has denied the allegations, and the last few months have seen teetering escalations deteriorate into a tense standoff.

The US has positioned naval destroyers and soldiers around Maduro’s waters, while the Venezuelan dictator has ordered mass mobilisation of over four million troops.

The Venezuelan President also ordered mass mobilisation of over four million troops last month.

The military jet flyover marks the latest escalation in the simmering conflict between Washington and Caracas over drug smuggling cartels.

Trump has accused President Maduro of “mass murder, drug trafficking, sex trafficking, and acts of violence and terror across the United States and Western Hemisphere”

The tit for tat escalation started with a $50million bounty on Maduro offered by Washington.

On top of this, $700million worth of assets with alleged links to Maduro have been seized since August – including luxury goods and private jets.

Aerial view of the USS Sampson docked in Panama City.
AFP

USS Sampson docks at the Amador International Cruise Terminal in Panama on Tuesday[/caption]

September 5, 2025
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Trump RULES OUT US troops patrolling Ukraine to police peace deal as he reveals role America would play when war is over

DONALD Trump today ruled out American troops patrolling Ukraine — but said he was looking at air cover for European boots on the ground.

The US President publicly confirmed that Britain, France and Germany had committed manpower to police any deal with Russia but insisted his forces would play a back-seat role underwriting the peace.

President Donald Trump speaking at a multilateral meeting with European leaders.
The Mega Agency

Donald Trump has ruled out US troops patrolling Ukraine to police the peace deal with Russia[/caption]

Zelensky and Trump shaking hands.
AFP

Zelensky won concessions from Trump after turning up for a White House summit in a suit[/caption]

Presidents Trump and Putin at a press conference.
Reuters

The White House did not deny claims Putin had suggested Moscow as a venue for face to face talks with Zelensky[/caption]

His comments came as the White House confirmed Mr Trump’s team was negotiating a one-on-one showdown between Volodymyr Zelensky and Vladimir Putin.

But dashing Ukraine ambitions, Mr Trump warned the country “is not going to be a part of Nato”.

He said instead: “We’ve got the European nations, and they’ll front-load it. When it comes to security, the Europeans are willing to put people on the ground.

“We’re willing to help them with things — especially, probably, talk about by air, because there’s nobody who has the kind of stuff we have. I don’t think it’s going to be a problem.”

The White House released a remarkable series of behind the scenes photographs of world leaders, including PM Sir Keir Starmer, negotiating plans for the so-called Coalition of the Willing of 30 nations signed up to protect Ukraine.

Mr Trump was snapped showing them a collection of MAGA caps, while, hours after the meeting a new portrait of the President, unsmiling and striding between lines of US flags was also unveiled.

The candid snaps of Monday’s summit also showed leaders studying a map of Ukraine in the Oval Office as they discussed Ukraine ceding territory to bring about an end to the war with Russia.

It was claimed the leaders used the talks to convince Mr Trump to take a stand against Putin demands for Kyiv to turn over all of its Donbas region — comparing it to the US losing his beloved Florida.

And it was reported by the Wall Street Journal that they talked the President into supporting Ukraine keeping heavily fortified parts of the eastern region by describing it as a “bastion against the Huns”.

Speaking about the chances of a deal, Mr Trump said: “I think Putin is tired of it. I think they’re all tired of it.

“But you never know. We’re going to find out about President Putin in the next couple of weeks.

“It’s possible he does not want to make a deal.”

He added: “I hope that President Putin will be good, and if he is not, it is going to be a rough situation and I hope President Zelensky is going to show flexibility as well.”

The Sun told how Mr Zelensky won concessions from Mr Trump after turning up for a White House summit in a suit — as opposed to the combat fatigues he wore when they rowed six months ago.

The White House did not deny claims Putin had suggested Moscow as a venue for face-to-face talks with Mr Zelensky.

But the Kremlin would not publicly confirm they had even agreed to sit down with the Ukrainians.

Russian Foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow was “not rejecting any forms of work, neither bilateral nor trilateral” but said any talks would have to be “prepared extremely carefully”. 

He did suggest that they were open to meeting the Ukraine leader if it was prepared with the “utmost thoroughness”.

Mr Zelensky has reportedly rebuffed the offer from Putin to hold the meeting in Moscow.

However, Mr Trump’s press secretary Karoline Leavitt insisted Putin was signed up for a meeting — and that the US was actively involved in the organisation of it.

Geneva was being talked up as a more suitable location for the showdown.

Switzerland, which remained neutral during both World Wars, has promised immunity to the Russian despot despite an International Criminal Court warrant out for his arrest.

No knee bending is critical

By Harry Cole

AS the dust settles on that extraordinary White House gathering, what’s left beyond some of the most astonishing pictures of world leaders in living memory?

For Donald Trump’s blowhard critics, even trying to seek an end to the bloody war is a new low, but that does not do the significance of Monday’s meeting justice.

The President pledged to continue to underwrite the safety of Ukraine with American might, in a huge U-turn on his campaign vows to withdraw from the world stage.

Large swathes of his Maga base are going to hate that, but as British Ambassador Peter Mandelson said last night, Trump is a “President with an appetite for risk that is enviable”.

On territory — Ukraine is going to lose parts of the Donbas. Let’s not sugarcoat it.

For all the talk about “not redrawing borders by force”, that’s exactly what is going to happen.

Russia keeps 70 per cent of a region it’s already flattened.

But — and this is critical — Trump did not bend the knee to Moscow’s Mad Vlad demand for the entire Donbas. He stated publicly negotiations must mirror current front lines. That matters.

This isn’t over. Not by a long shot.

But here’s the bottom line: if this ends with US planes patrolling the skies over Europe and Russia is forced to scale back its ambitions, that is not a win for Putin.

And for Ukraine — beaten, bloodied, but still standing — it could be a far better deal than the disaster many feared.

Although it is a signatory to the court, the Alpine nation said it could get around its obligations to handcuff Putin because of Geneva’s role as the UN’s European HQ.

Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis said: “We have always signalled our willingness, but it naturally depends on the will of the major powers.”

Both France and Italy have signalled their enthusiasm for Geneva as a host country.

Sir Keir Starmer chaired a virtual call of the pro-Ukraine Coalition of the Willing countries from Scotland, where he is on holiday.

Britain, France and Germany are all prepared to deploy peacekeeping troops in Ukraine in the event of a deal to end the war.

A No10 spokesman said: “The PM began by reflecting on the constructive meeting, saying it was clear there was a real sense of unity and shared goal of securing a just and lasting peace for Ukraine.”

At one awkward moment the PM was forced to tell other world leaders to “mute themselves” so he could speak.

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, US President Donald Trump, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and French President Emmanuel Macron at the White House.
AFP

Sir Keir Starmer chaired a virtual call of the pro-Ukraine Coalition of the Willing countries from Scotland[/caption]

Trump meeting with world leaders in the Oval Office regarding the war in Ukraine.
X

European leaders continued to lavish praise on Mr Trump[/caption]

Ukrainian firefighters extinguishing a fire in a damaged residential building.
Getty

War in Ukraine is still ongoing after Russia’s invasion on 24 February, 2022[/caption]

Meanwhile, despite the solidarity with President Zelensky, the Ukraine leader was told he would have to show “flexibility” in negotiations — even if some supporters back home want him to refuse to budge.

British ambassador to Washington Lord Mandelson said: “He may go back to Kyiv and find he doesn’t have the political support for the flexibility that he’s got to show in order to help bring this to an end.

“So we’ve got to continue making sure that what Zelensky can take back is cast-iron assurance, so that if he does show flexibility, Ukraine can be safe.”

European leaders continued to lavish praise on Mr Trump, with Emmanuel Macron saying his “unpredictability” was a handy trait.

The France President said: “I think we have changed President Trump since he arrived in power in January. We rose up, united as Europeans, and he took it into account. He also brought a fundamental asset in dealing with Russia — his unpredictability.”

PREZ’S HEAVEN BID

DONALD Trump has said he believes it will help pave his way into heaven if he can find an end to the war between Russia and Ukraine.

The US President told the Fox & Friends chat show yesterday: “I want to end it. You know, we’re not losing American lives, we’re not losing American soldiers.

“We’re losing Russia and Ukrainian, mostly soldiers. Some people, as missiles hit wrong spots or get lobbed into cities. But if I can save 7,000 people a week from being killed, I think that’s pretty — I want to try to get to heaven if possible.

“I’m hearing I’m not doing well. I hear I’m really at the bottom of the totem pole. But if I can get to heaven, this will be one of the reasons.”

DON’S HAT TRICK

Donald Trump showing hats to Zelenskyy and Macron.
x

Trump flaunts his collection of MAGA memorabilia to Zelensky and Macron[/caption]

DONALD Trump shows Volodymyr Zelensky and Emmanuel Macron the real feather in his cap — a shelf full of MAGA memorabilia.

The US President was seen with a red “Four More Years” hat in the White House with the Ukraine and France leaders after the peace talks on Monday.

Trump previously flaunted the collection to Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev last week.

August 19, 2025
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