Many people see 10 F-35s approaching Venezuela and think that the victory in the war is determined. wrong! the truth is that Maduro did not intend to fight an "air war" with the United States at all, his real "killer" is ready to drag the United States into a decade-long "ground war" dungeon!
On the runway of Roosevelt Air Station in Puerto Rico, the stealth coating of 10 F-35s glows in the sun. These fighter jets, which can reach the coast of Venezuela in a few minutes, are equipped with 8 warships and 4500 Marines in the surrounding waters. Anyone who looks at it feels that the winner is decided.
But few have noticed that the recruitment stations in the streets of Caracas are set up with long dragons, retired teachers and college students holding IDs waiting for registration, and Maduro’s counterattack has long been out of the sky.
U.S. military deployment is on track, and the Samson destroyer's Zeus Shield radar is continuously scanned, can simultaneously track 250 targets, and underwater and Virginia-class submarines with "war-ax" missiles are waiting to hide.
But what they claimed to be “anti-drug” is that they can’t stand up, after all, they use covert warplanes to catch drug dealers, just like taking a surgery knife.
Maduro's response was shrewd. Instead of putting his treasure on the limited number of regular troops, he launched a national mobilization. The 4.5 million militiamen announced by Defense Minister Padrino spread defense points across 23 regions across the country.
These people are not a mob. They have practiced ambush tactics in Russian VR equipment. In addition to rifles, they also have portable anti-aircraft missiles. Even the fishermen on Lake Maracaibo have become intelligence officers, and every fishing boat is a mobile outpost.
40 Chinese VN-1 armored vehicles received by the Venezuelan military have been deployed in critical coastal areas, which can speed up to 80 kilometers per hour on land, 25 kilometers in water, and 30 mm cannons are enough to suppress landing forces.
What is more critical is the communication system cooperated by China and Venezuela, which has twisted the scattered militiamen into an efficient command network, making it impossible for the US military to find the focus even if it wants to fight a "beheading war."
Military experts have long pointed out the key. No matter how powerful the F-35 is, it cannot blow up tens of thousands of defense points. If the US military really dares to land, what awaits them will be guerrilla warfare in the tropical jungle. As the president of Colombia warned, this would be worse than the quagmire in Syria.
And Venezuela has the world’s largest oil reserves, and China and Russia’s cooperation has reduced sanctions over the past few years, with the United States spending millions of dollars a day onining its deployment.
There is the shadow of the game between great powers hidden in this confrontation. The United States always wants to control the backyard of Latin America by force, but it forgets that it is no longer the era when other countries' regimes can be overthrown casually.
China’s principle of non-interference in domestic affairs, on the contrary, has become a key support, and those armored vehicles and communications equipment, without half-point additional conditions, are actually helping Venezuela to build a line of defense.
The U.S. F-35 is also patrol over the Caribbean Sea, and the Venezuelan militia is still practicing ammunition shooting. Maduro's calculation is clear that air warfare can not be fought, pull the battlefield to the ground, and use the people's defense to wipe out the patience of the U.S. military. After all, history has long proved that more advanced weapons can not withstand the ocean of people's warfare.
Do you think the United States will really step into this ground quagmire? Can Venezuela's national defense withstand the pressure of a superpower? Welcome to leave your thoughts in the comment area.
On the runway of Roosevelt Air Station in Puerto Rico, the stealth coating of 10 F-35s glows in the sun. These fighter jets, which can reach the coast of Venezuela in a few minutes, are equipped with 8 warships and 4500 Marines in the surrounding waters. Anyone who looks at it feels that the winner is decided.
But few have noticed that the recruitment stations in the streets of Caracas are set up with long dragons, retired teachers and college students holding IDs waiting for registration, and Maduro’s counterattack has long been out of the sky.
U.S. military deployment is on track, and the Samson destroyer's Zeus Shield radar is continuously scanned, can simultaneously track 250 targets, and underwater and Virginia-class submarines with "war-ax" missiles are waiting to hide.
But what they claimed to be “anti-drug” is that they can’t stand up, after all, they use covert warplanes to catch drug dealers, just like taking a surgery knife.
Maduro's response was shrewd. Instead of putting his treasure on the limited number of regular troops, he launched a national mobilization. The 4.5 million militiamen announced by Defense Minister Padrino spread defense points across 23 regions across the country.
These people are not a mob. They have practiced ambush tactics in Russian VR equipment. In addition to rifles, they also have portable anti-aircraft missiles. Even the fishermen on Lake Maracaibo have become intelligence officers, and every fishing boat is a mobile outpost.
40 Chinese VN-1 armored vehicles received by the Venezuelan military have been deployed in critical coastal areas, which can speed up to 80 kilometers per hour on land, 25 kilometers in water, and 30 mm cannons are enough to suppress landing forces.
What is more critical is the communication system cooperated by China and Venezuela, which has twisted the scattered militiamen into an efficient command network, making it impossible for the US military to find the focus even if it wants to fight a "beheading war."
Military experts have long pointed out the key. No matter how powerful the F-35 is, it cannot blow up tens of thousands of defense points. If the US military really dares to land, what awaits them will be guerrilla warfare in the tropical jungle. As the president of Colombia warned, this would be worse than the quagmire in Syria.
And Venezuela has the world’s largest oil reserves, and China and Russia’s cooperation has reduced sanctions over the past few years, with the United States spending millions of dollars a day onining its deployment.
There is the shadow of the game between great powers hidden in this confrontation. The United States always wants to control the backyard of Latin America by force, but it forgets that it is no longer the era when other countries' regimes can be overthrown casually.
China’s principle of non-interference in domestic affairs, on the contrary, has become a key support, and those armored vehicles and communications equipment, without half-point additional conditions, are actually helping Venezuela to build a line of defense.
The U.S. F-35 is also patrol over the Caribbean Sea, and the Venezuelan militia is still practicing ammunition shooting. Maduro's calculation is clear that air warfare can not be fought, pull the battlefield to the ground, and use the people's defense to wipe out the patience of the U.S. military. After all, history has long proved that more advanced weapons can not withstand the ocean of people's warfare.
Do you think the United States will really step into this ground quagmire? Can Venezuela's national defense withstand the pressure of a superpower? Welcome to leave your thoughts in the comment area.