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Two military fighter jets, seen from the front, taxi side-by-side on a runway with a grass-covered hill in the background.

Marine Corps F-35B Lightning II fighters taxi down the runway at Cold Bay Airfield in Alaska on Aug. 18, 2025. (Gracelyn Hess/U.S. Air Force)

WASHINGTON (Tribune News Service) — The United States will deploy stealth fighter jets to the Caribbean, according to a government official, after two Venezuelan military aircraft flew over an American naval vessel in the area, reflecting rising tensions between the two adversaries.

Venezuela’s fly-by on Thursday followed a U.S. strike on a speedboat purportedly carrying drugs from the country. “This highly provocative move was designed to interfere with our counter-narcotics operations,” the Pentagon said. It said the “cartel” running Venezuela is “strongly advised” not to interfere with any other operations by the U.S.

Ten Marine Corps F-35s will be dispatched to an air base in Puerto Rico, the U.S. official said Friday, to bolster Washington’s fight against illegal narcotics. The deployment was first reported by Reuters.

The Pentagon didn’t offer any further information on Thursday’s incident, such as how close the jets got to the U.S. ship or where exactly the vessel was located at the time. Venezuela’s information ministry didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment. CBS News said the planes were armed F-16 fighter jets.

On Tuesday, the U.S. struck what it described as a drug-smuggling vessel, killing all 11 people aboard in a move that drew criticism at home and abroad over the apparent use of lethal force on civilians.

Washington’s decision to send several ships carrying 4,000 sailors and Marines to the region has prompted speculation that President Donald Trump — who has vowed not to involve the U.S. in more foreign entanglements — may be seeking to push Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro from power. Earlier Thursday, the socialist strongman went on state television and called on all military reservists and more than 10 million militia members to mobilize to their local communal offices.

The fly-by also coincided with Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s visit to Ecuador on a trip aimed at rallying support for the U.S. pressure campaign. Rubio said the U.S. was prepared for more such strikes against Venezuela and signaled that the Trump administration was willing to take even more aggressive action.

“This time we’re not just going to hunt for drug dealers or their little fast boats and say, ‘Let’s try to arrest them,’ ” Rubio told reporters at a briefing. “The president has said he wants to wage war on these groups because they’ve been waging war on us for 30 years and no one has responded.”

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Rubio have defended the U.S. strike and warned that more could follow, saying the U.S. government aimed to send a message to drug traffickers.

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