New Boat Strike Adds to Controversial Anti-Narcotics Blitz
The U.S. military has carried out another strike in the eastern Pacific Ocean, targeting a small vessel suspected of narcotics trafficking. According to the latest statement, four individuals on board were killed in the assault. This operation marks the 22nd such strike since the campaign began earlier this year, bringing the estimated death toll to at least 87.
Officials say the targeted boat was part of a broader effort under a campaign launched by the current administration to disrupt alleged narco-terror operations at sea.
Follow-Up Attack on August 2 Boat Under Investigation
The recent strike comes amid renewed scrutiny — especially over a September 2 attack in the Caribbean where a second missile strike reportedly targeted survivors of an earlier strike. Sources claim the follow-up strike occurred despite evidence that some crew members were still alive and clinging to wreckage when the second strike hit.
While U.S. defense authorities insist the follow-up attack aimed solely to destroy the vessel, legal experts argue that targeting survivors could constitute a war crime under both domestic military law and international wartime statutes.
Bipartisan lawmakers have demanded full transparency and a classified briefing from the naval commander allegedly responsible for ordering the second strike. Meanwhile, the administration claims all actions were within legal bounds and necessary to dismantle narcotics-running networks at sea.
Mounting International Concerns Over Legality and Human Rights
Human-rights observers and international legal analysts have sharply criticized the string of boat strikes, pointing to a lack of publicly available evidence showing each vessel’s cargo or intent to attack U.S. interests.
The controversy has drawn fresh attention to the broader operation — dubbed “Operation Southern Spear” — which began in mid-2025 as a naval effort across the Caribbean and Pacific to combat drug trafficking. Critics warn that aggressive, repeated military strikes at sea may violate global norms, especially if civilian or non-combatant lives are lost.
Supporters of the campaign argue that it’s a necessary response to a surge in international narcotics smuggling and say the strikes are justified under wartime-style authorities granted to U.S. forces.





















