Even Washington’s European Vassal States Are Now Denouncing Trump’s Extrajudicial Killings on the High Seas

The Trump administration’s war (of pretext) against Latin America’s drug cartels is further isolating the US on the world stage. 

I started writing this post yesterday (as in Thursday) afternoon, GMT+1. However, just after I called it a night, when the article was more or less finished, the United States’ Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced Operation Southern Spear, a mission ostensibly to defend the US homeland from drug trafficking organisations throughout the Western hemisphere.

The key quote: “The Western Hemisphere is America’s neighborhood – and we will protect it.”

In other words, this military operation, bearing the name “Southern Spear” appears to be aimed at the entirety of the US’ southern “neighbourhood”, from Mexico’s Rio Bravo to the southern tip of Tierra de Fuego, where the US is reportedly developing a “joint” military base with Argentina’s Milei government (which is opposed by 71.5% of the local population).

For the moment, there is little information about Operation Southern Spear beyond Hegseth’s 60-word tweet. As NC reader Ben Panga pointed out on yesterday’s links page, Operation Southern Spear was actually originally announced on January 27 — almost ten months ago — by US Southern Command. A press release by the US Fourth Fleet described it as “the latest development in operationizing robotic and autonomous systems” in the naval theatre:

U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command/U.S. 4th Fleet is advancing the Navy’s Hybrid Fleet Campaign through Operation Southern Spear, which will start later this month in U.S. Southern Command Area of Responsibility (USSOUTHCOM AOR) and at U.S. 4th Fleet Headquarters at Naval Station Mayport.

“Southern Spear will operationalize a heterogeneous mix of Robotic and Autonomous Systems (RAS) to support the detection and monitoring of illicit trafficking while learning lessons for other theaters,” said Cmdr. Foster Edwards, 4th Fleet’s Hybrid Fleet Director. “Southern Spear will continue our (4th Fleet’s) move away from short-duration experimentation into long-duration operations that will help develop critical techniques and procedures in integrating RAS into the maritime environment.”

Specifically, Operation Southern Spear will deploy long-dwell robotic surface vessels, small robotic interceptor boats, and vertical take-off and landing robotic air vessels to the USSOUTHCOM AOR. 4th Fleet will operationalize these unmanned systems through integration with U.S. Coast Guard cutters at sea and operations centers at 4th Fleet and Joint Interagency Task Force South. Southern Spear’s results will help determine combinations of unmanned vehicles and manned forces needed to provide coordinated maritime domain awareness and conduct counternarcotics operations.

In other words, as Ben Panga notes, it seems that “Venezuela is about to be a proof-of-concept / show-of-force / testing-ground for US drone war capabilities.”

For now, there’s not much else to report on Operation Southern Spear, apart from the fact that it coincides with the arrival in the region of the US’ largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald Ford, where it joins other naval vessels, B-1 bombers and thousand of troops to intimidate — and quite possibly attack — Venezuela.

It also coincides with the release by the House Committee of thousands of documents from the Jeffrey Epstein estate. The first response to Hegseth’s original tweet (below) sums the situation up nicely.

Personally speaking, I rather like Alex Christoforou’s alternative name for the military operation: “Operation How to Lose the Midterm Elections”.

Now for the original post…

Thanks to its near-daily strikes against small boats in the Caribbean and the Eastern Pacific, Washington is further alienating itself on the world stage. Even the United States’ staunchest ally, the United Kingdom, which covertly facilitated Israel’s genocide in Gaza, wants nothing to do with the Trump administration’s campaign of extrajudicial killings on the high seas.

CNN reported on Tuesday that London has stopped sharing intelligence with Washington about vessels suspected of drug trafficking in the Caribbean because it does not want to be complicit in the US military attacks, which it considers illegal:

The UK’s decision marks a significant break from its closest ally and intelligence sharing partner and underscores the growing skepticism over the legality of the US military’s campaign around Latin America.

For years, the UK, which controls a number of territories in the Caribbean where it bases intelligence assets, has helped the US locate vessels suspected of carrying drugs so that the US Coast Guard could interdict them, the sources said. That meant the ships would be stopped, boarded, its crew detained, and drugs seized.

The intelligence was typically sent to Joint Interagency Task Force South, a task force stationed in Florida that includes representatives from a number of partner nations and works to reduce the illicit drug trade.

But shortly after the US began launching lethal strikes against the boats in September, however, the UK grew concerned that the US might use intelligence provided by the British to select targets. British officials believe the US military strikes, which have killed 76 people, violate international law, the sources said. The intelligence pause began over a month ago, they said.

The UN’s human rights chief, Volker Türk, said last month that the strikes violate international law and amount to “extrajudicial killing.” The UK agrees with that assessment, the sources told CNN.

Another key NATO ally, France, has publicly criticized the boat strikes, describing them as a “violation of international law.” At a G7 summit of foreign ministers in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said:

“We have observed with concern the military operations in the Caribbean region, because they violate international law and because France has a presence in this region through its overseas territories, where more than a million of our compatriots reside… They could therefore be affected by the instability caused by any escalation, which we obviously want to avoid.”

Canada is also distancing itself from the US’ escalatory actions in the region. In a response to CBC News on Oct. 31, a Global Affairs spokesperson said the Canadian military has had no involvement in the US military operations in the Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific.

Those operations included strikes against nine boats in the Eastern Pacific, seven in the Caribbean and two in the SOUTHCOM area, reportedly resulting in the deaths of 75 people. There have so far been three survivors, all of whom were repatriated to their respective countries since the US justice system had no case against them.

It is perfectly possible that European countries are publicly objecting to the US’ military actions as a way of pressuring Trump administration on Ukraine. After all, it took over a year for many European governments to raise a whiff of protest against Israel’s genocide in Gaza, and some such as Germany and the UK continue to facilitate Israeli war crimes.

In other words, Europe’s denunciations of Trump’s boat strikes should be treated with caution. However, it is also true that the attacks in the Caribbean and the Eastern Pacific are blatant war crimes — and, as already mentioned, the chain of command could not be clearer.

“These attacks appear to be unlawful killings carried out by order of a Government, without judicial or legal process allowing due process of law,” said UN human rights experts earlier this month. “Unprovoked attacks and killings on international waters also violate international maritime laws. We have condemned and raised concerns about these attacks at sea to the United States Government.”.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s response so far has been to tell European leaders that they have no say on what is or isn’t permissible by international law while (quite rightly) highlighting their hypocrisy over arming Ukraine with nuclear-capable missiles.

The last sentence — “But when the United States positions aircraft carriers in our hemisphere where we live, somehow that’s a problem” — suggests that Rubio cannot even identfy the main source of the problem.

It is the extrajudicial killings of unknown people on boats, not the mobilisation of aircraft carriers, that European leaders are specifically objecting to. Indeed, European leaders would happily support — indeed have probably already pledged their support for — a direct US military operation against Venezuela’s Maduro government.

It’s not just European leaders who have denouced the boat strikes. According to Infobae (in Spanish), more than 50 other countriesthrough joint statements, have condemned Washington’s illegal use of force. Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had this to say:

“I can’t conclude my comments on Venezuela first without mentioning our position on the unacceptable measures adopted by the US, on the pretext of combatting drug trafficking — destroying, without trial or investigation, or indeed presenting any proof to anybody, boats that according to them are transporting drugs. That’s how countries that operate outside the law, who consider themselves above the law, behave. I’m sure this path the Trump administration has chosen with regard to Venezuela will not lead to a good place and will do further harm to the US’s reputation in the world.”      

The New Age of the Hemispheric Presidency

Washington, it seems, is long beyond caring about that. It is now in the grip of what Jose Atiles calls the “hemispheric presidency”:

Long treated as a secondary concern, including during President Donald Trump’s first term, when attention centered on China, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe, [Latin America] has returned to the forefront of US global strategy. But what is emerging is not a revival of Cold War containment or the Monroe Doctrine. It is the consolidation of a new US doctrine, one that aims to fuse emergency powers, economic warfare, and militarization into a unified hemispheric order.

This emerging doctrine is anchored in the expansion of presidential authority. It represents the full extension of the unitary executive theory or the imperial presidency into the sphere of foreign policy, an effort to normalize executive unilateralism as the organizing principle of US governance at home and abroad. Trump’s approach reveals how emergency powers techniques, such as executive orders, emergency declarations, and budgetary discretion, are being implemented as instruments of foreign policy.

This realignment is only possible because of the profound transformations generated by the War on Drugs and the War on Terror, which over the last three decades expanded the legal and institutional capacity of the US executive branch to govern through permanent emergency. What began as exceptional counterinsurgency frameworks, asset seizures, sanctions, and military authorizations without congressional approval has evolved into the standard operating logic of the US government….

The Trump administration’s foreign policy rests on a single assumption: that the president can act independently of Congress, international law, and long-standing diplomatic norms. This logic manifests through unilateral bailouts, economic and financial sanctions, and militarized interventions.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is also well versed in the vernacular. Asked how the bailout of Argentina is of benefit to Americans, he says: “of course it is good… because we are taking back Latin America through our economic leadership. There will be no bullets (NC: as long as the natives do what they are told). The whole hemisphere is coming our way.”

As this stark reality of the US’ hemispheric ambitions becomes apparent, the pushback is growing. Even in the US, the chorus of opposition, particularly among Trump’s MAGA base, is rising to any potential regime change operation in Venezuela.

A recent article in Time magazine warns that opposition groups in Venezuela, led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Corina Machado, are using “misinformation” to promote regime change. Even regular FOX News commentator General Jack Keane has cautioned about the risks of the US pursuing another regime change war.

Back in late August, just before the boat strikes began, we asked whether the US was trying to cobble together a new “coalition of the willing” for another resource war, this time against Venezuela. The answer to that question is yes, but it has done a shockingly bad job of it.

The only nations that seem to want any part of the action are small states in the region run by lackey governments that are willing (or have little choice but) to let the US use their land, sea and airspace as a launchpad for its hostile actions against Venezuela. They include El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Panama and Trinidad and Tobago.

Governments such as Milei’s in Argentina and Daniel Noboa’s in Ecuador are also firmly. In fact, Ecuador will be voting this Sunday in a referendum on whether to allow the return of foreign (as in US) military bases and the drafting of a new constitution that could grant Noboa more power.

Colombia Suspends Intelligence Sharing With US (Or Does It?)

In neighbouring Colombia, by contrast, President Gustavo Petro ordered “all levels of intelligence” within the Colombian security forces to suspend “communications and other dealings” with US security agencies. Petro said the measure would remain in effect as long as Washington continues its attacks on suspected drug-trafficking boats.

Petro was apparently emboldened to take such a drastic measure by the UK government’s announcement that it had also stopped sharing intelligence with the US regarding drug trafficking operations in the Caribbean. Another seeming factor was a photograph taken in the Oval Office showing a document with a photomontage of Nicolás Maduro and Gustavo Petro dressed in orange jumpsuits as if they were US prisoners.

Petro, now in the final year of his four-year term, initially considered recalling Colombia’s ambassador to the US for consultations, but instead chose to “suspend sending communications and other dealings with US security agencies” — a move that has sparked outrage among the political elite in Bogota as well as on Capitol Hill.

“We know of Mr. Petro’s relationship with narco-terrorist groups within Colombia,” Florida Republican Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart told NTN24 , adding that the suspension of intelligence sharing benefits drug traffickers.

Given the prominent role the CIA has played in facilitating drug trafficking all over the world, including Colombia, that is highly debatable. Also, neocon lawmakers in the US like Diaz-Balart, Marco Rubio and Lindsey Graham don’t normally have a problem associating with narco-traffickers (see below).

The Colombian government appears to have since backtracked, according to Infobae. Either that or senior members of Petro’s government are directly contradicting his orders.

Statements by Colombian Interior Minister Armando Benedetti introduced an important nuance to the debate. Benedetti asserted that cooperation between the United States and Colombia has never ceased.

“President Gustavo Petro never said that the American security agencies —FBI, DEA, HSI— are going to stop working in Colombia alongside our intelligence agencies Dipol, Dijín and CTI, and we will continue working as this Government has done against drug trafficking and crime with the United States,” he stated in a message published in X.

Colombia, as readers may recall, has been under Washington’s sway for decades, becoming the the US’ main beachhead in South America. The first left-wing president of Colombia’s 206-year history, Petro was always going to have his work cut out, especially given the conservative nature of Colombian society and the US’ influence and long-history of interventions in the country.

Nonetheless Petro has raised his voice on some of the biggest issues of our time, including Israel’s genocide in Gaza, the failure of the US-led war on drugs, the destruction of the Amazon rainforest, and now Trump’s extrajudicial killings in the Caribbean and Pacific. Here he is blasting the US government for threatening to destroy Colombia and Venezuela as a blatant diversion from the Epstein pedophilia scandal:

As we have argued for the past three years, Washington’s escalating war against the drugs cartels is essentially a war of pretext. The real motives are the same as always — to smash and grab the region’s resources; to remove left-leaning governments that seek to create a more equitable economic system; and to rebuild US strategic and military dominance over its so-called “back yard”, at the expense of its main rivals, China, Russia and the BRICS association.

But it is also a war of distraction, a Wag-the-Dog conflict. In the Hollywood movie of that name, the president is caught making advances on an underage girl inside the Oval Office less than two weeks before the election, so his spin doctors construct a fictional war in Albania to divert the public’s attention.

In this real life story, the president is protecting a pedophile ring run by a now-deceased close friend of his that, to all intents and purposes, operated as an Israeli intelligence operation. In order to divert attention from the growing scandal, in which colleagues, associates and donors of the president are almost certainly implicated, the president appears to be launching a real war against not just one country but a vast region that straddles two continents.

Reality sometimes is not just stranger than fiction, it can be a whole lot darker.

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20 comments

  1. Revenant

    Is anybody specifically and credibly (witness statements and evidence, not hearsay) alleging that Trump has slept with underage women? I am not aware they are so for me the final paragraph here oversteps the mark….

    As far as the circumstantial evidence goes, Trump likes the statuesque ladies not the gamine types.

    Reply
    1. Carolinian

      Hedges has twice now extensively quoted from the deposition of a California woman who said Trump molested her and another girl who were under Epstein’s sway. Her lawsuit has since been withdrawn and the Trump people claim it was all made up. If this happened it was back in the early 1990s. It has also now been claimed that Trump met his statuesque wife through Epstein.

      What apparently can’t be denied and was unknown to some of us is how close Trump and Epstein were up there in NYC. Epstein was not merely some acquaintance at his Mar a Lago club.

      So no he hasn’t been proven guilty and probably can’t be since even the Hedges stuff is he said/she said. But it all sure looks like a duck.

      Reply
      1. t

        His beauty pageants were not for statuesque ladies. I suppose if you ask around around, you can find some sex workers with tales to tell of well-to-do men who favor one type for public appearances but nonetheless spend a lot of their private leisure time with another type. I’ll cite the strain Grindr servers when there’s a Republican gathering in town. Massive use of a gay hookup app from an influx of Christian family values men folk (and tradwife traditions women). Grindr is a publicly traded company so they are unlikely to run around making false statements about opertions.

        Reply
      2. Safety First

        Technically, irrespective of Trump’s sexual proclivities, if he did, in fact, “know about the girls” (per latest Epstein emails), and “asked Ghislaine to stop” (recruiting them at Maralago? something along those lines), then it is just conceivably possible that he ran afoul of something called “misprision of a felony”:

        A federal law against “misprision of a felony,” under 18 U.S.C. § 4, makes it a crime to have knowledge of a federal felony and take an affirmative step to conceal it from authorities. To be convicted, a person must know that a felony was committed and actively hide the crime; mere silence or failure to report is not enough.

        The full text of the law reads:

        Whoever, having knowledge of the actual commission of a felony cognizable by a court of the United States, conceals and does not as soon as possible make known the same to some judge or other person in civil or military authority under the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both.

        I am not a criminal lawyer by trade, nor a federal prosecutor. But I do wonder if I, random schlub, were reported by Epstein to have “known about the girls”, whether I would or would not be presently begging said federal prosecutor to let me off with probation and a minimal fine.

        Parenthetically, if I know one thing about the way laws in the US work, it’s that everyone, and I mean everyone, is guilty of something, somewhere, even if they haven’t a clue of what that something might be.

        Reply
  2. The Rev Kev

    Other people have pointed out that Bill Clinton decided to attack Serbia about the same time he had a little trouble over Monica Lewinsky and that cigar. Trump’s Presidency has not really been a success so far and in some aspects the wheels are coming off. Discontent is growing in his MAGA base and former supporters like Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens and Marjorie Taylor Greene are now calling him out on his betrayal of his promises. So perhaps he thinks that if he gets a big win in Venezuela, then most of his troubles will go away in a wave of patriotism staged by the main stream media. After all, what could go wrong. He forgets that George Bush had the same mindset when he invaded Iraq – and that blew up in his face. The guys at The Duran have pointed out that he has only a short time window to act. Thanksgiving is in two weeks time and after that the run-up to Christmas. Maybe the idea is to attack Venezuela with only drones so that there are no American dead. But sooner or later, US troops will have to go in on the ground and there they will meet the Venezuelan resistance but I have no doubt that Trump will try to hide those American bodies just like George Bush did those from Iraq. But I am sure that countries like the UK, France and all the others and have decided to stay out of this entire quagmire.

    Reply
    1. Carolinian

      In his latest Substack Alastair Crooke quotes from an article that says the Israelis send their drones into southern Lebanon and uses them to actually approach and threaten people on the street (they have loudspeakers). Sounds like “Southern Spear” is another Israel into America idea that hopes to use robots to control the world.

      Of course the Lebanese could no doubt shoot down those quadcopters but then come the jets with the 2000 lb bombs.

      It’s all “we have the Maxim gun and they have not” all over again. Make the world colonialist again.

      Reply
      1. JBird4049

        Whatever happens, we have got

        The Maxim gun, and they have not.

        Ah, but what happens when they do have the Maxim or when we use it on ourselves? And it will happen. It always does.

        I am consistently surprised, and I should not be, when the fools are surprised by the blowback.

        Reply
    2. Safety First

      Sudan, not Serbia. Clinton bombed a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan around August of 1998, just before the impeachment. Claiming bioweapons (ooh, scary), and then, I think, several years later the US had to pay compensation to the factory’s owner.

      The Serbia-Kosovo thing was months after the impeachment had concluded, not to mention the 1998 midterms, and was part of a slow-motion dismemberment of the former Yugoslavia. Ironically, it was this singular act that eventually brought Putin into power and launched the sequence of events that finds the Russians fighting in Ukraine today, but that is another story.

      Reply
  3. TomDority

    “Is anybody specifically and credibly (witness statements and evidence, not hearsay) alleging that Trump has slept with underage women? ” “oversteps as too the ongoing status of Trump actually committing statutory rape but the apparent cover-up indicates Trumps willingness to overlook what he may be culpable in criminal activity.
    “However, it is also true that the attacks in the Caribbean and the Eastern Pacific are blatant war crimes — and, as already mentioned, the chain of command could not be clearer.”
    Are these not High Crimes or at least Misdemeanors from on high

    Reply
    1. lyman alpha blob

      Turning Soleimani into pink mist was a war crime too and nobody cared. If anything, those in power cheered Trump on. Nobody is going to arrest a USian president for blowing up brown people. It’s not a crime for the ‘rules based order’, it’s a rite of passage.

      Reply
  4. leaf

    Slightly unrelated but in the full video of the interview with Rubio (which we have a clip of here which reminded me), I think it’s around the 9, 10 or 11 minute time range where he just calmly says that every [air] defense system sent to Ukraine is blown up within a week of installation. And that this has been going on for 2-3 years on a constant basis. None of the reporters really has a reaction to that.

    I previously thought Martyanov was exaggerating a bit about how ineffectual Western air defense was but he seems to be more right than we know.

    Reply
  5. Victor Sciamarelli

    It seems odd that nothing was said about the fact that China is now South America’s largest trading partner and, according to Foreign Affairs, “a major source of both foreign direct investment and energy and infrastructure lending, including through its massive Belt and Road Initiative.”
    What will Trump’s threats accomplish? Most likely push SA even more towards China.
    Together with Brazil, which is the world’s 6th largest economy and the largest in SA, Chile and Peru also claim China as their largest trading partner.
    Furthermore, despite sanctions China is the largest buyer of Venezuela’s oil.
    Argentina’s largest land owner is High Luck Group, a Chinese financed oil and gas extraction company.
    And again from FA, “Meanwhile, the state-owned China Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China are among the region’s leading lenders….Venezuela is by far the biggest borrower.”
    Furthermore, “In 2000, the Chinese market accounted for less than 2 percent of Latin America’s exports, but China’s rapid growth and resulting demand drove the region’s subsequent commodities boom. Over the next eight years, trade grew at an annual rate of 31 percent [PDF]. By 2021, trade exceeded $450 billion—a figure which grew to a record $518 billion in 2024, according to Chinese state media—and some economists predict that it could exceed $700 billion by 2035.”
    Forget trade and development, let’s just blow up small boats.
    https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/china-influence-latin-america-argentina-brazil-venezuela-security-energy-bri

    Reply
  6. ISL

    “Venezuela is about to be a proof-of-concept / show-of-force / testing-ground for US drone war capabilities”

    Given the lack of braying about these US wonderwaffens (particularly after the embarrassing Ukraine performance of all other of the supposed US wonderwaffen), it is reasonable to conclude that the Navy drone warfare capabilities have been sub-nominal, especially given the positive MICC $$ feedback achieved by meeting performance metrics.

    Since the Houthis have demonstrated a reliable neutering of global hawks, A/D knowledge that presumably has diffused widely (to US foes and also “friends”), it is doubtful that these represent the “new” drones – I assume it is unmanned surface boats or Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs).

    I would refine (pun intended) the article’s main thrust to the US goal is access denial to China (/BRICs) – ironic since the resources (other than oil, which Russia will supply through Power of Siberia 2) still will need to be mostlyrefining in China – but then Bessent argues that a rare earth metals refining ecosystem [narrative] can be willed into existence in a year or two.

    Lula needs to get over his personal issues with Maduro – “We must all hang together or hang separately.” – Ben Franklin

    Reply
  7. JBird4049

    >>>Here’s Lindsey Graham and fellow neocon senators with Colombia’s Alvaro Uribe, who was listed as an “important narco-trafficker” by US intel

    It’s looking like Uribe the rat is surrounded by happy wolves. He looks distinctly uncomfortable.

    Reply
  8. David in Friday Harbor

    The level of stupidity shown by Trump, Rubio, and Hegseth is only exceeded by the failure of the “news” media to challenge them.

    The current DEA 2025 National Drug Threat Assessment (July 2025) is quite clear that neither fentanyl nor heroin, the potentially deadly drugs of abuse about which pearls are clutched and crocodile tears shed, come from anywhere other than Mexico. https://www.dea.gov/sites/default/files/2025-07/2025NationalDrugThreatAssessment.pdf

    According to the DEA report, non-prescription fentanyl is compounded in Mexico by Mexican Trans-national Criminal Organizations from precursor chemicals synthesized in China, mainly the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, which operate extensively in both Mexico and the United States. The Venezuelan Tren de Aragua is mentioned in the DEA National Threat Assessment only as a human-trafficking outfit who do minor drug distribution on the side — “Tren” is Spanish for “Train” you media morons!

    Smuggling boats are common in the Caribbean an eastern Pacific, and they may be smuggling cocaine from Colombia (84 percent of seizures in the U.S.) into Mexico from where the DEA reports that the Trans-National Criminal Organizations named above smuggle it into the U.S. The DEA also points out that currently cocaine use is mainly toxic because of the recent trend of mixing it with fentanyl.

    Those little smuggling boats clearly can’t carry enough fuel to reach the U.S. and they are just as likely smuggling petroleum products or alcoholic beverages as they are cocaine. The entire basis for U.S. aggression in the Caribbean is simply based on falsehoods contradicted by their very own DEA of the U.S. Justice Department.

    The British are quite correct to distance themselves from these American extrajudicial killings. They are murders.

    Reply
  9. Tom Stone

    “The purpose of Terrorism is to terrify”, this explains both the ongoing murder of civilians in the Pacific and Carribean and the masked kidnapping gangs of ICE.
    It is more overt than in the past, but it is the old story of “Get in line and keep your mouth shut or get hurt”.
    Which works in the short term, at a high cost.
    And when it stops working the cost increases exponentially.

    Reply
  10. Rolf

    I’ve nothing substantive to add here, and am late to the party as always (current work leaves very little time for NC during the week), but my thanks to Nick for this really excellent piece.

    Reply

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