Times of Suriname Logo
Times of Suriname Logo

Engels

US jets tracked circling Gulf of Venezuela as tensions mount

VENEZUELA - Two US fighter jets were tracked circling the Gulf of Venezuela on Tuesday as tensions continue to escalate between the two countries.

Times of Suriname

The F/A-18 Super Hornets appeared on flight tracking sites near Maracaibo, Venezuela's second-largest city, at around 13:00 (17:00 GMT), before circling the gulf for about 40 minutes. A US defence official told the Associated Press the F/A-18 jets had conducted a "routine training flight" in the area. The incident comes amid a wave of US strikes against boats in the Caribbean Sea, which the White House said were trafficking drugs to the US from Venezuela. Experts have raised questions over the legality of the strikes, which have killed more than 80 people.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has accused the US of using the strikes to destabilise the country and oust him from power. In an interview conducted with Politico the day before the jets approached Venezuela's coastline, Trump declared that Maduro's days in power were "numbered", and declined to comment on whether US troops could be deployed to the country.

A separate jet, an EA-18G Growler, also appeared just before the F/A-18s on the tracking site FlightRadar24. Data shows the jet flew loops just north of Venezuela's coast. They are the latest in a number of unusual US air force activities that have been tracked since September. B-52 Stratofortress and B-1 Lancer bombers previously flew up to and along the Venezuelan coast.

But the F/A-18s, which are capable of engaging targets both on the ground and in the air, appear to be the first to approach the Venezuelan coastline so publicly in recent months. The F/A-18s came within 20 nautical miles of the coastline, flight tracking data showed, but the US official said the jets remained in international airspace.

Neither the F/A-18s or the Growler showed a point of origin or a destination on FlightRadar24, and all three aircraft only turned on their transponders when they arrived near the Venezuelan coastline. Justin Crump, head of the risk consultancy Sibylline, suggested the move was intended to "support the administration's signalling and put pressure on the [Venezuelan] leadership".

The F/A-18s - which operated under the callsigns RHINO11 and RHINO12 - flew six loops up and down the Gulf of Venezuela. Meanwhile, the Growler jet - flying under the codename GRIZZLY2 - also flew circles along the coast. (BBC)

Gerelateerde Artikelen

Buitenland

Pinguïns op Antarctica lijken vanwege klimaatverandering eerder te broeden

ANTARCTICA - Pinguïns op Antarctica hebben hun broedseizoen vervroegd, blijkt uit een tien jaar durend onderzoek van de University of Oxford en Oxford...

VOETBAL

Robinhood wint strijd van Notch in U-20 klasse

In de U-20-klasse van de Surinaamse Voetbalbond won Robinhood met een belangrijke overwinning tegen Notch.

Engels

Almost half of Kyiv without heat, power, after Russian attack

UKRAINE - An overnight Russian aerial attack left thousands of residential buildings in Kyiv without...

Binnenland

Minstens 40 vrouwen sterven jaarlijks als gevolg van baarmoederhalskanker

PARAMARIBO – Baarmoederhalskanker blijft één van de belangrijkste doodsoorzaken onder vrouwen in Suriname. In januari,...

Buitenland

Spaanse minister gaat niet uit van sabotage als oorzaak treinramp

SPANJE - De Spaanse autoriteiten gaan na de dodelijke treinramp van afgelopen zondag niet uit van sabotage.

US jets tracked circling Gulf of Venezuela as tensions mount