SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : World Outlook -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Les H who wrote (49593)12/18/2025 3:34:59 PM
From: Les H  Respond to of 49735
 
Police have identified a person of interest in relation to a fatal mass shooting at Brown University that killed two people and injured nine others, sources familiar with the investigation told the BBC's US partner, CBS News.

Authorities are now searching for the individual, the sources told CBS. No information has been released about the identity.

The development comes as the search for a suspect in the shooting on Saturday enters its sixth day, with investigators knocking on doors, asking home-security videos, and appealing to the public for tips.

On Thursday, authorities released a photo of an individual they believe was in close proximity to their primary person of interest.

Police identify person of interest in Brown University shooting, sources say



To: Les H who wrote (49593)12/18/2025 5:08:22 PM
From: Don Green  Respond to of 49735
 
These are the U.S. ships and aircraft massing off Venezuela - The Was…
Júlia Ledur

DG>>> that is a pretty impressive gathering of warships and support vessels positioned in a relatively small body of water. Certainly not there for a training exercise. Likely waiting for covert ops to be completed and Nobel “Peace” prize winner to agree to terms for her taking over government with agreement to U.S. of a MAJOR oil deal before the assault begins..

The Trump administration is adding steadily to its already formidable military buildup in the Caribbean, escalating a multifront pressure campaign against Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro that has included strikes on more than 20 alleged drugs boats and the seizure of a Venezuelan oil tanker. The prospect of potential strikes on Venezuelan territory continues to loom.

Advanced bombers, specialized jamming equipment and refuelers have been moved into the Caribbean in recent weeks, assets that analysts say could support military operations in the area, such strikes on Venezuela.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened imminent attacks on Venezuela in recent months, but it’s unclear if such an escalation, with the risks it would entail, has broad support within his administration. Some analysts say the public threats and military buildup could be aimed at encouraging Maduro to step down and depart power peacefully.


U.S. military assets deployed to the Caribbean in recent weeks

Known assets deployed in recent weeks as of Dec. 17. Some military assets may have repositioned, departed or reentered the area since their initial deployment.

Ford Carrier Group

Five vessels were deployed from Croatia with the USS Gerald R. Ford, according to the U.S. Navy.

USS Gerald R. Ford

USS Winston S. Churchill

Guided missile destroyer

Guided missile destroyer

Guided missile destroyer

Amphibious assault ship

USS Fort Lauderdale

Amphibious transport dock

Amphibious transport dock

Guided missile destroyer

Guided missile destroyer

Guided missile cruiser

Guided missile cruiser

Littoral combat ship

F-35 Lightning II

B-52 Stratofortress

Supersonic

fighter jet

Maritime patrol

aircraft

Transport and

cargo aircraft

Fighter and attack

aircraft

Unmanned combat

aerial vehicle

Electronic attack jet

Medium-lift military

utility helicopter

Medium-range

recovery helicopter

SPECIAL OPERATIONS FORCES

MH-6 Little Bird

AC-130J Ghostrider

Floating special

operations base

Medium-lift military

utility helicopter

Light observation

helicopter

Heavily armed gunship

Sources: U.S. Navy, Department of War, FlightRadar.

AC-130J GhostriderAV-8B Harrier IIB-1B LancerB-52 StratofortressEA-18G GrowlerF-35 Lightning IIMH-6 Little BirdMH-60M Black HawkMH-60T JayhawkMQ-9 ReaperMV Ocean TraderMV-22 OspreyP-8 PoseidonSikorsky UH-60L Black HawkUSS BainbridgeUSS Fort LauderdaleUSS Gerald R. FordUSS Gettysburg (CG-64)USS Iwo Jima (LHD-7)USS Jason DunhamUSS Lake Erie USS MahanUSS San AntonioUSS StockdaleUSS Thomas Hudner USS WichitaUSS Winston S. Churchill
Heavily armed gunshipSpecial Operations ForcesU.S. Air Force (Special Ops Command)
Fighter and attack aircraftAirU.S. Marine Corps
Supersonic bomberAirU.S. Air Force
Strategic bomberAirU.S. Air Force
Electronic attack jetAirU.S. Navy
Supersonic fighter jetAirU.S. Marine Corps
Light observation helicopterSpecial Operations ForcesU.S. Army (160th SOAR)
Medium-lift military utility helicopterSpecial Operations ForcesU.S. Army (160th SOAR)
Medium-range recovery helicopterAirU.S. Coast Guard
Unmanned combat aerial vehicle (drone)AirU.S. Air Force
Floating special operations baseSpecial Operations ForcesOperated for U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM)
Transport and cargo aircraftAirU.S. Marine Corps
Maritime patrol aircraftAirU.S. Navy
Medium-lift military utility helicopterAirU.S. Army
Guided missile destroyerNavalU.S. Navy
Amphibious transport dockNavalU.S. Navy
Aircraft carrierNavalU.S. Navy
Guided missile cruiserNavalU.S. Navy
Amphibious assault shipNavalU.S. Navy
Guided missile destroyerNavalU.S. Navy
Guided missile cruiserNavalU.S. Navy
Guided missile destroyerNavalU.S. Navy
Amphibious transport dockNavalU.S. Navy
Guided missile destroyerNavalU.S. Navy
Guided missile destroyerNavalU.S. Navy
Littoral combat shipNavalU.S. Navy
Guided missile destroyerNavalU.S. Navy


The buildup, dubbed Operation Southern Spear, is the largest U.S. deployment to the Caribbean since the 1989 invasion of Panama. The armada off Venezuela’s coast includes warships, surveillance craft, elite Special Forces units and the Navy’s largest aircraft carrier. On land, the United States has reactivated at least one military base in Puerto Rico, using it to house F-35 fighter jets, according to Washington Post analysis of satellite images.


José Aponte de

la Torre Airport

Source: Planet Labs

The escalatory U.S. seizure of an oil tanker off the Venezuelan coast last week could indicate the start of more to come, and analysts say the forces currently assembled in the Caribbean lend themselves to the imposition of a de facto oil blockade on Venezuela.

Follow Trump’s second term

“With Operation Southern Spear, we have the force posture in the region to do these kinds of things,” said Ryan Berg, the director of the Americas Program at the Center for Strategic & International Studies. He said the operation that seized the Venezuelan oil tanker last week involved forces from the coast guard, Navy, Air Force and Homeland Security.

“When we had a light footprint, when these vessels were in other theaters of the world, it was really hard to do sanctions enforcement like this,” Berg said.

Estimated U.S. military personnel deployed to the Caribbean

Deployments are as of Oct. 31 and are based on the ships announced or acknowledged by the Pentagon. The figure doesn’t include personnel in Puerto Rico.

The bombers, refuelers and jamming equipment most recently spotted in the Caribbean include EA-18G Growlers, F-35As, rescue craft and refueling planes, according to photographs and flight tracking information.

EA-18G Growlers were photographed by Reuters at the recently reactivated Roosevelt Roads naval base in Ceiba, Puerto Rico, on Dec. 10.

The addition of F-35As was reported by The War Zone, the same outlet that reported on new rescue craft and additional refueling equipment being moved to the Caribbean.

The Pentagon deployed its largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald Ford, to the Caribbean last month, a move seen as a major escalation of U.S. military posture in the region. The Ford joined previously assembled warships, fighter jets, drones and surveillance craft in the area.

As the buildup has progressed, the Pentagon has also flown bombers along Venezuela’s coastline in a show of force.

Outside Venezuela, the country’s opposition is attempting to increase political pressure on Maduro. Opposition leader María Corina Machado traveled to Norway to collect her Nobel Peace Prize. Machado missed the ceremony, but since then she has embarked on a diplomatic blitz through Europe, meeting with leadership there and granting press appearances.

Machado had been in hiding in Venezuela since January and was barred by the government from leaving the country. It’s unclear if she will be able to return to Venezuela while Maduro remains in power.

Maduro is feeling the pressure from the Trump administration, tightening security and limiting public appearances. But so far the Venezuelan president has chosen to dig in and wait. Trump and Maduro last spoke last month when Trump offered Maduro the possibility of exile, an offer the Venezuelan leader refused.

Amaya Verde and Dan Lamothe contributed to this report. Edited by Emily Eng, Benjamin Soloway and Jeremy Lang.

Júlia Ledur is a graphics reporter covering foreign news at The Washington Post. Before joining The Post in 2021, she worked as a graphics editor at the COVID Tracking Project at the Atlantic. Previously, she was on the graphics team at Reuters, covering Latin American politics, the environment and social issues with data and visuals. @juledurg

Susannah George is The Washington Post's Gulf bureau chief, based in Dubai, where she leads coverage of the oil-rich monarchies of the Persian Gulf and their neighbor, Iran. She previously spent four years as The Post's Afghanistan-Pakistan bureau chief



To: Les H who wrote (49593)12/18/2025 5:34:59 PM
From: Les H  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49735
 
It came out a few days earlier and the Washington Post picked up on it.