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US Carrier Group Heading to Caribbean

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  • Top_Gun
    replied
    Originally posted by PT737SWA
    http://www.wtopnews.com/index.php?nid=104&sid=754611

    The deployment by the USS George Washington group will also focus on threats such as drug and human trafficking,
    .
    this is a joke, if they want to stop the drugs and elegals, put the carrier in the Rio Grande River to protect against all of the above coming in from Mexico.....

    My brother used to be a US Customs Agent down in Fla, what he's told me proves they aren't trying to fight drugs or people coming into FLA..... He go so fed up he quit

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  • DAL767-400ER
    replied
    Of course Chavez has to whine again, but that's no surprise. If anything, Fidel should be concerned .

    Leave a comment:


  • Cam
    replied
    many Latin American nations are concerned because the U.S. has threatened since 2002 to withdraw military aid from governments that do not sign an agreement pledging not to turn American citizens over to the International Criminal Court.
    I know this has something to do with the current US Foreign policy in Iraq, but what do vacationing tourists have to do with it? They are not the ones overseas at war.

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  • Crunk415balla
    replied
    He added: "There's no other symbol of American power like the carrier."
    More or less, I agree with that.

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  • FlyingPhotog
    started a topic US Carrier Group Heading to Caribbean

    US Carrier Group Heading to Caribbean



    ABOARD THE USS GEORGE WASHINGTON (AP) - An aircraft carrier strike group moved into the Caribbean this week to begin two months of naval exercises in what the U.S. military hopes will be a show of its commitment to the region.

    The deployment by the USS George Washington group will also focus on threats such as drug and human trafficking, according to the Miami-based U.S. Southern Command, which oversees military activities in Latin America.

    Brig. Gen. Kenneth J. Glueck Jr., the Southern Command's chief of staff, called the tour an "opportunity for us to touch base with our partner countries."

    He added: "There's no other symbol of American power like the carrier."

    Members of the strike group, led by the nearly 1,100-foot long Nimitz-class carrier, made their first port stops Monday and Tuesday. The USS Stout, a destroyer, stopped in Curacao, while the USS Underwood, a frigate, docked in Cartagena, Colombia.

    The military has dismissed allegations by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez that it is planning an invasion of his country. But analysts say the show of force sends a signal to Chavez and other Latin American leaders about U.S. strength.

    Although the group has no plans to dock in Venezuela, the U.S. ambassador in Caracas met Sunday with the head of the Southern Command, Gen. Bantz Craddock, aboard the George Washington.

    Southern Command leaders were conducting a routine quarterly meeting, but the high interest from Venezuela in the deployment prompted the diplomatic participation, according to Southern Command Spokesman Jose Ruiz.

    The carrier will arrive at its first stop in St. Maarten on Friday. Other countries on the tour include Honduras, Nicaragua, Jamaica, Trinidad Tobago, Curacao, Aruba and St. Kitts.

    Daniel Erikson, a Caribbean analyst for the Inter-American Dialogue policy institute, said many Latin American nations are concerned because the U.S. has threatened since 2002 to withdraw military aid from governments that do not sign an agreement pledging not to turn American citizens over to the International Criminal Court.

    A number of Caribbean countries have not signed the waiver.
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