Mark Levin Podcast

The Best Of Mark Levin - 12/6/25

Dec 6, 2025
Venezuela's alliance with communist nations is portrayed as a direct threat to the U.S., with drug trafficking being a central issue. Comparisons to the 1989 Panama invasion illustrate historical parallels in dealing with such regimes. Legal disputes about military action against drug boats highlight partisan divides, while Levin underlines that state-sponsored drug exports are acts of war. He critiques contemporary conservative influencers and emphasizes the need for a deeper understanding of American history to maintain core values amid electoral risks.
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INSIGHT

Panama As Precedent For Military Action

  • The 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama (Operation Just Cause) was a surprise attack without prior congressional consultation to depose drug lord Manuel Noriega.
  • Mark Levin argues it justified military action to stop a government-enabled narco-state harming Americans and restoring democracy.
INSIGHT

Drugs As Acts Of War

  • Levin contends Venezuela's government, allied with China and Iran, is effectively waging war by exporting lethal drugs into the U.S.
  • He treats large-scale drug export by a hostile government as an act of war, not merely a criminal issue.
INSIGHT

Narco-Terror Designation And Targeting

  • The White House said presidentially designated narco-terrorist groups are subject to lethal targeting under the laws of war.
  • Levin uses that to justify strikes on Venezuelan drug boats and pressure to remove the regime.
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