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US kills 14 in strikes on four alleged drug boats

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
October 28, 2025
in International
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Bernd Debusmann Jrat the White House

US Department of Defense Boat on fire after being hit by US forces in the Pacific. US Department of Defense

One person survived the strikes and was rescued by Mexican search-and-rescue teams

US forces have killed 14 people in strikes on four alleged drug boats in the Pacific, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth says.

He said one survivor was rescued by Mexican search and rescue personnel.

It is the latest in a series of attacks on boats the US says have been carrying drugs in both the Pacific and Caribbean.

The latest strikes in the eastern Pacific, which Hegseth said happened on Monday at the direction of President Donald Trump, mark a further expansion in what it says is a campaign to target drug traffickers.

At least 57 people have now been killed in the strikes, which have led to increasing tensions between the US and the governments of both Colombia and Venezuela.

Most have taken place off the coast of South America, in the Caribbean, but more recently the US has carried out strikes in the Pacific Ocean as well.

The strikes have drawn condemnation in the region and experts have questioned their legality. Members of the US Congress, both Democrats and Republicans, have also raised concerns and questioned the president’s authority to order them.

In a statement on X, Hegseth said the four vessels hit on Monday “were known by our intelligence apparatus, transitioning along known narco-trafficking routes and carrying narcotics”.

Hegseth added that eight “narco-terrorists” were killed in the first strike. Four and three were killed in the following two strikes.

One person survived the strikes. According to Hegseth, the US military began search and rescue operations for the survivor before Mexican authorities “accepted the case and assumed responsibility for co-ordinating the rescue.”

The condition of the survivor or his current whereabouts are unclear.

Hegseth’s post included videos that appear to several vessels catching fire after being struck by US munitions.

“The department has spent over two decades defending other homelands,” Hegseth wrote. “Now, we’re defending our own.”

Watch: The US is “fabricating an eternal war”, says Nicolás Maduro

At least four of the strikes have so far taken place in the Pacific, which is a far more significant drug-trafficking corridor, with the rest taking place in the Caribbean.

President Trump has said he has the legal authority to continue bombing boats in international waters, but suggested last week that he may seek approval from Congress if the campaign is expanded to include targets on land.

Trump has said he is “totally prepared” to strike land-based targets, which would mark a significant escalation in the campaign.

The strikes, however, have drawn criticism from international law experts and both the Venezuelan and Colombian governments.

In an interview with the BBC’s Newsday programme last week, Colombian Deputy Foreign Minister Mauricio Jaramillo said the strikes were “disproportionate and outside international law”.

Jaramillo said those on the vessels had “no possibility to defend themselves” and were struck with “no process” and “no judicial order”.

The strikes also come as tensions ratchet up with both governments. The US has placed sanctions on Colombian president Gustavo Petro, accusing him of failing to curb drug trafficking and allowing cartels to “flourish”.

In the Caribbean, the US has deployed troops, aircraft and naval vessels and last week ordered the world’s largest warship – the USS Gerald R Ford – to the area.

Trump has accused Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro of being the leader of a drug-trafficking organisation, which he denies, and there are fears in Venezuela that the US military build-up is aimed at destabilising and toppling Maduro’s government.

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