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.
British officials suspended sharing intelligence on suspected drug boats after concluding the information could be used to support U.S. military strikes at sea, marking an unusual strain in the close security partnership. UK government spokespeople declined to comment on intelligence matters, but the decision and timing were reported by CNN and confirmed by UK media. (theguardian.com)
The UK has long helped the United States track narcotics trafficking in the region, where Britain retains several overseas territories, and has participated in multinational detection-and-monitoring efforts coordinated by Joint Interagency Task Force South in Florida. Those operations historically enabled law‑enforcement interdictions led by the U.S. Coast Guard and partners rather than lethal force. (jiatfs.southcom.mil)
Since September, the United States has announced a series of air or missile strikes on small vessels it says were engaged in drug trafficking, largely near Venezuela and, more recently, in the eastern Pacific. Depending on the cutoff date used, public tallies put the campaign at roughly 14–19 strikes and more than 70 fatalities; the Guardian most recently reported 19 strikes and 76 deaths. (theguardian.com)
The Pentagon has been rebranded by executive order as the Department of War, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has adopted the title “Secretary of War.” The statutory name remains the Department of Defense unless Congress changes the law, but the administration has authorized the “Department of War” as an official secondary title and updated public branding accordingly. (reuters.com)
UK concerns align with growing international criticism. UN human rights chief Volker Türk said the U.S. strikes violate international human rights law and called them “unacceptable,” urging Washington to halt operations and investigate. British media reporting indicates London fears potential complicity if UK‑sourced intelligence contributed to unlawful killings. (ungeneva.org)
Trump administration officials defend the campaign as lawful, portraying alleged traffickers as “narco‑terrorists” affiliated with designated terrorist organizations and linked to Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro. At the same time, U.S. intelligence assessments reported by the Washington Post have cast doubt on claims that Maduro directs some of the groups blamed for smuggling, underscoring the contested basis for the strikes. (cbsnews.com)
Legal experts are divided over presidential authority to order the operations without new authorization from Congress. Brian Finucane, a former State Department legal adviser, told the Daily Wire the strikes “are not legal” and that precedents from the post‑9/11 war on terror are “irrelevant” to suspected civilian traffickers at sea. By contrast, Nicholas Creel, a law professor at Georgia College & State University, argues the president has latitude to respond to perceived attacks and has broad discretion to define such threats. (dailywire.com)