WASHINGTON (Reuters) — The United States today formally designated Venezuela’s Cartel de los Soles as a foreign terrorist organization, layering additional terrorism-related sanctions on the group it has said includes President Nicolas Maduro and other high-ranking officials.
Venezuela’s government rejected what it called a “ridiculous” U.S. plan to designate the “non-existent” group.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said this month the U.S. would designate Cartel de los Soles, or Cartel of the Suns, as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO) for the network’s alleged role in importing illegal drugs into the U.S.
Maduro faces escalating pressure from President Donald Trump’s U.S. military buildup in the Caribbean, raising concerns that the U.S. may seek to use the designation to justify military action. Sanctions experts, however, have said the statute for the designation does not authorize such a move.
The U.S. for months has waged a campaign of deadly strikes against suspected drug trafficking boats off the Venezuelan coast and the Pacific coast of Latin America.
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the designation would bring “a whole bunch of new options to the United States,” in excerpts released on Thursday from an interview with One America News.
U.S. officials have accused Cartel de los Soles of working with the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, which Washington also ties to Maduro and previously designated an FTO, to send illegal narcotics to the U.S.
Maduro says US seeking regime change
Maduro and his government have always denied any involvement in crime and have accused the U.S. of seeking regime change out of a desire to control Venezuela’s vast oil reserves. Trump has said repeatedly he is not pursuing regime change in Venezuela.
“Venezuela categorically, firmly, and absolutely rejects the new and ridiculous fabrication by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of State, Marco Rubio, which designates the non-existent Cartel de los Soles as a terrorist organization,” said Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil on his Telegram account.
The measure, Gil added, revives “an infamous and vile lie to justify an illegitimate and illegal intervention against Venezuela, under the classic U.S. regime-change format. This new maneuver will meet the same fate as previous and recurring aggressions against our country: failure.”
Reuters reported on Saturday that the U.S. is poised to launch a new phase of Venezuela-related operations in the coming days, without determining the exact timing or scope of the new operations, nor whether Trump had made a final decision to act.
The Treasury Department in July designated Cartel de los Soles, a reference to the sun insignia worn by Venezuelan generals, as a “Specially Designated Global Terrorist,” which froze any of its U.S. assets and generally barred Americans from dealing with it.
InSight Crime, a foundation that analyzes organized crime, said in August that it was an “oversimplification” to say Maduro heads the cartel, saying that it “is more accurately described as a system of corruption wherein military and political officials profit by working with drug traffickers.”
“As head of state overseeing the armed forces in a civil-military regime, is he in on it or at least aware of official military complicity with cocaine traffickers? Very likely,” said Will Freeman, a fellow for Latin American studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. “But does that mean he is directing its movements and coordinating the drug flows? We have never had the information publicly to say.”
Justifying military action?
A former senior Treasury Department official said while the designation could send a significant message to the public and the market to stay away from the cartel, it has never been suggested that the policy purpose of an FTO designation could be overlaid with the use of military tools.
“I sat in a number of meetings with various agencies, and never had it been suggested that by designating an entity as an FTO it would … meet the standard for military action,” the former official said.
The addition of the FTO listing, considered Washington’s strictest terrorism designation, adds greater criminal liability for those who provide material support to the group, said Peter Harrell, an international economics official in the Biden administration.
By REUTERS
Reporting by Daphne Psaledakis, additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle Editing by Rod Nickel
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