전쟁 범죄
Admiral denies ‘kill all’ order as Congress grills Pentagon over deadly Caribbean boat strike
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Navy Adm. Frank M. Bradley has told lawmakers that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth did not give a "kill all" order during a September 2 strike on a suspected drug‑smuggling boat in the Caribbean, even as a classified video of a follow‑on strike on two survivors has triggered a fierce partisan dispute over whether the operation was lawful.
중국 국가档案국은 토요일 러시아의 기밀해제 문서인 소련의 일본 731부대 심문 기록을 발표했다. 이는 심문 기록과 범죄 수사 기록을 포함한다. 외교부 대변인 곽가쿤은 월요일 이 문서들이 중국 침략 기간 동안 해당 부대의 반인도적 범죄에 대한 철저한 증거를 제공한다고 밝혔다.
AI에 의해 보고됨 사실 확인됨
The White House has rejected reports that War Secretary Pete Hegseth personally ordered a second strike on a Venezuelan boat in September, saying the decision was made by Admiral Mitch Bradley under Hegseth’s delegated authority. The clarification comes as lawmakers raise concerns about potential war crimes and vow heightened congressional oversight of the broader U.S. campaign against alleged narco-terrorists near Venezuela.