Eight killed in latest strikes on alleged drug boats, US military says

Tabby Wilson

US Southern Command A greyscale aerial image shows a small boat speeding through a stretch of water, with a small square of focus visible in the centre.US Southern Command

The US military says it has carried out strikes on three boats it has accused of trafficking drugs in the Pacific Ocean, killing eight people.

The US Southern Command posted footage of the strikes on social media and said the vessels were “transiting along known narco-trafficking routes… and were engaged in narco-trafficking”.

More than 20 vessels in the Pacific and the Caribbean have been targeted in recent months, killing at least 90 people, as part of President Donald Trump’s escalating campaign against gangs he accuses of transporting drugs in the region.

Some experts say the strikes could violate laws governing armed conflict.

The Trump administration has accused Venezuela of funnelling narcotics into the US and has intensified its efforts to isolate President Nicolás Maduro in recent months.

Thousands of troops and the USS Gerald Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, have been positioned within striking distance of Venezuela.

On 10 December, US forces seized an oil tanker off the Venezuelan coast, which the US claimed was being used to transport sanctioned oil from Venezuela and Iran in an “illicit oil shipping network supporting foreign terrorist organisations”.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yván Gil called the seizure “international piracy” and has claimed Trump wants to gain control over Venezuela’s vast oil reserves.