Boat strikes trigger Trinidad and Tobago military alert

Photo courtesy of MARTIN BERNETTI / AFP

Photo courtesy of MARTIN BERNETTI / AFP

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PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad and Tobago (AFP) — Trinidad and Tobago put its military on alert Friday and recalled all personnel to their bases amid a deepening row between the United States and Venezuela and a deadly US military buildup in the Caribbean.
Trinidadian forces have been placed on “STATE ONE ALERT LEVEL” and have been ordered to report to base, according to a message sent by the army seen by Agence France-Presse (AFP). Police said that “all leave is restricted” until further notice.
The island nation of Trinidad and Tobago is located just off Venezuela’s coast, and the mobilization comes after the US carried out airstrikes on at least 15 alleged drug-trafficking boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific, killing 62.
The alert caused panic in Port of Spain, where locals rushed to buy food and fuel, as witnessed by AFP reporters.
Officials urged calm, and said “the Government of Trinidad and Tobago is in active contact with the Embassy of the United States of America in Port of Spain.”
In the name of curbing drug trafficking, Washington has deployed a massive military force, with eight US Navy ships to the Caribbean, F-35 stealth warplanes to Puerto Rico, and an aircraft carrier strike group is en route to the region.
Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, who faces indictment on drug charges in the US, accused Washington of using drug trafficking as a pretext for “imposing regime change” in Caracas to seize Venezuelan oil.