🚨 Trump IGNITES International Firestorm After Seizing Venezuelan Oil Tanker — Senators Warn of Illegal Conflict and Massive Cover-Up

 

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — A political earthquake hit Capitol Hill after President Trump authorized the seizure of a Venezuelan oil tanker — an escalation many lawmakers say edges the U.S. dangerously close to an unauthorized war. The move, which the administration claims is tied to “narco-terrorism,” has triggered outrage in Congress, where key senators warn the White House is hiding evidence, bypassing constitutional authority, and violating international law.

Senator Richard Blumenthal delivered one of the sharpest rebukes yet, revealing that Congress has received no formal briefing on the operation. He called the tanker seizure “a significant escalation” and accused the administration of deliberately withholding documents, videos, and after-action reports. “If nothing wrong happened,” he said, “why the cover-up? Why refuse transparency?” His warning highlights a growing bipartisan demand for answers — and a deepening fear that Trump is pushing the U.S. into conflict without congressional approval.

The controversy intensified after reports detailed the administration’s lethal strikes on boats in the Caribbean — attacks that killed more than 80 people without evidence or oversight. Journalists pressed the Pentagon and State Department for proof, but officials provided only a short, edited video clip. “Is that the whole story?” Blumenthal asked. According to him, Congress and the public are being shown only fragments while crucial evidence remains locked away, fueling accusations of a coordinated concealment effort.

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A stunning New York Times investigation added explosive new details: survivors of these strikes were allegedly sent back to their home countries to avoid landing in U.S. courts — where Trump’s administration would be legally required to justify its military campaign. One internal Pentagon proposal even suggested sending survivors to El Salvador’s notorious maximum-security prison, a move State Department officials immediately rejected. Blumenthal called the episode “deeply troubling” and warned it signals a wider erosion of congressional authority.

The senator also pointed to a glaring contradiction in Trump’s rationale: on October 16, U.S. forces rescued two shipwrecked survivors — yet weeks earlier, two other survivors clinging to debris were killed in a nearly identical incident. “They were wrong in one case or the other,” Blumenthal said. “And almost certainly wrong to kill those survivors.” The implication is devastating: possible extrajudicial killings, potentially rising to murder or war crimes, carried out under U.S. command.

Lawmakers are now pushing back hard. The House-passed National Defense Authorization Act includes language compelling the Pentagon to release the unedited drone footage of the deadly September 2 strike, threatening to cut the Defense Secretary’s travel budget by 25% if he refuses. Blumenthal doubts even that will be enough pressure — but he insists the fight isn’t over. “If Americans saw the real video,” he said, “they would realize the administration has been lying about what happened.”

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Policy experts say the tanker seizure also revives Trump’s long-criticized obsession with oil-rich nations in crisis. Throughout his first term, he floated the idea that such countries’ oil reserves should be “taken over.” Critics argue this latest action strips away the diplomatic veneer and exposes his real motives. As one analyst put it: “Trump has ripped the mask off. This is about dominance, resources, and bypassing Congress.”

Legal scholars warn that Trump’s actions violate both international law and U.S. constitutional requirements. The president cannot initiate conflict or use lethal force abroad without congressional authorization — yet the administration has acted unilaterally. “The president is not a king,” one expert said. “You can’t just seize another country’s ship because you want to.” With tensions rising, congressional oversight stalled, and the White House stonewalling every request for transparency, many fear the U.S. may already be drifting into an undeclared and unlawful war.