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THE GOD-EYE VS. THE EYE OF THE STREET: St. Croix Reacts to the ‘Nose-Out’ Navy

By: JOHN McCARTHY/V.I. Free Press Staff

FREDERIKSTED — While the USS Gettysburg (CG-64) sits at the Ann E. Abramson Marine Facility with its sensors trained on the Caribbean horizon, a different kind of surveillance is happening on the ground. For the residents of St. Croix, the cruiser isn’t just a “shield”; it’s a lightning rod for a community that has seen this script before.

As part of Operation Southern Spear, the Navy’s presence is officially about “interdicting narco-terrorists,” but for many in the West End, the view from the pier looks more like a staging ground than a safeguard.

The Military ‘Gems’: A Community Divided

The reactions from “de people dem” highlight a deep rift between the strategic goals of the Pentagon and the lived reality of Crucians:

Echoes of ‘89 and the Maduro Shadow

The timing of this buildup is eerie. Just as No. 2 Michigan (a school record 21-1) looks to repeat the magic of their 1989 National Championship run—the same year Just John first landed on St. Croix—the geopolitical stakes are reaching a fever pitch.

With rumors swirling about “Maduro raids” launching from regional staging areas and the USS Stockdale currently on the front lines in Haiti, the Gettysburg’s presence in Frederiksted is a reminder that St. Croix is, and perhaps always will be, a “Forward Operating Base” in the eyes of Washington.

THE AFTER-ACTION REPORT: Eye of the People

While the Navy counts its missile cells, the digital street-side of St. Croix is doing its own counting. The recent naval buildup has turned the West End into a geopolitical “Decision Space” where the tech of the future meets the ghosts of the past.

As the sun sets over the Frederiksted pier, the Gettysburg reminds us that in the age of Elon Musk and “God” AI, privacy is a wive’s tale, and the ultimate disruptor isn’t just a rocket—it’s the voice of a people who refuse to be a mere staging area.

The writer’s “command post” in the kitchen on St. Croix.
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