In a region that styles itself a “Zone of Peace,” the Caribbean now wakes up to videos of boats being blown out of the water – grainy clips edited like a video game, pushed for ratings on cable news and fed into the endless scroll of social media.
In one of those segments, Rachel Maddow walks viewers through something that should stop every Caribbean government, every law-trained leader, in their tracks. She explains that the Trump administration’s sudden “war” with Venezuela appears to have been reverse-engineered from a domestic deportation scheme: they wanted to use the Alien Enemies Act to expel people from the United States who were not otherwise deportable; that statute requires a state of war; so a “war with Venezuela” was declared, and only then did they scramble to invent a justification about drugs on the high seas.[source]
While that legal fiction plays out in Washington, U.S. forces are firing on small boats in Caribbean waters – some not even confirmed to be carrying drugs, not aimed toward U.S. shores, not pursued with the usual Coast Guard process of interdiction, seizure, arrest and trial. Instead, people are being killed at sea under an improvised “war power” whose origin story sounds like a law school exam gone mad.
The Pardon That Exposes the Hypocrisy
On the very same day that this manufactured war is sold as a righteous stand against narco-trafficking, Donald Trump signs a full pardon for Juan Orlando Hernández, the former president of Honduras who was convicted in U.S. federal court of conspiring to import roughly 400 tons of cocaine into the United States and running his country as a “narco-state.”[source] Other reporting notes that Hernández had been sentenced to 45 years in prison for those crimes before being freed by Trump’s signature.[source]
For years, U.S. prosecutors laid out how Hernández and his allies turned Honduras into a corridor for cocaine, while publicly posing as tough-on-crime partners of Washington.[source] Now, in a single act of clemency, the supposed architect of a brutal Caribbean “war on drugs” chooses to free one of the most notorious political traffickers of the era.
That is not a minor contradiction; it is the tell. It shows that these boat bombings are not about principle. They are about power, optics and distraction.


