Dear Editor,
In the James Gunn’s 2025 Superman movie, the narrative is as blunt as it is resonant, as it demonstrates that justice should not be hemmed in by international boundaries that insulate tyrants and criminals from accountability. In that movie Superman crosses sovereign borders not out of whimsy but out of necessity, because evil does not observe arbitrary lines on a map. Moreover, whenever he is confronted on the ethics and morality of his decisions, either by the free press or his fellow heroes, his values stood firmly rooted in the idea of Truth, Justice and the American way, to the point where he eventually inspires the Justice Gang to follow in his footsteps, not only to capture the evil dictator in the movie, but also dole out brutal justice for his misdeeds. And for audiences tired of traditional American moralism, that message landed squarely on the head of a nail most Democrats wish they didn’t have to confront, but they applauded for it regardless and branded this version of Superman as the hero we need in this moment, never once pondering the hypocrisy of their beliefs.
Now, the Caribbean Sea, for decades, has been a battleground for illicit trafficking networks that blend hard narcotics with elements of terroristic coercion, and threat was one the leading rationale U.S. strategists invoked last year when Washington repositioned naval assets, air power, and unmanned systems into the Caribbean under a mission labeled Operation Southern Spear. And at the end of 2025, the United States military had reported striking dozens of small vessels it alleged were moving drugs or linked to organized crime, including some identified with Venezuelan groups like Tren de Aragua.
Yet, in the opening weeks of 2026, a curious development has emerged, as the U.S. defense and law enforcement agencies have not publicly reported a single discovery or interdiction of a narco-terrorist vessel in the Caribbean Sea so far this calendar year. At the same time, the geopolitical landscape changed in a way few pundits anticipated, as Nicolás Maduro, long accused by Washington of overseeing a state apparatus that protects and profits from narcotics flows, was captured in a dramatic military operation in Caracas early this January and brought to the United States to face federal charges, including narco-terrorism and cocaine trafficking. He has since appeared in a Manhattan federal courtroom to enter pleas of not guilty, and his case now unfolds under unusually intense legal and diplomatic scrutiny.
For Americans who welcomed the idea that justice shouldn’t be arrested at some imaginary border, that image of a foreign strongman in U.S. legal custody felt like a cinematic coup. The logic seemed straightforward, as if the bad guy couldn’t be lured into court, you march into his backyard and bring him here. And while there might be some who criticize the arrest out of some sense of misguided persuasion to oppose everything that President Trump has achieved, for the vast majority of persons living in Venezuela and along the Caribbean Sea, the arrest of the head of one of the largest criminal networks in the western hemisphere has created an immediate relief in the level of crime an tyranny that has plagues the region for decades.
Taken together, these actions appear to have produced a tangible security dividend as the Caribbean Sea today is quieter and safer than it has been in decades. Fewer trafficking vessels mean reduced violence, stronger maritime commerce, and greater confidence for tourism-dependent economies throughout the region. For Caribbean nations, this shift enhances sovereignty rather than undermines it, by reducing the influence of transnational criminal organizations that thrive on instability.
And credit is due to the leadership that made this approach possible. Under Donald Trump, the United States adopted a posture that combined clarity of purpose with a willingness to act. Rather than allowing legal ambiguity or political caution to paralyze enforcement, the U.S. treated narcoterrorism as a direct threat to regional security and responded accordingly. The result has been a demonstrable improvement in safety across a strategically vital region.
Justice without borders is not a slogan, but rather it is a policy choice. In the Caribbean, that choice has helped deliver a level of maritime security not seen in many years. By confronting criminal networks and their political enablers head-on, the United States has contributed to making the region safer, more stable, and more prosperous. That outcome deserves recognition, not only as a strategic success, but as a reaffirmation of the principle that accountability, when firmly enforced, can still change realities on the ground and at sea.
Best regards,
Ravi Balgobin Maharaj
