MarketUnited States strikes on alleged drug traffickers during Operation Southern Spear
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United States strikes on alleged drug traffickers during Operation Southern Spear

The United States military began executing airstrikes on vessels in the Caribbean Sea in September 2025, described by the administration of President Donald Trump as part of an effort to fight the flow of illicit drugs from Latin America to the US. In October, the strikes expanded to include vessels in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. The Trump administration has alleged, without producing public evidence, that the vessels were operated by groups it designated as narcoterrorists, including the Venezuelan criminal organization Tren de Aragua and the Colombian far-left guerilla group National Liberation Army.

Background
During the Trump administration's second term, the US intensified its focus on drug cartels, characterizing the smugglers as terrorists. In August 2025, the US deployed warships and personnel to the Caribbean, citing the need to combat drug cartels. PBS News reported that Trump was using the military to counter cartels he blamed for trafficking fentanyl and other illicit drugs into the US and for fueling violence in American cities. == Airstrikes on vessels ==
Airstrikes on vessels
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 ==
Armed conflict declaration and escalation
Trump formally notified the United States Congress on 1 October 2025 that the US was in a "non-international armed conflict" with "unlawful combatants" regarding drug cartels in the Caribbean, specifically referencing the 15 September strike. The Miami Herald wrote that: "In an armed conflict, a country can lawfully kill enemy fighters even when they pose no threat." Initially positioned as a mission to stop narcotics traffic to the US, by mid-October, Venezuelan opposition figures and independent analysts stated the American objective had shifted to regime change, with Trump acknowledging the possibility of strikes within Venezuelan territory. On 16 October, Admiral Alvin Holsey, the commander of United States Southern Command, announced that he would retire at the end of the year, less than a year into what is normally a three-year placement, with anonymous sources reporting tension between Holsey and the Trump administration over Venezuela. Two unnamed officials told The Wall Street Journal that tension between Hegseth and Holsey began early during Trump's administration over military planning involving the Panama Canal, with Hegseth wanting to replace Holsey, but differences intensified when "Holsey was initially concerned about murky legal authority for the boat strike campaign" and "objected that parts of the operations fell outside his direct control". The sources stated that, after months of tension, there was a confrontational meeting in October, and Holsey's resignation was announced the same day. Described by a US official as "a formal operation naming for what the Joint Task Force Southern Spear ... and Southcom have already been doing in theater", the "counter-narco-terrorism campaign" included the airstrikes on vessels. Colombia conflict Following increased criticism by Colombian President Gustavo Petro over US strikes on vessels and support for Israel in the Gaza war during his visit to the September session of the UN General Assembly, the US Department of State revoked Petro's visa on 27 September, stating on X that: "Earlier today, Colombian president (Gustavo Petro) stood on a NYC street and urged US soldiers to disobey orders and incite violence." Petro stated that a US airstrike had killed a Colombian fisherman In October 2025, the United States Department of the Treasury announced sanctions against Petro and Interior Minister Armando Benedetti, citing their alleged involvement in illicit drug trafficking activities. These measures marked a significant deterioration in bilateral relations, with the Colombian government condemning the decision as politically motivated and labeling it "an act of aggression" against its sovereignty. Analysts described the move as one of the most severe diplomatic escalations between Bogotá and Washington in recent years. == Land targets in Venezuela ==
Land targets in Venezuela
}} US officials said on 30 October 2025 they had identified "targets that sit at the nexus of the drug gangs and the Maduro regime", including facilities such as ports and airstrips, including military facilities, allegedly uses for drug trafficking. On 22 December, referring to the military buildup and ongoing airstrikes, Trump stated: "Soon we will be starting the same program on land." Trump announced on 29 December the first strike on a land target in Venezuela, stating that a marine facility used for loading drug boats had been hit. Trump had previously mentioned on 26 December a strike he said happened two nights earlier, likely on 24 December. Trump gave no details about the location of the facility or what entity, military or otherwise, was responsible for the strike. As of 30 December, there were no official statements from either the US or Venezuela confirming the details of any strike. Colombia's president Petro stated that the target was a factory near Maracaibo that he suspected was used by ELN to fabricate cocaine from coca paste. and several sources speculated that a warehouse fire at a petrochemical facility on 24 December was the target mentioned by Trump, although the company denied any connection. Eyewitnesses reported another incident on 18 December in another area of ELN activity on the northwestern Venezuelan border with Colombia in which they say a storage hut was destroyed by an explosion. On 3 January 2026, explosions and low-flying aircraft were reported in Caracas and other locations, and Maduro was captured in Operation Absolute Resolve by the US. == Claimed land target in Ecuador ==
Claimed land target in Ecuador
On 3 March, 2026, United States Southern Command and the Ecuadorian Armed Forces launched joint military operations against alleged drug traffickers based in Ecuador, in an expansion of the ongoing Ecuadorian conflict. Initial reporting indicated that the US. was not directly participating in these operations, instead providing intelligence and logistical support, as well as U.S. special forces training, for Ecuadorian commandos. On 6 March, Ecuador and the United States claimed that their militaries had conducted a joint operation, a bombing of a location in the Cascales Canton region, along the Colombia-Ecuador border. Both governments asserted the target was a compound belonging to Comandos de la Frontera, a group of FARC dissidents accused of drug smuggling. The Pentagon claimed the bombing was conducted by the US military, while Ecuador, in a Spanish language press release, stated the bombing was conducted by their forces with US intelligence. On 24 March, a New York Times report emerged stating that the target was actually a cattle and dairy farm, which was destroyed by at least three rockets fired from a helicopter. The strike was part of a larger, week-long operation, during which Ecuadorian soldiers interrogated farmworkers, burned down their shelters with gasoline, and burned down and bombed two nearby homes. The following day, 25 March, the Ecuadorian Defense Ministry commented on the event, indicating "The Ministry of National Defense rejects any assertion that distorts facts". The Ministry also indicated it had captured 4 of the Comandos de la Frontera, who were later released. The United States Department of Defense, did not comment as an investigation into the event is ongoing, but referred the matter to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence for further questions. ==Casualties and survivors==
Casualties and survivors
The Trump administration alleges the vessels destroyed were operated by narcoterrorists or members of cartels or gangs. The Guardian stated on 6 November 2025 that "governments and families of those killed in the US strikes on alleged drug boats have said many of the dead were civilians—primarily fishers." Sean Parnell stated that Department of Defense intelligence "consistently ... confirm[ed] that the individuals involved in these drug operations were narco-terrorists, and we stand by that assessment". Names and surnames of people missing and suspected killed in the strikes have rarely been made public and information has been repressed by the Venezuelan government, or families have avoided speaking out of fear. The family of a Colombian fisherman presumably killed in the 15 September strike stated that Alejandro Andrés Carranza Medina, alias 'Coroncoro', was not trafficking drugs, but according to CBS News, "... media have reported that Carranza had a criminal record for stealing weapons in collusion with gangs". In early December 2025, Colombian president Petro's personal lawyer According to CNN, the sister of the Ecuadorian survivor of the 16 October strike, repatriated to Ecuador, "claim[ed] to know nothing of her brother's alleged involvement with drug trafficking and instead portrayed him as a desperate father trying to provide for his six kids". The Ecuadorian attorney general's office stated that no crime reports had been filed against him with their institution, so absent evidence for detaining him, the subject was released. The other survivor of the 16 October strike, repatriated to Colombia, was hospitalized upon arrival with moderate injuries, including a skull fracture. Petro and Armando Benedetti, Colombian Minister of the Interior, said at the time he was repatriated the survivor would be "prosecuted according to the law, because he is allegedly a criminal who was trafficking drugs". However, because the incident occurred in international waters, outside Colombian territory, he would only be prosecuted if he voluntarily spoke and incriminated himself. The families of two missing people from Trinidad and Tobago identified them publicly and suspected they were killed in the 14 October strike; one family said their relative was a fisherman who traveled often to Venezuela and denied he was involved in trafficking drugs. MSNBC wrote that one had a drug-related charge from 2018, and the other had been released in 2021 after a prison sentence for a 2009 murder. In the Paria Peninsula of Sucre state in Venezuela, from which the first boat struck on 1 September allegedly originated, Venezuelan media reported published tributes containing photos of the deceased beginning early on 3 September. People who knew him claimed one of the bodies was a Venezuelan, recognizable by his watch; the Associated Press report said "he had been jailed by Venezuelan authorities on human-trafficking charges after a boat he had operated capsized in December 2020" and people had described him as "a longtime local crime boss [who] made most of his living smuggling drugs and people across borders". He is the first known American fatality from Operation Southern Spear. ==Analysis==
Analysis
US rationale The Trump administration did not initially announce any specific legal authority for the first strike. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth declared, "We have the absolute and complete authority", citing "... the defense of the American people alone. 100,000 Americans were killed each year under the previous administration because of an open border and open drug traffic flow. That is an assault on the American people." Regarding the initial strike, the Trump administration did not provide evidence about the vessel's cargo, nor did it establish that the vessel's crew were threatening to attack. Trump was questioned on 5 September about the legality of the first strike, to which he responded: "We don't want drugs killing our people. I believe we lost 300,000 ... last year"—a number he repeated days later in an Oval Office meeting. Drug overdose deaths in the US in 2024 were about 80,000 according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, representing a 25 percent decline from the previous year deaths of 112,910. When speaking impromptu to reporters prior to boarding Air Force One on 14 September, Trump inflated that number to 300 million. CNN states that "allegations involving [Venezuela's] presidential palace in cocaine trafficking have existed for at least a decade." UN analysis of global drug trafficking contradicts the broader Trump administration claims around narco-trafficking through Venezuela, as it shows that the majority of drugs trafficked to the United States are not produced in Venezuela or smuggled through the Caribbean. Drugs are instead typically produced in Colombia or Peru and transported along the Pacific coast. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime has not identified Venezuela as a cocaine-producing country. Independent analysts have found evidence of drug trafficking in Venezuela, including in its armed forces, and CNN states that "the reality is more complex" in regards to the US government's claims about Maduro's involvement: "while Caracas claims to be waging war on drugs, there is also evidence of direct involvement in drug trafficking from the highest levels of government." Legality of the strikes Experts have questioned the legality of the strikes under US and international law. The US Coast Guard or other law enforcement agencies had been responsible for US drug interdiction efforts for decades prior to the strikes, and suspects were prosecuted as a criminal matter, International law Law professor Mary Ellen O'Connell said that the strike "violated fundamental principles of international law". Luke Moffett of Queen's University Belfast, also a law professor, stated that striking the ship without grounds of self-defense could be extrajudicial killing. Regarding the 2 September strike, Geoffrey Corn, former senior adviser on the law of war to the US Army, said "I don't think there is any way to legitimately characterize a drug ship heading from Venezuela, arguably to Trinidad, as an actual or imminent armed attack against the United States, justifying this military response." Obama era legal figure Harold Hongju Koh said that the strikes were "lawless, dangerous and reckless". Unnamed sources told The New York Times and the Washington Post that the US military used a plane during the first strike in September 2025 that was part of a US Air Force fleet painted to look like civilian aircraft. Although its radio transponder was electronically broadcasting its military identity, some legal experts opined that using a plane without visible military markings could have constituted perfidy, considered a war crime under international law. In response, the Pentagon asserted that all its aircraft and weaponry used in the strike complied with Defense Department policy, US laws, and the laws of armed conflict. A group of UN human rights experts stated on 21 October 2025 that the use of lethal force in international waters without a proper legal basis constitutes "extrajudicial executions", and that covert or direct military action against another sovereign state would represent "an even graver breach of the UN Charter". On 31 October, Volker Türk, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said that the US "must halt" strikes on alleged drug boats to prevent "extrajudicial killing" and also called for an investigation into the strikes. A spokeswoman for Türk's office said Türk believed that "airstrikes by the United States of America on boats in the Caribbean and in the Pacific violate international human rights law." She added, in a statement that contradicts Trump's "armed conflict" declaration, that the strikes were taking place "outside the context" of armed conflict or active hostilities. Amnesty International USA described a strike as murder. Human Rights Watch said the strikes are extrajudicial killings. Adam Isacson of the Washington Office on Latin America said the strike "[l]ooks like a massacre of civilians at sea". A former ICC chief prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo, told the BBC that the strikes would be considered under international law as crimes against humanity. Referring to premeditated killing outside of armed conflict as murder, he also said: "For me, it's very clear. A crime against humanity is a systematic attack against a civilian population, and there is no clarity why these people are not civilians, even [though] they could be criminals ... and it's clearly systematic, because President Trump says they have planned and they organised this, so that should be the charge." Inter-American Commission on Human Rights A case was filed with the IACHR on behalf of the wife of a Colombian man allegedly killed in the 15 September strike by Colombian president Petro's personal lawyer, Dan Kovalik, accusing "the United States of violating the rights to life, equality before the law, recognition of legal personality, a fair trial, and due process", according to El País. In an 8 December interview with Democracy Now!, prosecutor Reed Brody called the strikes murder, distinguishing them from war crimes because they took place in the absence of a legitimate conflict. He compared the actions of the US to the actions for which Rodrigo Duterte is on trial at the International Criminal Court, saying both countries had endorsed the killing of suspected drug traffickers without trial. In March 2026, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights held a hearing on the strikes. The American Civil Liberties Union, Ben Saul, Center for Constitutional Rights, , International Crisis Group and the US Department of State testified before the commission. Domestic law BBC News argued that "Questions also remain as to whether Trump complied with the War Powers Resolution, which demands that the president 'in every possible instance shall consult with Congress before introducing United States Armed Forces into hostilities'". and on 6 November, the US Senate voted against a resolution that would have required congressional approval for further military action directed at Venezuela, following an October vote that failed to limit strikes in the Caribbean. The Atlantic and the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) suggested that Trump was relying on the authority given the president as commander in chief under Article II of the US Constitution. Political scientist Peter Feaver noted that every presidential administration since Ronald Reagan's considered deploying military force in the war on drugs, but only the second Trump administration followed through. US legislators expressed similar concerns, and bipartisan investigations were launched by the Senate and the House Armed Services Committees. ==Reactions==
Reactions
Venezuela Early on 3 September, tributes containing photos, videos and names of the deceased began to appear on social media. Inhabitants of San Juan de Unare disagree with this version. In the TV segment, he called the killings extrajudicial murders. Cabello later said that Venezuelan investigations determined none of the 11 people killed were members of Tren de Aragua. A neighbor of one of the missing people disagreed with this version. The next day, on 4 September, Maduro accused the US of threatening regime change with the strike and build up of naval forces in the area. He said there were no criminal connections to drug traffickers. In November 2025, Yván Gil, Venezuela's foreign minister, issued a statement saying that "Venezuela categorically, firmly, and absolutely rejects the new and ridiculous fabrication by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of State, Marco Rubio, which designates the non-existent Cartel of the Suns as a terrorist organization," saying it is "an infamous and vile lie to justify an illegitimate and illegal intervention against Venezuela, under the classic US regime-change format." Senator Bernie Moreno responded to Paul saying, "what's really despicable is defending foreign terrorist drug traffickers who are responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Americans in Kentucky and Ohio." The initial strike was welcomed by Republican senators Lindsey Graham and Bernie Moreno, with Moreno saying that "Sinking [the] boat saved American lives." A bipartisan briefing scheduled for 5 September was abruptly canceled. Warner condemned the government's briefing procedures again on 29 October. When asked for comment in response, a White House spokesperson accused the Democratic Party of "running cover for foreign drug smugglers." In November 2025, senator Mark Kelly and five other Democratic Congress members participated in a video, telling military personnel to defy "illegal orders". Trump said those in the video were traitors who should be charged with sedition and shared a social media post that called for them to be hanged. Puerto Rico governor Jennifer Gonzalez thanked the Trump administration on 9 September 2025 for the "fight against drug cartels in our hemisphere". Representatives Joaquin Castro and Sara Jacobs released a letter in March 2026 in support of aInter-American Commission on Human Rights investigation into the legality of the strikes. Lawsuits In January 2026, the American Civil Liberties Union, Center for Constitutional Rights, and Jonathan Hafetz filed a federal lawsuit against the United States government on behalf of the families of two people from who were killed in a strike on 14 October 2025. The lawsuit alleged that the strikes were "premeditated and intentional killings" that "lack any plausible legal justification" and were "simply murder, ordered at the highest levels of government and obeyed by military officers in the chain of command." Other Latin American and Caribbean Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago Kamla Persad-Bissessar praised the US attack and encouraged more operations against drug traffickers, saying: "The pain and suffering the cartels have inflicted on our nation is immense. I have no sympathy for traffickers; the US military should kill them all violently." Colombian president Gustavo Petro said that attacking the boat occupants in drug interdictions rather than capturing them amounted to murder. On 11 November, Petro announced he would suspend sharing of intelligence with the US while strikes on vessels continued; When asked whose side he was on, Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said he was on the side of peace, favored negotiations, and that US forces in the Caribbean had become a source of tension. Addressing the United Nations General Assembly, Lula compared "using lethal force in situations that do not constitute armed conflict" to "executing people without trial." Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum stated in October: "We do not agree with these attacks, with the way they are being carried out." Mexico and the US agreed in November 2025 on a protocol whereby "Mexico's Navy will be responsible for intercepting these vessels in international waters near the country's coasts in order to prevent further bombings", according to El País. Foreign Policy magazine described Latin America's reaction to the strikes as "disjointed" and fragmented in November 2025, "explained, in part, by ideological divisions across the region", with "left-wing leaders of Colombia, Mexico, and Brazil [as] the most vocal critics of the strikes", while "countries with right-wing leaders—such as Paraguay, Argentina, and Ecuador—have generally aligned themselves with the Trump administration's approach to drug trafficking and Maduro. He was quoted as saying, "We have observed with concern the military operations in the Caribbean region, because they violate international law and because France has a presence in this region through its overseas territories, where more than a million of our compatriots reside," without citing specific US actions, and said that it was crucial to avoid "instability caused by potential escalations". Canadian officials distanced the Canadian military and intelligence personnel from the strikes. United Kingdom officials refused to comment A spokesperson for Prime Minister Keir Starmer stated that "the US is our closest partner on defense, security, intelligence", while declining to comment on intelligence matters. Yvette Cooper, the UK foreign secretary, responded that intelligence sharing continues, and referenced Rubio's comment about the "false story". Amid increasing tensions, many European high-level leaders canceled their planned participation in a November summit held in Colombia between the European Union and the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), in contrast to the 2023 EU–CELAC summit attended by numerous heads of state. According to Pino Arlacchi, the former head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, the portrayal of Venezuela as a "drug state" is a "geopolitically motivated smear campaign" by the US government; he refers to the World Drug Report 2025 and states that the Venezuelan government's cooperation in the fight against drug trafficking is among the best in South America. His view is that the US has taken an interest in Venezuelan oil reserves, which are among the largest in the world. On 4 November, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning defended China's growing cooperation with Venezuela, saying it "constitutes normal cooperation between sovereign states" and is "not directed against any third party". She was quoted as saying "China supports strengthened international cooperation to combat transnational crime and opposes the use or threat of force in international relations." She added that China "opposes any attempt to undermine peace and stability in Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as unilateral coercive actions against foreign vessels that exceed reasonable and necessary limits." China urged the US to "carry out regular judicial and law enforcement cooperation through bilateral and multilateral legal frameworks". The Iranian ambassador to the UN in Geneva condemned the attack as illegal under international law. Journalist Katy Balls wrote that the strikes were "a response to Beijing's fast-growing influence in Latin America." In November 2025, Pope Leo XIV noted that the strikes were gradually nearing Venezuela's coastline and stated that they were only "increasing tension"; he called for the United States and Venezuela to "seek dialogue". The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights called "upon the United States to: refrain from employing lethal military force in the context of public security operations, ensuring that any counter-crime or security operation fully complies with international human rights standards; conduct prompt, impartial, and independent investigations into all deaths and detentions resulting from these actions; and adopt effective measures to prevent recurrence" and urged the US to "to ensure that all security operations, including those carried out beyond its borders, are consistent with international human rights obligations, particularly regarding the protection of the right to life, the use of force, due process guarantees, and accountability mechanisms." In March 2026, the commission held a hearing on the legality of the strikes. At the hearing, the American Civil Liberties Union, Center for Constitutional Rights, International Crisis Group, and the United Nations argued that the strikes violated domestic US law and international law. A Reuters/Ipsos poll from 7–12 November found that 51% of Americans opposed "killing suspected drug traffickers abroad without judicial process", while 29% supported it. ==See also==
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