As of 25 March 2026, at least 163 people had been killed (including 3 who are missing and presumed dead) in 47 strikes on 48 vessels, including 15 vessels struck in the Caribbean Sea, 31 in the Eastern Pacific, and 2 in an unspecified location. Two people who survived the 16 October strike were repatriated to their home countries.
Initial strike The US announced on 2 September that a naval vessel struck and sank a speedboat that it alleged was smuggling drugs from Venezuela to the southern Caribbean.
El Pitazo and killed 11 members of
Tren de Aragua. On 6 September 2025,
Marco Rubio, the
US Secretary of State, said: "Instead of interdicting it, on the president's orders, we blew it up. And it'll happen again." According to
The Wall Street Journal, "The attack was the US military's first publicly acknowledged airstrike in Central or South America since the
US invasion of Panama in 1989." ,
Venezuela, and projected end at
Chaguaramas,
Trinidad and Tobago The vessel was a flipper type with four 200-horsepower engines about long; it came from San Juan de Unare, located on the
Paria Peninsula in
Sucre state. Sources told journalist that the vessel carried a "considerable cargo" some of which was thrown overboard before the US attack. Rubio added that the boat appeared to be heading for Trinidad or another Caribbean country. In November 2025,
The Washington Post reported that two anonymous sources said
Pete Hegseth, the
US Secretary of Defense, had given a verbal order to
SEAL Team Six to
leave no survivors; two people who survived the initial strike were killed in a subsequent
double tap strike. Hegseth responded on social media that "the fake news is delivering more fabricated, inflammatory, and derogatory reporting to discredit our incredible warriors fighting to protect the homeland". CNN stated that "Hegseth had ordered the military prior to the operation to ensure the strike killed every person on board, but it's not clear if he knew there were survivors prior to the second strike, one of the sources said." Five US officials speaking anonymously to
The New York Times outlined the same chronology of the attack unfolding: they said Hegseth ordered a lethal strike ahead of the actual attack, but did not give orders about what to do if the lethal strike failed, and did not give the order after seeing footage showing survivors. US Navy Admiral
Frank M. "Mitch" Bradley, the commander who directed the strike, According to anonymous sources reported by CNN, Bradley said the struck vessel was going to meet another boat which was bound for
Suriname. In 1 December press conference the White House reiterated "the president has made it quite clear that if narcoterrorists are trafficking illegal drugs towards the United States, he has the authority to kill them".
Karoline Leavitt, press secretary for the Trump administration, stated that "... Secretary Hegseth authorized Admiral Bradley to conduct these kinetic strikes. Admiral Bradley worked well within his authority and the law, directing the engagement to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was eliminated." According to
The Guardian, the administration "argu[es] that its objective was to ensure the complete destruction of the boat". Bradley was promoted after the strike.
The Washington Post also reported that intelligence analysts observing the boat via surveillance aircraft were increasingly confident that it was carrying drugs, and that "protocols were changed after the strike", providing for rescue of survivors, according to anonymous sources. Following the attack, Trump wrote on social media in all capital letters: "Be warned—If you are transporting drugs that can kill Americans, we are hunting you!" Anonymous sources for
The Guardian said leadership for the strike was provided by
Stephen Miller, newly empowered via the
Homeland Security Council. White House officials learned about the strike hours before it happened. Trump told reporters on 16 September that the US military had sunk a third boat in the Caribbean, without providing any other detail. and two unnamed US officials stated that there were Colombians on at least one of the boats. The White House responded that these assertions were baseless. On 18 October, Petro specified that he was referring to the 16 September strike announced by Trump; other sources said Petro was referring to the 15 September strike. On 14 October, six more people were killed in a strike on a vessel near the coast of Venezuela. Trump stated that Hegseth ordered the strike that morning. Two of those killed may have been citizens of Trinidad and Tobago. On 24 October, Hegseth announced "the first strike at night" against a vessel allegedly operated by Tren de Aragua in the Caribbean, killing six people on board.
Other Caribbean strikes On 19 September, Trump announced that another vessel allegedly carrying drugs had been destroyed in the Caribbean and that three people had been killed; Trump stated that the vessel was "affiliated with a Designated Terrorist Organization conducting narcotrafficking in the USSOUTHCOM area of responsibility", but did not specify where within the
United States Southern Command the strike occurred, the country of origin, or the alleged criminal affiliation. The
Dominican Republic later announced that, under its National Directorate for Drug Control and the
Dominican Navy, it had cooperated with the US Navy to locate the boat, which was about 80 nautical miles (130 km) south of Dominican-controlled
Beata Island. After the boat was destroyed the Dominican Navy salvaged 377 packages of
cocaine amounting to . The Directorate stated that "This is the first time in history that the United States and the Dominican Republic carry out a joint operation against narco terrorism in the Caribbean". Reuters reported that there was a previously unannounced strike on 16 October 2025, which included survivors. The US alleged that the vessel struck was a
narco-submarine. Two people were killed and two survived. The survivors were rescued and detained on a US Navy ship. By 19 October, both were repatriated to their respective countries of origin, Colombia and Ecuador. On 17 October, a strike in international waters on an alleged Colombian
National Liberation Army (ELN) drug vessel killed an additional three people. The ELN denied involvement with the alleged drug boat or any other drug boat trafficking. On 1 November, a strike "at the direction of President Trump" according to Hegseth, killing three people took place on what the US claimed was a designated terrorist organization, though the organization's name was not given. Hours after the
US Senate voted down a resolution that would have required congressional approval for further strikes, a 6 November strike in the Caribbean killed three people, with debris and body parts reportedly washing ashore in Colombia days later. A strike on 10 November in the Caribbean killed four people. A 13 February strike killed three people. Three strikes were conducted on 16 February, one of which killed three people in the Caribbean.A 25 March strike killed four people.
Pacific strikes The US struck another alleged drug boat on 21 October, killing at least two people, marking the first strike to take place in the Pacific Ocean. An unnamed US official said the strike occurred off the Colombian coast. A second strike in the Pacific on 22 October killed three people. Three more strikes on four alleged drug boats in the Pacific—the first instance of multiple boats struck in one day The
Mexican Navy (SEMAR) coordinated search and rescue after the US reported the location to aircraft in the area from Mexico, and the US Coast Guard. On 29 October, a strike on an alleged drug boat in the eastern Pacific Ocean killed four people, followed by a 4 November strike that killed two people. Two boats were struck on 9 November, each killing three people. In the first strike after the unveiling of
Operation Southern Spear, the US Southern Command announced in a post to X that the Southern Spear joint task force had conducted a 15 November strike that killed three people; a strike on 4 December killed four people, two strikes on two vessels on 18 December killed five people, and a 29 December strike killed two people. Three vessels traveling in a convoy were struck on 30 December, killing three people. After the first vessel was hit, an unknown number of survivors and possibly eight survivors. On 2 January 2026, US Coast Guard suspended a search for survivors southwest of the Mexican–Guatemalan border, in the fourth strike where crew members survived the initial strike. A 23 January strike killed two people and left one survivor, for whom the US Coast Guard activated a search-and-rescue mission. A 5 February strike on an alleged Designated Terrorist Organization killed two people. On 16 February, the US struck two boats in the Pacific, killing four people per boat. A 20 February strike killed three people. An 8 March strike killed six.
Not specified Five people were killed in two strikes on 31 December according to SOUTHCOM; three people were killed in one vessel, and two in another. SOUTHCOM did not indicate the location of the strike.
Summary of strikes on vessels == Armed conflict declaration and escalation ==