Donald Trump has claimed to have destroyed a third vessel he alleged was carrying drugs.
Share and Follow

President Donald Trump said Friday the U.S. military has carried out its third fatal strike against an alleged drug smuggling vessel this month.

Trump in a social media posting said the strike killed three and was carried out against a vessel “affiliated with a Designated Terrorist Organisation conducting narcotrafficking in the USSOUTHCOM area of responsibility.”

He did not provide more precise details about the location of the strike.

Donald Trump has claimed to have destroyed a third vessel he alleged was carrying drugs.
Donald Trump has claimed to have destroyed a third vessel he alleged was carrying drugs. (AP)

The Pentagon deferred questions about the strike to the White House, which did not respond to a request for clarity about the origins of the vessel. 

“Intelligence confirmed the vessel was trafficking illicit narcotics, and was transiting along a known narcotrafficking passage en route to poison Americans,” Trump said in the post. 

Trump also posted a video of the latest strike that shows a vessel speeding through waters before it appears to be struck by a pair of missiles from overhead and sink in a fiery explosion. 

“It was at this moment, the narcoterrorists knew they screwed up,” White House communications director Steven Cheung said on X in a posting with the video. 

Trump on Monday announced the US military had carried out a strike on a boat allegedly carrying drugs from Venezuela. That strike also killed three on board. 

That followed a September 2 military strike on what the Trump administration said was a drug-carrying speedboat that killed 11. 

Trump claimed the boat was operated by the Tren de Aragua gang, which was listed by the US as foreign terrorist organisation earlier this year. 

The Trump administration has justified the military action as a necessary escalation to stem the flow of drugs into the United States. But several politicians, Democrats and some Republicans, as well as human rights groups have questioned the legality of Trump’s action. 

They view it as a potential overreach of executive authority in part because the military was used for law enforcement purposes. 

The boat being destroyed.
The boat being destroyed. (Truth Social)

The Trump administration has yet to explain how the military assessed the boat’s cargo and determined the passengers’ alleged gang affiliation before the attacks on the vessels. 

National security officials told members of Congress that the first boat taken out was fired on multiple times after it had changed course and appeared headed back to shore. 

The strikes follow a buildup of US maritime forces in the Caribbean. It marks a dramatic shift in how the US is willing to combat drug trafficking in the Western Hemisphere. 

In Venezuela, some are speculating whether the strikes are part of a plan to try to topple President Nicolás Maduro, a notion that the Venezuelan leader has echoed. 

Maduro claimed after the first strike that a US video released by Trump was created with artificial intelligence and that a boat of that size cannot venture into the high seas. 

But earlier this week Maduro lashed out at the US, accusing the Trump administration of using drug trafficking accusations as an excuse for a military operation whose intentions are “to intimidate and seek regime change” in the South American country.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
Eight minutes to put 11 in hospital: What's known about UK train stabbing

UK Train Stabbing Rampage: 11 Hospitalized in Just 8 Minutes – Here’s What We Know

The police have not yet pressed charges in connection with the incident,…

IVF Data Breach Victims Pursue Compensation in National Regulatory Complaint

Patients from Genea, one of Australia’s largest IVF clinics, are seeking compensation…

Shocking UK Train Attack: Man Faces Attempted Murder Charges After Mass Stabbing

A 32-year-old British man has been charged with 10 counts of attempted…
Tonga coach defends handling of player who suffered three head knocks and required medical attention

Tonga Coach Stands Firm Amid Controversy Over Player’s Triple Head Injury Management

<!– <!– <!– <!– Tonga’s head coach, Kristian Woolf, has come to…
'I feared for my life': Family traumatised by two break-ins in one night

Family Endures Night of Terror with Two Break-Ins: ‘I Feared for My Life

A young family south of Brisbane has been left traumatised after an…

Optus Executives Under Scrutiny: Investigation Launched into Triple-Zero Outage Crisis

A Senate probe into the debacle was given the green light last…

Mother’s Courage to Speak Out: Breaking the Silence on Her Son’s Bullying Experience

How are parents raising resilient kids in an age of constant judgement…
Stephen Rue, CEO, Optus, during the Triple Zero service outage hearing with the Senate Environment and Communications References Committee, at Parliament House in Canberra on Monday 3 November 2025.

Optus Executives Acknowledge Critical Errors in Deadly Triple-Zero Outage Incident

The chairman and CEO of embattled telco Optushave been grilled at a…