Aftermath of a U.S. strike on a suspected drug boat in the Caribbean Sea, with smoke and debris in turquoise waters.
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Pentagon says Caribbean strike killed three on alleged drug boat as Democrats press for legal rationale

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The Pentagon said a U.S. strike in the Caribbean Sea killed three people aboard a vessel tied to a U.S.-designated terrorist group, the latest in a campaign that has drawn intensifying scrutiny on Capitol Hill.

The Defense Department said Saturday that U.S. forces carried out a lethal strike in the Caribbean Sea, killing three people aboard a boat that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth described as operated by a U.S.-designated terrorist organization. He did not name the group. It was at least the 15th such operation since early September. (apnews.com)

In a post on X, Hegseth said the vessel "—like EVERY OTHER—was known by our intelligence to be involved in illicit narcotics smuggling, was transiting along a known narco-trafficking route, and carrying narcotics." He referred to those aboard as "narco-terrorists" and said the department would treat them "EXACTLY" as it treated al-Qaeda. (nbcchicago.com)

According to the Associated Press, the strike brings the tally of deaths from the maritime campaign in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific to at least 64 since early September. (apnews.com)

President Donald Trump has framed the operations as a necessary escalation to stem drug flows and has described the campaign as part of an "armed conflict" with cartels, while the administration has invoked law-of-armed-conflict concepts in its notifications to Congress. At the same time, officials have argued the War Powers Resolution does not apply to these strikes because they do not constitute "hostilities" under the law — a position that has drawn bipartisan concern. (politico.com)

On Friday, Senate Democrats — including Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sens. Jack Reed, Jeanne Shaheen, Mark Warner, Chris Coons, Patty Murray and Brian Schatz — sent a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and Hegseth, seeking all legal opinions related to the strikes and a list of groups the president has deemed targetable. The letter said the administration has "selectively shared what has at times been contradictory information" with some members while excluding others. (foreign.senate.gov)

Earlier, the Republican chairman and Democratic ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee — Sens. Roger Wicker and Jack Reed — released letters they sent in late September and early October requesting the Pentagon's legal rationale, relevant execute orders and a list of organizations designated in the administration's justification for using force. (reed.senate.gov)

Separately, Senate Judiciary Committee Democrats led by Sen. Peter Welch asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to provide the Justice Department's legal analysis for the maritime strikes, which they said had killed 57 people as of Oct. 29. (reuters.com)

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Dramatic illustration of U.S. military helicopters striking drug-smuggling boats in the Pacific Ocean amid explosions and smoke.
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U.S. military says strikes on three boats in eastern Pacific kill eight amid scrutiny in Congress

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The U.S. military says it conducted strikes on three boats accused of smuggling drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean on December 15, 2025, killing eight people it described as members of designated terrorist organizations. The operation, part of a broader Trump administration campaign against drug cartels, has intensified concerns in Congress over transparency and the legal basis for the use of force.

U.S. lawmakers from both parties are demanding answers about a September U.S. strike on a suspected drug-smuggling boat in the Caribbean that killed survivors of an initial attack, amid intensifying questions over the operation’s legality. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has confirmed he authorized the first strike but says a follow-up attack that sank the vessel was ordered by Admiral Frank Bradley, prompting debate over whether the actions violated U.S. or international law.

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Democratic lawmakers and some media outlets are intensifying scrutiny of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s role in a U.S. strike on a suspected Venezuelan drug-smuggling boat, arguing that a follow-up missile attack that killed two survivors could amount to a war crime. The debate has been fueled by a Washington Post report alleging an order to “kill them all,” subsequent accounts disputing that claim, and weekend talk show interviews probing the operation’s legality and congressional oversight.

Britain has paused certain intelligence‑sharing with the United States on suspected drug‑smuggling vessels in the Caribbean amid concerns that a U.S. campaign of lethal strikes may breach international law, according to reporting first by CNN and corroborated by multiple UK outlets. The pause began more than a month ago, these reports say.

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The Pentagon is sending the USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group to the U.S. Southern Command region to bolster counter-narcotics operations, as President Donald Trump suggests the campaign could expand to land targets after a 10th strike on a suspected drug boat killed six people in the Caribbean.

미국 군대가 베네수엘라 해안에서 두 번째 유조선을 제압하며 도널드 트럼프 대통령의 제재 유조선 차단 약속을 이행했다. 이번 작전은 트럼프가 니콜라스 마두로 대통령에 대한 압박을 강화하는 가운데 이뤄졌다. 홈랜드안보부 장관 크리스티 놈은 유조선이 자발적으로 정지했다고 확인했다.

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U.S. forces said they boarded and apprehended the motor tanker Olina in international waters in the Caribbean Sea during a pre-dawn operation on January 9, 2026, describing it as part of a “ghost fleet” suspected of moving embargoed oil after departing Venezuela.

 

 

 

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