President Donald Trump solutions questions from reporters throughout a roundtable on legal cartels within the State Eating Room of the White Home, Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025, in Washington, as Protection Secretary Pete Hegseth listens.
Evan Vucci/AP
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Evan Vucci/AP
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — The U.S. army has carried out one other deadly strike on alleged drug smugglers within the Caribbean Sea, Protection Secretary Pete Hegseth introduced Saturday.
Hegseth in a social media posting mentioned the vessel was operated by a U.S.-designated terrorist group however didn’t identify which group was focused. He mentioned three individuals had been killed within the strike.

It is a minimum of the fifteenth such strike carried out by the U.S. army within the Caribbean or japanese Pacific since early September.
“This vessel—like EVERY OTHER—was identified by our intelligence to be concerned in illicit narcotics smuggling, was transiting alongside a identified narco-trafficking route, and carrying narcotics,” Hegseth mentioned in a posting on X.
The U.S. army has now killed a minimum of 64 individuals within the strikes.
Trump has justified the assaults as a mandatory escalation to stem the circulate of medication into the US. He has asserted the U.S. is engaged in an “armed battle” with drug cartels, counting on the identical authorized authority utilized by the Bush administration when it declared a battle on terrorism after the Sept. 11, 2001, assaults.
U.S. lawmakers have been repeatedly rebuffed by the White Home of their demand that the administration launch extra details about the authorized justification for the strikes in addition to higher particulars about which cartels have been focused and the people killed.

Hegseth in his Saturday posting asserting the newest strike mentioned “narco-terrorists are bringing medication to our shores to poison People at house” and the Protection Division “will deal with them EXACTLY how we handled Al-Qaeda.”
Senate Democrats renewed their request for extra details about the strikes in a letter on Friday to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Director of Nationwide Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and Hegseth.
“We additionally request that you simply present all authorized opinions associated to those strikes and an inventory of the teams or different entities the President has deemed targetable,” the senators wrote.
Amongst these signing the letter had been Senate Minority Chief Chuck Schumer in addition to Sens. Jack Reed, Jeanne Shaheen, Mark Warner, Chris Coons, Patty Murray and Brian Schatz.
The letter says that to date the administration “has selectively shared what has at instances been contradictory data” with some members, “whereas excluding others.”
Earlier Friday, the Republican chairman and rating Democrat on the Senate Armed Providers Committee launched a pair of letters despatched to Hegseth written in late September and early October requesting the division’s authorized rationale for the strikes and the record of drug cartels that the Trump administration has designated as terrorist organizations in its justification for the usage of army drive.