Trumps says Venezuelan jets will be ‘shot down’ if they endanger US ships

President Donald Trump warned that Venezuela Jets flew over US marine ships and put us in a dangerous position, “they will be shot.”
US officials told the BBC to the US partner CBS News, and after the second time in Venezuela’s second -time military planes near a US ship outside South America.
Reports follow a strike that a gang said that the US said that Trump officials are “a ship carrying drugs from Venezuela”.
President Nicolás Maduro said that the US claims about Venezuela were not correct and that the differences between countries did not justify the “military conflict”.
“Venezuela is always willing to speak, dialogue, but we demand respect.”
When asked by journalists at the Oval office on Friday, Venezuela Jets said what would happen if he flies again from the US ships, Trump Venezuela would be in a “problem”.
Trump said that he was standing next to his general, that he could do anything he wanted if the situation increases.
Since he returned to office in January, Trump has constantly intensified his efforts to cognize anti -drugs in Latin America.
Maduro accused the United States of looking for a “regime change with military threat”.
When the comments were asked, Trump said, “We don’t talk about it,” he said, but he called it “very strange election” in Venezuela. Maduro swore for the third period in January After a controversial election.
Trump, Venezuela’dan “drugs spilled” in the United States, and the USA, a gang that is banned as a terrorist organization in the United States, said Aragua lived in the United States.
The US army took action to support the forces of the Southern Caribbean, including the deployment of additional marine ships and thousands of US maritime and sailors to eliminate drug flow.
The White House said that the US sent 10 F-35 fighter planes to Porto Rico on Friday.
“I think it’s just strong. We’re strong about drugs. We don’t want drugs to kill our people,” Trump said.
Trump has long been a critic of Maduro. US President A reward doubled For information led to the arrest of the Venezuela leader, he reached 50 million dollars (£ 37.2 million) in August and accused him of being “one of the world’s largest narco-traffickers”.
In the first period of Trump, the US government accused Maduro and other senior Venezuela officials of a number of crimes, including narco-terrorism, corruption and drug trafficking.
Maduro previously rejected the US claims.