President Donald Trump announced Friday that the ringleader of Venezuela’s most notorious criminal syndicate, Tren de Aragua, has been eliminated in a U.S. military strike—another bold example of Trump’s unapologetic approach to eradicating international threats before they reach American soil.
According to Trump, the U.S. Southern Command executed a “swift and lethal kinetic strike” that took out Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores, known as “Niño Guerrero.”
The gang boss led Tren de Aragua, a violent cartel-like faction that started in Venezuela’s prison system and metastasized across Latin America.
The strike marks the first American military operation within Venezuela since January’s Operation Absolute Resolve, when U.S. forces captured former Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro.
It’s clear that the Trump administration is dead serious about dismantling the power structures fueling lawlessness, terrorism, and the flow of drugs through South America.
Trump made the announcement on his Truth Social platform, praising the success and coordination of the mission. “This action was coordinated closely with our friends in Venezuela,” Trump stated.

“We are working very well together.” The post included dramatic aerial footage of a building engulfed in fire—a testament to U.S. precision and dominance from the skies.
While details remain classified, the message is unmistakable: under Trump’s leadership, the days of restraint and endless negotiations with narco-terrorists are over. Questions were directed to the White House, which declined to elaborate, while SOUTHCOM stayed tight-lipped on operational specifics—a sign of proper military discipline and continued readiness.
Guerrero Flores had long been on the radar of U.S. intelligence services. His Tren de Aragua organization has grown into Venezuela’s most powerful homegrown criminal empire, diversifying into everything from human trafficking to narcotics smuggling.
Even after Venezuelan forces raided the gang’s prison base in 2023, Guerrero escaped and rebuilt his forces across Latin America.
President Trump made the group a focal point of his counterterrorism campaign. Early last year, his administration officially designated Tren de Aragua as a foreign terrorist organization, unlocking a broad range of military and financial measures against its leadership and operations.
The Department of Justice followed in December by issuing an indictment against Guerrero Flores for financing and directing terrorist acts.
This recent strike marks a new phase of the Trump administration’s campaign in the Western Hemisphere—an offensive that combines intelligence, diplomacy, and force.
American troops launched multiple precision operations in Venezuela this year, culminating in Maduro’s capture and the subsequent stabilization missions across key supply routes and waterways in the Caribbean.
Since January, U.S. forces have maintained a robust military presence in the region, striking at cartel networks and illegal trafficking vessels. Last month, the administration disclosed that more than 200 criminals and traffickers had been neutralized in maritime interdictions aimed at cutting the head off the drug trade between South America and the United States.
