4 killed in latest strike on claimed drug boat

By , December 5, 2025

Four people have been killed in the latest US strike on a claimed drug boat amid growing unease at the legality of the attacks.

The small vessel, which was hit in the eastern Pacific Ocean on Thursday, December 4, 2025, is the 22nd destroyed by the US military on suspicion of drug trafficking.

It is the first such attack since a nearly three-week pause.

At least 87 people have now been killed during Donald Trump’s war on the narcotics trade, which has also seen vessels targeted in the Caribbean Sea, including near Venezuela.

Video of the strike shows a small boat moving across the water before a large explosion suddenly hits it.

The boat is then seen engulfed in flames and billowing smoke as the camera zooms out.

A police car. Image used for illustration purposes only. PHOTO/Pexels
A police car. Image used for illustration purposes only. PHOTO/Pexels

On X, formerly known as Twitter, the US Southern Command described those killed as “four male narco-terrorists“.

“Intelligence confirmed that the vessel was carrying illicit narcotics and transiting along a known narco-trafficking route in the Eastern Pacific,” the post said.

The Trump administration has been weighing options to combat what it has portrayed as Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s role in supplying illegal drugs that have killed Americans.

The socialist leader has denied having any links to the illegal drug trade.

Venezuela has said the boat attacks amount to murder – and that President Trump’s true motivation is to oust Maduro and access its oil.

A police car at the crime scene. Photo/Pexels
A police car at the crime scene. Photo/Pexels

It comes as an investigation in Washington, DC, has started looking into the very first strike on said drug boat in September 2025, in international waters near Venezuela.

On that occasion, US Navy admiral Frank “Mitch” Bradley is accused of ordering a follow-up strike to kill the survivors.

This reportedly followed demands from Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth that the navy “kill them all”.

The admiral briefed politicians in a series of closed-door briefings at the US Capitol on Thursday, and denied there was any such order from Hegseth.

Hegseth said the admiral “made the correct decision to ultimately sink the boat and eliminate the threat”.

But speaking on Air Force One last Sunday, the president said he was unaware of the second strike and would not have wanted it, though he backed Hegseth.

A video of the September 2, 2025, strike, which killed 11 people, has been shown to politicians, but accounts of its contents split along party lines.

Republican Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas said the survivors were “trying to flip a boat loaded with drugs bound for the United States back over so they could stay in the fight”.

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