
"Trump has waged a campaign of aerial bombardment against alleged drug boats in the Caribbean for months, killing dozens of people in at least 21 strikes that we know of. The campaign has been criticized over the legality of the strikes and that was before the revelation that survivors of one strike were ordered to be killed. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth was blamed for giving the order in initial reporting, but has since pointed the finger at Admiral Frank Bradley."
"On Wednesday night's edition of CNN NewsNight, Phillip convened a panel consisting of Fields, Navarro, Arthur Aidala, and Jamie Harrison to discuss the strikes. As Navarro and Fields an executive at the lobbying firm CGCN Group brawled over drug traffic from Venezuela, Fields quipped that your day job is The View, to which Navarro retorted And you have no day job."
"NAVARRO: I think, he thought I think Trump thought that he could scare Maduro out of Venezuela, that if he started bombing, you know, putting sending bombs of to some Venezuelan boats, if he started sending some USS carriers to the coast of Venezuela, Maduro, like many dictators before him, would be afraid, figure out how he could take his money, his family, get on a plane and flee to some place in exile for the rest of his life, it hasn't worked."
An ex-Trump spokesman, Harrison Fields, insulted CNN contributor Ana Navarro during a CNN NewsNight panel, prompting Navarro's sharp retort and anchor Abby Phillip's correction. The U.S. has conducted months-long aerial strikes against alleged drug boats in the Caribbean, causing dozens of deaths across at least 21 known strikes. The strikes face legal criticism and allegations that survivors of one strike were ordered killed. Initial reporting blamed Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth for the order; Hegseth later blamed Admiral Frank Bradley, who denied any "kill them all" order in closed-door talks. Navarro argued bombing failed to force Maduro from power.
Read at www.mediaite.com
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]