Bipartisan Support Ramps Up On Narco Campaign
Congress is moving to put hard oversight on the Trump administration’s expanding counter-narco strike campaign in the southern Caribbean, and the push is coming from both parties. Senate Armed Services Committee leaders Sen. Roger Wicker (R-MS) and Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI) issued a joint statement calling for “vigorous oversight” of recent maritime strikes. House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mike Rogers (R-AL) and Ranking Member Adam Smith (D-WA) followed with their own bipartisan pledge to demand a full accounting from the Pentagon.
The flash point is a Washington Post investigation published on November 29. The Post, citing unnamed officials and documents, alleged that Secretary of War Pete Hegseth gave a verbal order during a September 2 strike on a suspected drug-smuggling vessel to “kill everybody,” including survivors in the water. Hegseth has publicly denied issuing any unlawful order and called the reporting false. The Department of Defense says the strikes are lawful and aimed at vessels tied to U.S.-designated narco-terror networks, but the Post report and outside legal experts argue that a follow-on strike on clearly combat-ineffective survivors, if confirmed, would raise serious law-of-armed-conflict issues. That disputed sequence is now under review inside DoD and on Capitol Hill.
This oversight wave is not Congress trying to shut the mission down. It is Congress saying that even an aggressive counter-cartel fight needs clear authorities, clean target folders, and documented safeguards. Trump campaigned on taking the gloves off against cartels and their maritime facilitators. Operation Southern Spear, unveiled by Hegseth in mid-November, is the operational expression of that promise. Since early September, U.S. forces have reportedly conducted at least 20 strikes on suspected smuggling boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific, with reported deaths around 80, according to U.S. officials and multiple media investigations. Supporters argue the campaign is finally imposing real costs on transnational networks. Critics question whether wartime targeting standards are being applied to what is usually a law-enforcement problem.
For operators, the stakes are simple. If the legal lane is solid, oversight helps protect the force and keeps pressure on the networks. If the lane is muddy, the people on the trigger end are the ones left exposed later. Expect closed-door briefings soon. If DoD can show sound authorities, reliable intelligence, and disciplined ROE, Congress may back the mission with tighter clarity. If not, lawmakers have plenty of ways to narrow the playbook. Either way, the cartels are on notice, and so is the Pentagon.
Maduro Cruises Caracas Behind Blacked-Out Glass
Nicolás Maduro’s latest “nothing to see here” video says more about his insecurities than his confidence. He films himself cruising Caracas to prove he is calm in the face of a U.S. carrier strike group offshore and a multimillion‑dollar bounty on his head, but he does it from behind side glass tinted so dark you can barely see the man who is supposedly unafraid.
The optics are almost funny. Maduro’s message is that Venezuela is normal and its leader is accessible, yet the vehicle looks more like an armored vault on wheels than the car of someone who’s comfortable among his own citizens. Ultra‑dark tint is not a fashion statement in this context; it is armor you can see. It signals concerns about snipers, cameras, and anyone getting a clean look at who is actually in the car. When your whole information operation is “I am not scared,” choosing a rolling bunker for your set piece undercuts the message.
Maduro is pushing this content while U.S. naval aviation is flying patterns within reach of Venezuelan airspace and while Washington keeps a standing reward for information leading to his arrest on narcotics charges. In that environment, leaders who genuinely feel secure usually lean into controlled openness, carefully staged meet-and-greets, visits with supporters, or at least clear glass to show they are personally present. Maduro instead opts for a brief, tightly framed clip and windows so dark that an average Caracas cop would probably ticket a normal driver on sight.
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For Venezuelans watching inside the country, the contrast is sharp. Most people are dealing with economic collapse, unreliable power, and rising security problems. Their president answers by recording a quick drive‑by in a heavily tinted vehicle, telling them everything is fine while physically shielding himself from the same streets he claims are safe. The symbolism is hard to miss: maximum opacity between ruler and ruled.
For the U.S. and regional military planners, the video is just noise, but it’s also free intelligence on how Nicolás wants to be seen. Maduro clearly feels the need to project personal toughness in the face of foreign pressure, yet his own security protocols betray how seriously he is taking the threat environment. The more he insists there is nothing to worry about from behind double‑dark glass, the more he confirms he is, in fact, deeply rattled.
Venezuela President Maduro driving in Caracas, as one third of the US Navy is stationed in the Caribbean & a $50M bounty over his head. pic.twitter.com/X9O6kytkue
— MenchOsint (@MenchOsint) November 28, 2025
NYPD Clears Roadways After ICE Protest Escalates
New York City saw a tense anti-ICE protest Saturday, November 29, outside the federal complex at 26 Federal Plaza in Lower Manhattan. The crowd formed after reports that ICE agents were staging in the area and moving detainees through the building’s federal parking garage. Several hundred protesters gathered around the plaza and nearby streets, chanting against deportations and trying to block vehicle access to the garage and surrounding lanes.
According to the NYPD, the demonstration escalated when a subset of the crowd pushed past metal barricades and spilled into the roadway. Witnesses and police said objects were thrown at law-enforcement vehicles, including trash, barricades, and large planters. Officers in riot gear moved in to clear the street and reopen access points to the federal facility. Police said multiple people were arrested on charges including disorderly conduct and obstructing government administration. No serious injuries were reported, though videos and on-scene accounts showed pushing, shouting, and a fast-moving scramble as officers drove the crowd back to the sidewalks.
NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said the department supports lawful protest but will not tolerate violence or attempts to shut down federal buildings. She also criticized the way federal teams moved personnel and vehicles through a dense urban area, arguing that sudden, high-visibility ICE activity can raise risk for city officers, federal agents, and bystanders. Tisch later said she relayed those concerns to senior federal officials and urged better coordination to prevent repeat flashpoints.
The clash comes amid broader friction over the Trump administration’s stepped-up immigration enforcement and the role 26 Federal Plaza plays in New York. Activists and some local officials claim ICE uses parts of the building as a holding site tied to immigration court check-ins. DHS and ICE deny running an unlawful detention center there, describing the site as a lawful processing and transport hub connected to federal court and removal operations. Regardless of where you land on policy, Federal Plaza has become a repeat pressure point whenever ICE activity spikes in the city.
The line is simple. Americans have the right to protest federal policy, including immigration policy. That right is non-negotiable. What is not protected is blocking roads, trapping vehicles, or throwing heavy objects at law enforcement. When a crowd crosses that boundary, NYPD has a duty to restore order so lawful federal operations can continue and so a protest does not turn into a free-for-all. Saturday’s scene shows how fast this issue can jump from politics to street-level riot.
🚨 CHAOS IN NYC: Anti-ICE communist mobs are now BRAWLING with NYPD outside a federal building, trying to stop deportations.
These treasonous thugs just declared war on law and order. Crush them. Arrest every single one!pic.twitter.com/evYOeoH6V6
— Gunther Eagleman™ (@GuntherEagleman) November 29, 2025
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