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Troops Tied to Trump’s Caribbean Drug-Interdiction Surge to be Housed at St. Croix “Man Camp”

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Ernice Gilbert (The Virgin Islands Consortium) writes, “St. Croix’s PHRT “Man Camp” now hosts U.S. troops in Trump’s expanded Caribbean anti-drug surge, as Marines, Navy, and Air Force units join a 4,500-person regional mission targeting cartels tied to Venezuela and narcotics routes into the U.S.” [Many thanks to Michael Connors for bringing this item to our attention. Needless to say, this situation will affect other nearby islands, such as the other Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico… Will it be for better or worse?] Read full article at The VI Consortium.

U.S. military personnel assigned to President Donald Trump’s stepped-up drug-interdiction mission in the Caribbean are set to use the PHRT Village—better known locally as the “Man Camp”—as housing on St. Croix, according to people with knowledge of the arrangements. The stateside call that kicked off the local preparations came from the U.S. Air Force a few weeks ago, the sources said, and the St. Croix lodging request is part of a broader push to tighten maritime interdictions across the region.

Behind the scenes, planners described a joint footprint that includes Marines, Navy and Air Force elements. Surface vessels will handle maritime stops while surveillance aircraft circle and direct intercepts at sea. The deployment envisions about 4,500 troops spread around the Caribbean, with a U.S. submarine operating near Trinidad and Tobago, which is very close to Venezuela. Additional staging is likely in Puerto Rico, bringing to bear a regional show-of-force posture to pressure Venezuela.

Last week, Governor Albert Bryan Jr. voiced support for the deployment of American naval vessels to the southern Caribbean, an operation aimed at curbing the flow of narcotics from South America, particularly Venezuela. “If we could stop this flow of drugs to our shores, why wouldn’t we be for that?” he said. Bryan explained that heightened law enforcement along the U.S. southern border has forced traffickers to rely more heavily on Caribbean routes. “Along with the cocaine comes a lot of bad actors, murder and a lot of things we don’t want,” he noted. “So I am for it.” [.. .]

The stepped-up activity on St. Croix has created some confusion with an unrelated visit by Kentucky Air National Guard personnel. People with knowledge of the plans said that unit is on a separate training mission — which ends on Sept. 4 — and not part of the interdiction surge.

Those familiar with the St. Croix deployment said the local mission is tightly focused on intercepting narcotics shipments traveling by boat toward the United States. They added that the maritime operations are also likely to encounter migrants making the journey by sea from Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and other parts of the region—an expected byproduct of the effort.

The broader policy backdrop has come into sharp relief over the past month. In mid-August, Reuters reported that the United States ordered air and naval forces—including an amphibious squadron and, in total, seven warships plus a fast-attack submarine—toward the southern Caribbean as part of a campaign aimed at Latin American drug cartels. The movements have driven up tensions with Caracas as U.S. officials publicly tied the deployments to cartel threats linked to Venezuela. [. . .]

For full article, see https://viconsortium.com/vi-exclusive/virgin-islands-troops-tied-to-trump-s-caribbean-drug-interdiction-surge-to-be-housed-at-st–croix–man-camp-

[Photo above: The USS Sampson, a U.S. Navy warship, shown during maritime operations.]

Ernice Gilbert (The Virgin Islands Consortium) writes, “St. Croix’s PHRT “Man Camp” now hosts U.S. troops in Trump’s expanded Caribbean anti-drug surge, as Marines, Navy, and Air Force units join a 4,500-person regional mission targeting cartels tied to Venezuela and narcotics routes into the U.S.” [Many thanks to Michael Connors for bringing this item to