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US kills three men in another strike on suspected drug vessel, Hegseth says

The latest U.S. strike, the 17th in the campaign, killed three aboard a vessel alleged to be operated by a drug cartel designated as a terrorist organization.

  • On Thursday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced a U.S. strike on a vessel suspected of trafficking narcotics in the Caribbean Sea that killed three people, part of at least 17 strikes.
  • The administration told Congress the campaign began with a first strike on September 2 and labeled those killed 'unlawful combatants,' citing a classified Justice Department finding.
  • Hegseth posted a 20-second video of the strike on social media documenting the attack, officials said U.S. forces were unharmed, and three survivors were returned after brief U.S. Navy detention.
  • Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio briefed congressional leaders Wednesday on the campaign's legal rationale, while Senate Republicans on Thursday rejected legislation limiting attacks as Democrats pressed for more information.
  • Absent public evidence, human rights groups and members of Congress argue the administration has not shown proof of narcotics or cartel links on struck boats and question the legal basis.
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Center

The U.S. Army struck a ship sailing in the international waters of the Caribbean, killing the three people on board. This is the latest U.S. operation in the fight against drug trafficking in Latin America.

·France
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Lean Left

Three people died on Thursday when the U.S. Army attacked the boat they were traveling in waters of the Caribbean Sea, according to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. With the latter there are already 18 boats sunk in just two months within the framework of what the Donald Trump Administration defines as operations against “narcoterrorism,” extrajudicial attacks that have already claimed, in total, 69 lives of civilians. Continue reading

·Spain
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Center

Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth said U.S. forces attacked another drug boat in the Caribbean on Thursday, killing three people, bringing the death toll in Washington's controversial war on drugs to at least 70. U.S. authorities say the operation is to defend the United States from the importation of dangerous substances, but they have so far provided no evidence that the sunken vessels are actually carrying illegal drugs.

·Ljubljana, Slovenia
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Center

Since early September, Washington has used regular airstrikes in the Pacific, and especially in the Caribbean, against vessels that have been identified as belonging to drug traffickers.

·France
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elsiglodetorreon.com.mx broke the news in on Thursday, November 6, 2025.
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