
US deploys 900 troops to Venezuela earthquake zone as death toll nears 2,000
More than 900 American military personnel are inside Venezuela assisting with search-and-rescue and logistics after twin earthquakes, marking a dramatic shift in bilateral relations.
Twin earthquakes of magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 struck northern Venezuela last Wednesday, toppling buildings and trapping thousands beneath rubble. Venezuelan authorities reported a death toll approaching 2,000, with the figure continuing to rise as search operations proceed.
The United States has established a substantial military presence in and around the country to support relief efforts, according to General Francis Donovan, commander of US Southern Command. More than 900 American service members are operating inside Venezuela, with a further 800 positioned at Caribbean logistics hubs in Puerto Rico and Curaçao. US forces have participated in search-and-rescue missions, helped reopen the main airport, and mobilised air and naval assets to facilitate the arrival of humanitarian aid. At least four or five MQ-9 Reaper drones are flying over Venezuelan territory, feeding intelligence to a fusion cell in Miami that is assisting local authorities in identifying damaged infrastructure and open routes.
The deployment marks a sharp reversal from the US military’s 3 January raid that captured then-president Nicolás Maduro and flew him to New York to face drug-trafficking charges. Since the earthquakes, Washington has described “total compliance” from the interim authorities led by Delcy Rodríguez, who was installed by Venezuela’s Supreme Court. A State Department official said every US request had been immediately granted, and noted an outpouring of public support for American personnel on the ground. The US has also mobilised $150 million in humanitarian relief and deployed a Disaster Assistance Response Team with urban search-and-rescue specialists.
Venezuelan government agencies have faced criticism from residents and local media for failing to deploy heavy equipment and specialised teams quickly enough, leaving families to dig with their hands in the crucial first days. General Donovan acknowledged that decades of mismanagement had degraded national infrastructure, complicating the response. The US military has stated it is not preparing for a long-term ground mission and will withdraw once relief operations conclude. The broader American assistance effort is being led by the State Department, and no timeline has been set for the military’s departure.
| Arab Levant-Maghreb press | +0.80 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Iranian & allied press | −0.70 | critical |
Jordanian rescue teams pull a child from the rubble in Venezuela, proving that true solidarity comes from the Arab world, not from Western powers.
The narrative focuses on the individual rescue and the heroism of the rescuers, creating an emotional story that overshadows the US military presence and makes it a secondary detail.
The deployment of over 900 US military personnel for relief operations is not mentioned, nor is the US role in the earthquake response.
The US troop deployment to Venezuela is yet another proof of Washington's imperialist arrogance, exploiting a natural disaster to impose its hegemony.
The discourse links the event to a long history of US interventions in Latin America, using language of threat and suspicion to delegitimize the humanitarian mission as a cover for military aims.
The humanitarian nature of the mission and the fact that the Venezuelan government accepted US aid are not acknowledged; any details about earthquake victims are omitted.
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