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US military kills 14 more people accused of smuggling drugs on boats

  • Writer: The San Juan Daily Star
    The San Juan Daily Star
  • 10 hours ago
  • 4 min read
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, center, attends President Donald Trump’s speech at Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan, on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. The Trump administration launched another round of deadly strikes on vessel it accused of smuggling drugs, killing 14 people in four boats on Monday Hegseth said Tuesday. At left is Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan; center left is Shinjiro Koizumi, Japan’s defense minister. (Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times)
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, center, attends President Donald Trump’s speech at Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan, on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. The Trump administration launched another round of deadly strikes on vessel it accused of smuggling drugs, killing 14 people in four boats on Monday Hegseth said Tuesday. At left is Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan; center left is Shinjiro Koizumi, Japan’s defense minister. (Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times)

By HELENE COOPER and ERIC SCHMITT


The Trump administration launched another round of deadly strikes on vessels it accused of smuggling drugs, killing 14 people in four boats in its growing military campaign off the Central and South American coasts, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said earlier this week.


Hegseth said that the strikes — three of them — took place Monday in international waters and that there had been one survivor. They bring the overall death toll to 57 in the campaign, which began in September.


A U.S. military official, discussing operations on the condition of anonymity, said the lone survivor was picked up in waters near the coasts of Mexico and Guatemala.


Hegseth said that Mexican search and rescue authorities had “accepted the case and assumed responsibility for coordinating the rescue,” but he did not release further details.


“The four vessels were known by our intelligence apparatus, transiting along known narco-trafficking routes and carrying narcotics,” Hegseth said in a post on social media announcing the strikes and accompanied by a video. He said eight men were on the boats in the first, four men were on the boat in the second strike and three men were on the boat that was struck third.


He did not provide geographic details beyond saying the strikes took place in the eastern Pacific. After launching a series of strikes in the Caribbean near the coast of Venezuela, the Trump administration has more recently been directing the U.S. military to strike boats in the eastern Pacific, off the coast of Colombia.


Two Air Force B-1 bombers from Texas flew off the coast of Venezuela in international airspace Monday, the latest effort by the Trump administration to pressure the country’s authoritarian president, Nicolás Maduro, to leave his nation, two U.S. officials said Tuesday, discussing operational matters on the condition of anonymity.


It was the second time in less than a week that the B-1s have flown such a mission. The long-range B-1 bombers, from Dyess Air Force Base in Abilene, Texas, can carry up to 75,000 pounds of guided and unguided munitions, the largest nonnuclear payload of any aircraft in the Air Force arsenal.


Earlier this month, at least two B-52 bombers from Louisiana flew for several hours off the Venezuelan coast in international airspace in what one senior U.S. official called “a show of force.” The B-52s can carry dozens of precision-guided bombs.


At roughly the same time, an elite Army Special Operations aviation unit conducted flights in the southern Caribbean Sea near the coast of Venezuela. The helicopters, belonging to the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment, were flying training missions, not rehearsals for a possible military action inside Venezuela, military officials said.


Hegseth has also ordered the deployment of the aircraft carrier Gerald R. Ford as well as its accompanying warships and attack planes to waters off Latin America, the Pentagon said last week, in a further, dramatic escalation of military might in the region.


The Pentagon has not said when the Ford, the Navy’s most modern and technologically advanced carrier, will arrive. It is heading to Latin America from the Croatian coast, where it had been on a monthslong European deployment. Navy officials have speculated that the arrival could come in the first half of November, depending on weather conditions.


It was unclear how hurricane season in the region might affect the heavy U.S. naval buildup.

Since late August, the U.S. military has deployed about 10,000 troops to the Caribbean, about half of them on eight warships and half in Puerto Rico, for what the administration says is a counterterrorism and counternarcotics mission. The Ford carries about 5,000 sailors and has more than 75 attack, surveillance and support aircraft, including F/A-18 fighters.


Hegseth in his social media post Tuesday compared the strikes against the boat cartels to America’s wars in the Middle East and Afghanistan over the past 24 years.


“These narco-terrorists have killed more Americans than Al-Qaeda, and they will be treated the same,” he said.


A broad range of outside experts in laws governing the use of armed force have said the campaign is illegal because the military is not permitted to deliberately target civilians — even criminal suspects — who are not directly participating in armed hostilities. But the Trump administration has asserted that the president has the power to “determine,” without any authorization from Congress, that drug cartels and those who work for them are enemy combatants.


President Donald Trump has falsely asserted that each destroyed boat saves 25,000 American lives. In reality, about 100,000 Americans die each year from drug overdoses, but most of those deaths are from fentanyl, which comes from labs in Mexico. South America produces cocaine.

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