U.S. Southern Command Kills Two in New Strike on Alleged Narco‑Terror Vessel
5d
Breaking
1
U.S. Southern Command says U.S. forces carried out a lethal kinetic strike Friday against a vessel in the Eastern Pacific that it alleges was operated by a designated terrorist organization and actively engaged in narco‑trafficking, killing two suspected narco‑terrorists. The command says intelligence showed the craft was traveling along known drug‑smuggling routes and describes this as the first such strike since the U.S. raid that captured Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, part of a broader Trump‑era campaign of deadly maritime interdictions that has already raised legal‑oversight concerns. After the attack, SOUTHCOM activated its search‑and‑rescue system to look for a third suspected trafficker believed to have survived, underscoring that these are shoot‑to‑kill operations followed by limited efforts to recover potential survivors rather than arrests and prosecutions. The Pentagon has released strike video but, as in earlier cases, provided no public evidence beyond its own intelligence claims to substantiate the target’s terrorist designation or the identities of those killed—fueling online debate about whether Washington is quietly waging undeclared lethal warfare at sea under a "narco‑terror" label. This developing episode will likely intensify congressional and human‑rights scrutiny of how far the administration is stretching counterterrorism authorities for drug enforcement and what safeguards exist to prevent misidentification or civilian casualties.
U.S. Counter-Narcotics Operations
Latin America & Caribbean Security