Strike on Alleged Drug Boat Kills 3 in Caribbean Sea, U.S. Military Says
SOUTHCOM said the strike was part of a campaign that has killed at least 181 people since September.
- On Sunday, U.S. Southern Command conducted a lethal strike on a boat in the Caribbean, killing three people whom the military described as operating a vessel for "Designated Terrorist Organizations."
- Launched by President Donald Trump in September 2025, Operation Southern Spear has conducted 52 strikes, destroying over 50 vessels and killing at least 181 people across the Caribbean and Pacific.
- President Trump argues the U.S. is in "armed conflict" with cartels, justifying lethal force; critics note the military provided no public evidence the vessel carried drugs or belonged to designated terrorist groups.
- United Nations special rapporteur Ben Saul condemned the strikes as "serial extrajudicial killings" violating the right to life, while Democrats led by Rep. John Larson of Connecticut filed impeachment articles against Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth over alleged law-of-armed-conflict violations.
- Officials in Venezuela and Colombia report that some victims were fishers unaffiliated with illicit trade, raising concerns about civilian casualties amid ongoing questions regarding operational transparency and legal justification.
123 Articles
123 Articles
Latest Caribbean Strike Kills Three Suspected Narco-Terrorists
"Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Caribbean and was engaged in narco-trafficking operations." The post Latest Caribbean Strike Kills Three Suspected Narco-Terrorists first appeared on Le·gal In·sur·rec·tion.
The U.S. military confirmed on Sunday the death of three people in an attack on a vessel allegedly used for drug trafficking in the Caribbean. President Donald Trump’s administration insists that, in practice, it is at war with what it calls “narcoterrorists” in Hispanic America, and since last September began attacking boats allegedly used for drug trafficking.
U.S. authorities claim that the vessel was transiting well-known routes for drug trafficking
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