Dems Call for Release of Video Amid Controversy Over Boat Strikes
- - Dems Call for Release of Video Amid Controversy Over Boat Strikes
Chad de GuzmanDecember 8, 2025 at 7:34 AM
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A screenshot from a social media post by President Donald Trump on Sept. 2, 2025. Credit - @realDonaldTrump/Truth Social
âDeeply disturbingâ and âone of the most troubling things Iâve seenââthatâs how top Democratic lawmakers have described classified video they recently watched of a series of strikes on an alleged drug boat in the Caribbean in September. Now, theyâre pushing the Trump Administration to declassify the footage for the public to assess if the attack was appropriate.
âI think it's really important that this video be made public,â Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut, who was among the select lawmakers who watched the video in a closed-door briefing last Thursday, told CBS News on Sunday. Himes, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, pointed out that descriptions and interpretations of what lawmakers saw split along party lines, adding: âThis is an instance in which I think the American public needs to judge for itself.â
âThey ought to release the video,â Rep. Adam Smith of Washington told ABC News on Sunday. âIf they release the video, then everything that the Republicans are saying will clearly be portrayed to be completely false and people will get a look at it and they will see.â
The Sept. 2 attack on the alleged drug boat, which killed 11 in total, gained renewed scrutiny after reports emerged that the U.S. military killed survivors of an initial strike in a follow-up strike. Since then, Congress members have raised questions on the legality of the militaryâs actions and who gave such an order.
President Donald Trump had posted a short video labeled âUNCLASSIFIEDâ on his Truth Social platform on Sept. 2. The clip appeared to show just an initial strike on what Trump described as âTren de Aragua Narcoterroristsâ who were âat sea in International waters transporting illegal narcotics, heading to the United States.â Trump added that the strike should âserve as notice to anybody even thinking about bringing drugs into the United States of America. BEWARE!â
Many lawmakers who were shown video of what followed have kept silentâciting the classified nature of the briefing with military officialsâthough some, like Himes and Smith, offered descriptions that hinted at potential violations of international law.
After the Thursday briefing, Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware offered few details, but he said there were actually four strikes in the attackâthe first killing nine, the second killing the survivors, and the third and fourth sinking the boat. âItâd be hard to watch the series of videos and not be troubled by it,â he told reporters.
Himes, speaking after the briefing, said that he witnessed âone of the most troubling things Iâve seen in my time in public service,â saying that there were âtwo individuals in clear distress, without any means of locomotion.â Himes added, âAny American who sees the video that I saw will see the United States military attacking shipwrecked sailors.â Days later, the Connecticut lawmaker said on CBS that the survivors were âbarely alive, much less engaging in hostilities.â
Republicans, meanwhile, maintained that the U.S.âs actions on the boat were justified, and have disputed claims from Democrats that the survivors were helpless.
Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee and was also among the lawmakers briefed last week, told NBC News on Sunday that the footage showed two survivors âsitting or standing on top of a capsized boatâ before getting killed in the second strike. âThey werenât floating helplessly in the water,â Cotton said. âIt looked at one point like they were trying to flip the boat back over presumably to rescue its cargo and continue their mission.â
Cotton also said that at one point, one of the survivors âtakes off his T-shirt,â when he was asked about reports that the two were reportedly âwaving overheadâ after their boat was struck. But Cotton dismissed the survivorsâ actions. âIt doesn't really matter what they were trying to do. What matters is they were not in a shipwrecked state, distressed, dog-paddling in the water at all.â
Smith, the Washington Democrat, echoed on ABC earlier descriptions from other Democrats of the survivors. âWhen they were finally taken out, they werenât trying to flip the boat over. The boat was clearly incapacitated. A tiny portion of it remained capsized, the bow of the boat.â He also said that the boat in question was âadriftâ and was being carried by the current and that the two survivors were âtrying to figure out how to survive.â
Smith also disputed Defense Secretary Pete Hegsethâs comments on Saturday at the Reagan National Defense Forum that the subsequent strikes were justified, given that the âcouple of folks that could still be in the fightâ had access to radios and could connect to other boats. Smith said, âThey had no communications device. Certainly, they were unarmed.â
President Donald Trump had suggested there would be no issues releasing classified video of the Sept. 2 attack. Hegseth, however, has not committed to making it public, stating his department would âreview the processâ first.
âI would trust Secretary Hegseth and his team to make the decision about whether they can declassify and release the video,â Cotton said. âBut again, thereâs nothing remarkable about the video, in my opinion.â
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Source: âAOL Breakingâ