Protection Secretary Pete Hegseth responded to a report that he ordered the navy to kill all passengers aboard a ship suspected of ferrying medication within the Caribbean Sea in September.
In line with The Washington Post, the Sept. 2 boat strike initially left two survivors clinging to the boat. The Submit alleges Adm. Mitch Bradley, head of Particular Operations Command, then ordered a second strike with a purpose to adjust to Hegseth’s orders and to make sure the survivors could not name on different traffickers to retrieve them and their cargo.
In a publish on X on Friday, Hegseth mentioned the strikes had been meant to be “deadly, kinetic strikes.”
“Our present operations within the Caribbean are lawful underneath each U.S. and worldwide regulation, with all actions in compliance with the regulation of armed battle—and authorized by the very best navy and civilian legal professionals, up and down the chain of command,” Hegseth mentioned.
If true, it’s unclear why Bradley would not have ordered troops to gather the survivors and their cargo from the water, because the navy did in a subsequent strike when two survivors had been taken aboard a Navy ship through helicopter. These survivors had been later repatriated to Ecuador and Colombia, though some authorized specialists mentioned the survivors might have been prosecuted in federal courtroom for smuggling narcotics.
SOCOM additionally declined to touch upon the report.
Protection Secretary Pete Hegseth arrives to transient Senators on US navy exercise within the Caribbean and Pacific, on the US Capitol in Washington, November 5, 2025.
Mandel Ngan/AFP through Getty Pictures
One particular person conversant in particulars of the Sept. 2 incident confirmed to ABC Information that there have been survivors from an preliminary strike on the boat and that these survivors had been killed in subsequent strikes. ABC Information has not confirmed, although, the specifics of orders from Hegseth or Bradley.
Critics of the Trump administration and a few authorized specialists have questioned the legality of the strikes. Beneath the Geneva Conventions, wounded or sick combatants are to be collected and cared for by both facet in a battle.
A prime Republican senator, Roger Wicker, has joined his Democratic counterpart in calling for “vigorous oversight to find out the details” of allegations that the navy deliberately killed survivors of a ship strike.
“The Committee has directed inquiries to the Division, and we shall be conducting vigorous oversight to find out the details associated to those circumstances,” mentioned Sen. Wicker, R-Miss., chairman of the Senate Armed Providers Committee, and U.S. Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., rating member of the Senate Armed Providers Committee.
There have been greater than 20 airstrikes in opposition to vessels within the Caribbean and the japanese Pacific, killing greater than 80 individuals.
Trump and his prime advisers say U.S. intelligence clearly exhibits that the boats are smuggling unlawful narcotics. They argue the strikes are authorized as a result of Trump has designated drug cartels as “overseas terrorist organizations.”
Many authorized specialists say that line of pondering, although, is unprecedented and say the U.S. must be counting on regulation enforcement — not the navy — to grab shipments and arrest suspected criminals.
