Top Democrat backs US intel on narco-trafficking strikes, faults Biden for ‘not going far enough’ on Maduro

Democrats defend U.S. intel behind strikes near Venezuela but say Biden missed a chance to rally allies against Maduro after the nation’s contested 2024 election.

"The final comment I’ll make is just that nothing in the legal opinion even mentions Venezuela," said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, War Secretary Pete Hegseth and senior Pentagon lawyers led the closed-door briefing for congressional leaders and the chairs and ranking members of the Intelligence, Armed Services and Foreign Affairs committees.

Lawmakers have complained for days about being left in the dark as the Pentagon launched multiple maritime strikes without first consulting Congress. Officials declined to discuss the intended scope or duration of the campaign and provided few details about who was killed or what evidence tied the targets to narcotics trafficking.

"Lots of mistakes could get made," said Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., the top Democrat on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. "But, again, they are applying the eyes and ears of our intelligence community to these boats. I don’t worry too much that there will be a strike on a fishing boat or a pleasure boat, but that’s always possible."

Himes said the administration described "the process by which these boats are selected" but did not share photographs or the identities of those killed.

House Speaker Mike Johnson also backed the intelligence underpinning the operation.

"We have exquisite intelligence about these strikes on these vessels," Johnson said. "We know the contents of the boats. We know the personnel almost to a person."

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A series of narco-trafficking strikes over the past few months has killed 63.  (X.com/SecWar)

"I frankly think the Biden administration didn’t go far enough after the Venezuelan people voted overwhelmingly to get rid of Maduro," Warner said. "We missed a huge opportunity when Venezuelans — in numbers probably in the mid-sixties percent — came out against Maduro, even under threat of violence. The fact that we didn’t rally the region at that point was, in retrospect, a huge mistake."

After the July 2024 vote, the Biden administration imposed sanctions on high-level Maduro officials but stopped short of reimposing broad restrictions on Venezuela’s oil sector, a move officials said could have driven up global fuel prices and worsened migration pressures.

By contrast, the Trump administration has taken a harder line. It reimposed sweeping sanctions on Maduro during Trump’s first term and has since increased pressure on the South American strongman in his second. The Justice Department has offered a $50 million bounty for information leading to Maduro’s arrest, and officials have not ruled out whether the current strikes could be intended to pressure him to step aside.

Asked in a CBS interview over the weekend whether Maduro’s days were numbered, Trump said, "I would say yeah. I think so."

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Pressed on whether the U.S. would go to war with Venezuela, he added, "I doubt it. I don’t think so."

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/mark-warner-us-intel-narco-trafficking-strikes-faults-biden-maduro