Trump Confirms US Strike on Drug Submarine, Killing Two 'Narcoterrorists'
222 Articles
222 Articles
The U.S. military had attacked a submarine that was said to have smuggled drugs – two people died. Survivors were now handed over to Colombia and Ecuador.
The two survivors of an American military strike against a suspected drug transport ship in the Caribbean will be repatriated to Ecuador and Colombia, their home countries, announced on Saturday President Donald Trump.
U.S. returns Caribbean strike survivors to home countries, Trump says | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
WASHINGTON >> The United States is sending the two survivors of a Thursday strike in the Caribbean to their home countries of Colombia and Ecuador to be detained and prosecuted, President Donald Trump said today.
"25,000 People Would've Died": Trump As US Strikes 'Drug-Carrying Submarine'
President Donald Trump said Saturday the United States was sending two suspected drug traffickers back to their native Ecuador and Colombia, after a military strike on their "drug-smuggling submarine" in the Caribbean that killed two others.
U.S. President Donald Trump announced on Saturday, October 18, a new attack on ships in the Caribbean. On this occasion, he was a submarine narco carrying four occupants, two of whom died and two others survived after the bombing carried out for what appears to be a missile.
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