US Navy F/A-18 jets flew over the Gulf of Venezuela, staying in international airspace. The flight comes amid a major US military buildup and ongoing strikes on drug-smuggling boats.

US jets fly near Venezuela in show of pressure as Trump steps up campaign against Maduro.
The US military flew a pair of Navy F/A-18 fighter jets over the Gulf of Venezuela on Tuesday, marking what appears to be the closest American warplanes have come to the country’s airspace since President Donald Trump launched his pressure campaign against Nicolas Maduro, the Associated Press reported.
Public flight-tracking websites showed the jets circling over the narrow gulf — a body of water bordered by Venezuela and stretching only about 150 miles across — for more than 30 minutes.
A US defense official confirmed the aircraft were conducting a routine training flight, adding that they remained in international airspace. The official, speaking anonymously, would not say whether the jets were armed, but insisted the flight was not meant to be provocative, according to the Associated Press.
VENEZUELAESTADOS
ZULIA y FALCN
NUEVA VIOLACIN del ESPACIO AREO de VENEZUELA
Dos2F18 Super Hornet de la Marina de EE.UUsobrevolando el golfo de Venezuelamuy cerca de Maracaibo y Punto Fijo.
MADUROTIENEMIEDO pic.twitter.com/qSXjsOwF0t— abogadosvenezuela (@abogadosvenezu1) December 9, 2025
The US has earlier sent B-52 and B-1 bombers to the region, but those aircraft stayed farther offshore. Tuesday’s flight brought American military planes closer to Venezuelan territory than at any point in recent years.
The move comes as the US builds its largest regional military presence in decades and continues a controversial campaign of lethal strikes on suspected drug-smuggling boats across the Caribbean and eastern Pacific.
Since early September, at least 87 people have been killed in 22 strikes, including two survivors hit by a follow-up strike — an incident now drawing scrutiny from lawmakers.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth briefed congressional leaders on Tuesday alongside Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as lawmakers demanded unedited footage of the boat attacks. Hegseth said he had not yet decided whether to release the videos.
Trump has defended the military actions as essential to combating cartels, saying the US is engaged in an armed conflict with drug traffickers and warning that land attacks are coming soon, though he has offered no specifics.
Flightradar24 said the F/A-18s were the most-tracked aircraft on its platform Tuesday as users watched the jets fly near Venezuelan waters in real time.
- Ends
With inputs from Associated Press
Published By:
Aashish Vashistha
Published On:
Dec 10, 2025

2 hours ago

