Boat Destroyed in Double-Tap Strike Was Not Heading to U.S.
- - Boat Destroyed in Double-Tap Strike Was Not Heading to U.S.
Rebecca SchneidDecember 7, 2025 at 1:44 AM
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Adm. Frank Bradley departs from the U.S. Capitol Building on December 4, 2025 in Washington, DC. Members of the Senate and House Armed Services and Intelligence committees met with Bradley in closed-door classified meetings to discuss the strikes on suspected drug boats out of Venezuela ordered by the Trump Administration. Credit - Anna Moneymakerâ2025 Getty Images
The Trump Administrationâs justification for striking a boat in the Caribbean in early September, killing all 11 people on board in multiple strikes, was that it was carrying a cargo of potentially deadly drugs that was headed to the United States.
But that justification appears to have been undermined by a briefing from the commander of that operation before lawmakers on Thursday, who reportedly said the boat in question was heading to the coast of Suriname, where it was planning to transfer its drugs to a larger vessel.
The revelation means the boat was not heading directly to the United States, and that the U.S. was likely not the final destination for its shipment. The U.S. governmentâs own intelligence has said previously that the majority of drug trafficking routes that go via Suriname head towards Europe.
Read more: âThis Is Murderâ: Experts Say Hegseth Could Face Prosecution For Alleged Order to âKill Everyoneâ on Boat in Caribbean
Adm. Frank âMitchâ Bradley, the head of U.S. Special Operations Command and commander of the operation, disclosed the boatâs destination during a briefing for a select group of lawmakers on Thursday, which included the leaders of the Armed Services and Intelligence committees in the House and Senate, CNN reported.
Bradley argued that the drug shipment allegedly on board the boat could have ultimately made its way to the United States, according to CNN. The news outlet cited two sources familiar with his remarks to lawmakers.
The September 2 strike has come under intense scrutiny after it emerged that Bradley, a Navy SEAL officer with decades of experience who now leads U.S. Special Operations Command, ordered a second attack after two of the 11 people on the boat survived the first.
Democratic and Republican lawmakers emerged from Bradley's briefing with diametrically opposing views of what they had seen, with Democrats expressing deep concern and Republicans appearing satisfied that Bradley had acted lawfully.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has also been under fire following a Washington Post report that cited two people familiar with the operation who claimed he ordered that the strike leave no survivors, a potential war crime.
TIME has reached out to the Defense Department for comment.
Hegsethâs story has shifted in the weeks since the strike. He initially said he had watched the strike live, but later, when news of the second strike emerged, he revealed that he had left the room after the initial launch and did not see the second.
Hegsethâs primary justification for all the strikes, including the September 2 operation, has been that the alleged trafficking boats were heading to the United States with deadly drugs that pose a threat to Americans.
The day after the strike, Hegseth said in an interview on Fox & Friends. âWe knew exactly who was in that boat. We knew exactly what they were doing, and we knew exactly who they represented â and that was Tren de Aragua, a narco-terrorist organization designated by the United States, trying to poison our country with illicit drugs,â he said.
âWeâve only just begun striking narco-boats and putting narco-terrorists at the bottom of the ocean because theyâve been poisoning the American people,â Hegseth told reporters earlier this week, threatening to ramp up a campaign that has drawn criticism from experts and both sides of the aisle.
President Donald Trump has claimed the same. On the day of the strike, he said with certainty in the Truth Social post announcing the attack that the traffickers, who he said were âunder the controlâ of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, were âheading to the United States.â
The U.S. governmentâs own intelligence has shown that in recent years that drug trafficking routes via Suriname are primarily headed towards Europe, and that much of the U.S. drug trade has shifted towards the Pacific.
âSuriname is a transit country for South American cocaine, the majority of which is likely destined for Europe,â the US State Departmentâs 2025 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report said on the South American nationâs drug trade.
The strikes have killed more than 87 people in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific.
Read More: âThis Is Murderâ: Could Hegseth Face Prosecution For Alleged Order to âKill Everyoneâ on Boat in Caribbean?
Bradleyâs classified briefing to lawmakers on Thursday did little to quell outrage among Democrats over the September strike.
Senate Armed Services Committee Ranking Member Jack Reed, a Democrat of Rhode Island, said in a statement to TIME that he was âdeeply disturbedâ by what he saw at the briefing.
Democratic Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut, the ranking member on the House Intelligence Committee, also raised serious concerns. âWhat I saw in that room was one of the most troubling things Iâve seen in my time in public service,â he told reporters.
âYou have two individuals in clear distress, without any means of locomotion, with a destroyed vessel, [who] were killed by the United States,â the Connecticut congressman said, though he acknowledged that âthereâs a whole set of contextual itemsâ that Bradley explained. âYes, they were carrying drugs. They were not in the position to continue their mission in any way,â Himes added.
According to the Post report, Bradley ordered a follow-up strike that killed two survivors of the first attack in an attempt to fulfill Hegsethâs directive to leave no survivors. Hegseth has repeatedly denied the allegations, calling the story âfake newsâ and âfabricated, inflammatory, and derogatory reporting,â on social media on Nov. 28
Hegseth said on Fox News earlier this week that he did not see the second strike, having learned a âcouple of hours laterâ that Bradly had ordered it, âwhich he had the complete authority to do.â He has defended the strikes, which he says were intended to be lethal.
Legal experts have pointed to international war laws and domestic laws to argue that if the directive did occur, it could amount to âmurderâ and a âwar crimeâ for which Hegseth could be held legally culpable, as it is illegal to kill shipwrecked people who are technically out of combat.
The revelations have sparked investigations in both houses of Congressâa rare show of bipartisan pushback against the Trump Administration, as the Senate Armed Services Committee has vowed âvigorous oversightâ to determine what occurred.
Reporting from CNN and the New York Times of Bradleyâs testimony also alleges that after the first strike on the boat, survivors climbed atop the overturned boat and waved something in the air above their heads. Interpretation by lawmakers who saw the video was split, as military officials argued the move was to beckon other alleged drug traffickers in a plane or boat to come get them, while some believed it could have been an attempt to surrender.
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Source: âAOL Breakingâ