Ground crews unloaded cargo last week from an Air Force C-17 Globemaster III aircraft, top, parked next to a U.S. Air Force HC-130 aircraft, at the Roosevelt Roads naval base in Ceiba, Puerto Rico.
Credit...Ricardo Arduengo/Reuters

U.S. Is Adding to Its Military Buildup in the Caribbean

Over the past week, C-17 heavy-lift cargo planes, which usually transport troops and equipment, flew to Puerto Rico at least 16 times, according to flight tracking data reviewed by The New York Times.

by · NY Times

The United States military has dispatched a number of transport and cargo planes to the Caribbean this week, as President Trump continues to ramp up military pressure on President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela, whom Mr. Trump has threatened with military action.

Over the past week, C-17 heavy-lift cargo planes — which are largely used for transporting military troops and equipment — conducted at least 16 flights to Puerto Rico from American military bases, according to flight tracking data reviewed by The New York Times. The actual number of flights may be higher, as some military flights do not appear on public flight-tracking websites, according to air traffic control communications.

The C-17s flew to Puerto Rico from bases in New Mexico, Illinois, Vermont, Florida, Arizona, Utah, Washington State and Japan. It was unclear how many troops or other equipment were transported aboard those flights. Defense officials declined to comment.

The United States Central Command has said that some 15,000 troops are already deployed in the Caribbean, one of the country’s largest naval deployments in recent years. On Monday, Mr. Trump called it a “massive armada” and said that he was planning action on land in Venezuela “soon.”

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier on Tuesday that the United States has also recently moved special-operations aircraft to the Caribbean.

Mr. Trump in August secretly signed a directive to the Pentagon to begin using military force against certain Latin American drug cartels that his administration has deemed terrorist organizations. Since then, more than 100 people have been killed in a series of more than two dozen boat strikes.

Legal and military experts have raised questions about the legality of the administration’s military campaign. Congress has not authorized the strikes, nor has it declared a war on Venezuela.

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