The New York Times propaganda machine came to life when President Donald Trump summoned the Alien Enemy Act of 1798 to send illegal Arien members of the Venezuela Tren de Aragua gang.
The order argues that Tren de Aragua is part of a narcoterror operation sponsored by the administration of Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro. No, the Times scribe writes, US intelligence officials say the Maduro administration has no control over the costumes.
The Problem of the Time: Two days later, the Miami Herald cited a former CIA agent to report that the Maduro administration is in “operational control” of the gang. Trump was right. The entry of gang members into the US was certainly an invasion. And that means that it is the right thing to do to cause the actions of the alien enemy.
Times Story
Trump signed his orders on March 15 after the TDA and other gangs declared that they were terrorist groups. It clearly explains why the 227 law should be called.
The TDA is a designated foreign terrorist organization with thousands of members, many of which have illegally infiltrated the United States, engaging in irregular wars and taking on hostile actions against the United States,” the order states.
The TDA runs alongside Cartel de Los Sales, a narcotello enterprise sponsored by the Venezuela-based Nicolas Maduro administration, and commits brutal crimes such as murder, trickery, tension, human, drugs and weapons transport. TDA is engaged and continues to engage in mass illegal migration to the United States to promote its objectives of supporting the Maduro administration's goals of hurting American citizens, undermining public safety and destabilizing American democratic nations, including the United States.
Additionally, Maduro-sponsored Cartel de los Saul “will carry out the purposes of “inundating” the United States to coordinate with the TDA and other organizations and to carry out the purposes of using illegal drugs. ”
So did Trump exert the summary power of deportation awarded by the alien enemy law?
Whenever there is a declared war between the United States and a foreign or government, an invasion or predatory invasion of US territory is made, attempted or threatened by a foreign or government, and the President makes a public declaration of the event. You are obliged to be arrested, restrained, secured and removed as an alien enemy.
The times didn't have that.
Trump is wrong
The document dated February 26th has been cited. This describes the “shared decision of the country's spy institutions” that the Maduro regime does not control the gang. Of course, that means Trump has once again come off the deep edge. Of course, the Times didn't do that.
“The disclosure questioned the credibility of Trump's basis for calling the rarely used wartime law of alien 1798 law, and the Times was observed to move a group of Venezuelans to a high security prison in El Salvador last weekend.
The intelligence reporting agency's assessment concluded that gangster Tren de Aragua did not commit any crimes in the Venezuelan government or the United States, according to an (anonymous) official.
Interestingly, the Times had almost undermined its own report. The newspaper confessed that the conclusion is “only a “moderate” level of trust,” as there is limited reporting available about gangs.
“Most Intelligence Reporting agencies, including the CIA and the National Security Agency, agreed to the assessment,” the Times reported. He then downplayed the FBI. The gang says that although linked to Maduro, they used “information that other agencies didn't think could be trusted.”
The Times also explained that Trump's declarations have incided countries that are closer to “constitutional conflicts” between the administrative and judicial departments.
Miami Herald Story
Two days later, the Herald roared with reports that were inconsistent with the times.
The Herald revealed that “former US officials with small teams of Venezuelans and deep ties with South American countries' police and intelligence agencies have informed the number and identity of Trump do Aragua and other Venezuelan gang members, or the number and identity of other Venezuelan gang members,” the Herald said.
But that wasn't all. The same group met and presented information to top top advisers before he was founded. The group revealed “the link between the feared Tren de Aragua gang and the Nicolas Maduro regime.” The Herald also gave Trump Venezuelan police documents identifying “1,800 gang members believed to have been sent to the United States.”
Maduro controls TDA
In fact, Times sources did not inform the papers on the record that some TDA members who landed in the United States had been military training or that the Maduro administration controlled them. It was up to the Herald. In fact, according to the newspapers, Maduro manages the gang.
Among those sent to the US were 300 gang members who were paramilitary trained in Venezuela, said Gary Bernzen, a decorated former CIA station chief who led the agency's troops in search of Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan.
“The Venezuelan administration took operational control of these people (Tren de Aragua) and trained 300 people. They gave them paramilitary training and trained them to fire weapons. “They gave them all a 4-6 week course. They had these 300 guys through that course and deployed them to 20 states that had deployed them in 20 locations in the US.”
Another team member who requested anonymity to protect the identity of the Venezuelan team's sources said the group has access to records from police agencies in South America, which they were provided to the Trump administration, leading to the identities and arrests of at least 800 Venezuelans believed to be one of Tren de Aragaa's members.
Venezuelan intelligence agency gave money to gang members to enter the US. They were “deliberately sent to America's largest city to cause problems for American law enforcement,” a source told the Herald. ”
The gang members are “soldiers sent in an asymmetrical war operation against the United States,” sources said. One job of the gang members was to deal with drugs in major cities “to fill in the void created by the crackdown” of Salvador's MS-13 gang.
The Trump administration also received documents revealing the names of 1,281 gang members. They were “part of the estimated 20,000 inmates released from Venezuelan prisons during Maduro's tenure, and were told they had to leave the country if they wanted to maintain their freedom,” the newspaper continued.
Information gathered by the team from sources within the administration points to plans to deploy 5,000 gang members in the United States, Burnteng said.
With 300 gang members running by the prime minister who received the scourge, he said people pose a dangerous threat to US national security. “This is equivalent to an oversized combat brigade scattered across 20 different locations, but there are thousands of people who can communicate, move drugs, do what is necessary, put pressure on the US with violence in cities, and allow them to build a massive criminal infrastructure in America,” he said.
The former FBI agent was right
The Herald report confirmed a warning to an elected official from 10 former Capitol Hill FBI officials in January 2024.
“The threat we call today is new and unfamiliar,” the former official wrote about the Biden administration's catch and catching and releasing millions of illegal aliens.
“It is difficult to exaggerate the dangers represented by existence within our boundaries as a multi-division army of young single men from hostile countries or regions whose hostile, intentional or loyalty is not entirely known,” they write.
“The Sterling number is on the Terrorist Watchlist,” the official wrote. They are “potential operators that appear to be accelerated strategic infiltration, and soft invasions designed to gain internal access to a country that cannot be militarily invaded to cause catastrophic damage if the enemy thinks it needs it.”