US strike kills three as Trump Venezuela drug boat strike fuels anti-cartel campaign message
WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States military struck a vessel it said was carrying drugs from Venezuela, killing three people, President Donald Trump announced Monday, according to the Associated Press. The Trump Venezuela drug boat strike was disclosed in remarks at the White House and in posts on the former president’s social platforms, with officials also releasing video of the operation.
Trump said the target was located in international waters and described the crew as “confirmed narcoterrorists” transporting cocaine and fentanyl to the United States. The administration also said footage of the strike was shown to President Donald Trump by Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The president suggested the effort could expand beyond maritime targets to include land routes used by traffickers.
The announcement comes nearly two weeks after a prior U.S. strike on a speedboat the administration said was carrying drugs, an action that officials said killed 11 people. Unitedpac St Lucia News previously reported on that strike, which marked the first major escalation in Trump’s renewed anti-cartel campaign. Defense and administration officials have presented the operations as necessary measures to stem the flow of illicit opioids and other narcotics into American communities, and the White House posted an unclassified clip of Monday’s strike on social media.
Limited independent verification, growing controversy
The Pentagon has not publicly released independent verification of the latest strike, and some lawmakers have raised questions about the legal basis for using the military in what critics characterize as law enforcement actions. Several senators, including members of both parties, expressed unease about the administration’s rationale and urged more information on the evidence supporting the strikes.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted on X that the United States would “track them, kill them, and dismantle their networks throughout our hemisphere, at the times and places of our choosing,” language that echoes robust counterterrorism rhetoric used in past administrations. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other senior officials have argued the cartels pose an immediate threat that justifies the actions, with Rubio calling the trafficking groups a danger to the nation.
At the same time, critics warn that unilateral military strikes raise legal and diplomatic questions, and regional leaders have signaled concern about operations conducted near or inside Latin American maritime zones. The White House has described the moves as self-defense, and administration spokespeople say the actions target transnational criminal networks that endanger U.S. citizens.
Caracas rejects U.S. claims
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro condemned the strikes, saying they were intended to intimidate his government and to promote regime change. Maduro pointed to a separate incident he described as a raid on a local fishing boat, and he dismissed U.S. accounts of drug trafficking ties as pretexts for military intervention.
The Venezuelan government did not immediately provide an independent accounting of the casualties from Monday’s strike. Caracas has repeatedly rejected U.S. allegations that its officials collude with traffickers, calling such claims politically motivated.
Background on trafficking and regional impact
U.S. officials and law enforcement agencies long have identified Venezuela as a transit route for cocaine produced in Colombia, with shipments moved through Caribbean and Central American maritime paths toward North America and Europe. Authorities say some criminal groups based in Venezuela, including gangs previously designated by the United States as terrorist organizations, have expanded their reach and capacity.
President Donald Trump and his allies have tied the surge of fentanyl and other narcotics in the United States to what they describe as lax foreign responses and porous borders. The president told reporters he had seen imagery of cargo “spattered all over the ocean,” and he asserted the material proved drugs were aboard the struck vessel. Reuters and other outlets have reported on the administration’s claims, while flagging the need for independent confirmation of the amounts and identities involved.
Political stakes at home and abroad
The strikes are playing into a broader political argument ahead of national elections, as the administration seeks to cast the narcotics crisis as both a domestic and foreign policy failure of its political opponents. Supporters praised the moves as decisive, while critics cautioned they may inflame tensions across the hemisphere and complicate cooperation on counter-drug operations.
U.S. officials say the initial strike earlier this month reduced the number of suspect vessels operating in the Caribbean, but President Donald Trump and other leaders warned that traffickers are shifting to overland routes. The administration said it will pursue smugglers on land if necessary, and it signaled further military and law enforcement actions could follow.
Unitedpac St Lucia News will update this story as officials release additional details.