The Oldest US Colony & the Newest War

Shares

Michelle Ellner on the Trump administration’s use of Puerto Rico as a launchpad for war on Venezuela.

Members of the 346th Air Expeditionary Wing assembling concertina wire in Ceiba, Puerto Rico, on Oct. 14, are deployed in support of the U.S. Southern Command mission, Department of War-directed operations and the president’s priorities. (U.S. Air Force/Gabriel JonesWikimedia Commons/Public Domain)

By Michelle Ellner
Z-Network

When President Donald Trump announced that the C.I.A. had been authorized to conduct operations inside Venezuela, just as U.S drones struck another small boat off Venezuela’s coast, few people in the United States realized that much of this militarization begins on the soil of a land denied its own sovereignty: Puerto Rico.

The island that has lived under U.S. rule since 1898 is once again being used as a staging ground for U.S. militarism, this time for Washington’s latest “war on drugs” narrative, masking a campaign of coercion against Latin America’s independent governments.

After invading Puerto Rico in 1898, the United States quickly turned the island into a strategic military outpost: the “Gibraltar of the Caribbean,” with naval bases in Ceiba, Roosevelt Roads and Vieques designed to dominate the eastern Caribbean and protect the new artery of empire: the Panama Canal.

U.S. General Nelson Miles and other soldiers on horseback in Puerto Rico, July 1898. (Strohmeyer & Wyman /U.S. Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain)

From World War I onward, Puerto Ricans were drafted into every major U.S. war, fighting and dying for a flag that still denies them full citizenship rights. Meanwhile, the island’s lands and waters were expropriated for bombing ranges, naval training and intelligence operations.

For six decades, the U.S. Navy used Vieques as a live-fire testing ground, dropping millions of pounds of explosives and munitions, including napalm and depleted uranium. The result was environmental devastation and one of the highest cancer rates in the region. It took a mass civil disobedience movement to finally force the Navy out in 2003.

At Camp Garcia on Vieques Island, Puerto Rico, U.S. Navy officials in 2000 dismantling makeshift buildings erected by protesters, where the ground is spray painted “Navy Out Now!” as U.S. Military and Department of Justice Agents reclaimed the federal property that protesters occupied for over a year. (PH2 J. B. Keefer/ DefenseLINK Multimedia Gallery/Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain)

That victory proved Puerto Ricans’ capacity for organized resistance, but the structures of empire never disappeared.

Two decades later, those same bases and runways are being reactivated. In 2025, Washington quietly expanded military operations on the island, deploying F-35 fighter jets, stationing P-8 maritime patrol aircraft, and rotating Marine and Special Operations units through Puerto Rican ports and airfields. The official justification is “counter-narcotics operations,”  but the timing and scale point to something far larger: a regional military buildup aimed at Venezuela.

The aggression has now extended to Colombia, where Trump has cut off all U.S. aid and accused President Gustavo Petro of being a “drug leader.” The announcement came just days after Colombia’s president denounced the U.S. drone strikes off Venezuela’s coast, one of which, he warned, hit a Colombian vessel and killed Colombian citizens. Instead of accountability, Washington answered with insults and economic blackmail.

Colombia’ Petro, second from right on far side of table, during a meeting in Bogota in March with U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, second from right on near side. (DHS/Flickr/ Tia Dufour)

The Trump administration’s designation of a “non-international armed conflict with drug cartels” gives legal cover for drone strikes and covert missions far from U.S. territory. Puerto Rico’s colonial status makes it the perfect staging ground: a place the Pentagon can operate freely without congressional debate or local consent.

For Puerto Ricans, this militarization is not an abstract issue. It means more surveillance, more environmental risk and a deeper entanglement in wars they never chose. It also signals a return to the same imperial logic that made Vieques a bombing range: using occupied territory to project power abroad.

Puerto Rico remains the oldest colony in the modern world, a U.S. “territory” whose people are “citizens” but not sovereign. They cannot vote for president, have no senators and possess only a symbolic representative in Congress. That absence of sovereignty is what makes it so useful to the empire: a gray zone of legality where wars can be prepared without democratic consent.

This is not the first time Puerto Rico has been used as a military springboard. Its bases have served as logistical hubs for interventions across the hemisphere,  from the U.S. invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965, to Grenada in 1983 and Panama in 1989.

Each of these operations was justified through Cold War rhetoric, the defense of “freedom,” “stability” and “democracy,” while systematically targeting governments and social movements seeking independence from U.S. control.

Puerto Rican born Congresswoman Nydia Velázquez has warned that history is repeating itself. In a Newsweek op-ed, she reminded Washington of the lesson of Vieques: that the island’s people have already paid the price for U.S. militarism through contamination, displacement, and neglect.

“Our people have already suffered enough from military pollution and colonial exploitation. Puerto Rico deserves peace, not more war,” she said.

Her call aligns with that of Caribbean and Latin American nations in CELAC, which have declared the region a “Zone of Peace.” 

The buildup around Venezuela follows a long-standing pattern in U.S. foreign policy: when a nation asserts control over its own resources or refuses to obey Washington’s dictates, it becomes a target. Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua are punished for exactly that. Sanctions, blockades, and covert operations function as mechanisms of domination to keep the hemisphere open to U.S. capital and military reach.

Puerto Rico’s place in this strategy reveals Washington’s core hypocrisy: it wages wars abroad in the name of freedom while denying that freedom to the colony it still holds. Its people are governed without full representation, its land is used for war, and its economy remains bound to Washington’s dictates. Puerto Rico’s demand for independence is the same demand made by Venezuela, Cuba and every nation that refuses to live on its knees: the right to determine its own future.

The struggle for peace, sovereignty, and dignity in Nuestra América runs through Puerto Rico’s shores. When U.S. drones take off from Caribbean airstrips to strike Venezuela, they fly over the ghosts of Vieques, over the land where Puerto Ricans once stood unarmed against an empire.

Puerto Rico deserves a future of peace, environmental healing, and sovereignty, and Venezuela deserves the same: the right to live free from siege, to defend its independence, and to build its own destiny without fear of U.S. bombs or blockades. To defend Puerto Rico’s right to peace is to defend Venezuela’s right to exist.

Michelle Ellner is a Latin America campaign coordinator of CODEPINK. She was born in Venezuela and holds a bachelor’s degree in languages and international affairs from the University La Sorbonne Paris IV, in Paris.

This article is from Z-Network.

Views expressed in this article and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

4 comments for “The Oldest US Colony & the Newest War

  1. gwb
    October 28, 2025 at 20:03

    My grandfather was born in Puerto Rico, and he and his father were in the sugar-cane refining and exporting business in the early 20th century. I have a really expensive gold Tiffany pocket watch which belonged to my great-grandfather, that was bought with sugar-cane money. Yep, it’s all about profiting from resource extraction

  2. J.D. Ruybal
    October 28, 2025 at 14:04

    “Puerto Rico deserves a future of peace, environmental healing, and sovereignty, and Venezuela deserves the same: the right to live free from siege, to defend its independence, and to build its own destiny without fear of U.S. bombs or blockades….”

    Meanwhile on the ‘mainland’ the us declaration of independence states declares:
    “He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavored to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the MERCILESS INDIAN SAVAGES, whose known rule of warfare, is undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions. 
    Just as:
     “Puerto Rico deserves a future of peace, environmental healing, and sovereignty, and Venezuela deserves the same: the right to live free from siege, to defend its independence, and to build its own destiny without fear of U.S. bombs or blockades….” THIS TOO GOES FOR THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES OF THE ENTIRE CONTINENTS OF TURTLE ISLAND!
    A good study book: Federal Anti-Indian Law The Legal Entrapment of Indigenous Peoples By Peter P.d’Errico

  3. Paul Citro
    October 28, 2025 at 11:05

    Puerto Rico, conquered and subjugated since 1898.

  4. Helga Fellay
    October 28, 2025 at 11:00

    Stop attacking Venezuela just because you want to steal its oil. All it does make the world hate America because it is a thiefing war monger.

Comments are closed.