העגסעט פארטיידיגט די מיליטערישע אטאקע אויף ווענעזועלא דראג שיפן
President Donald Trump delivered a forceful message during a cabinet meeting, reaffirming his administration’s uncompromising stance against narcotics trafficking operations that attempt to smuggle fentanyl into the United States by sea. Trump made clear that the military is authorized to eliminate these threats with decisive force. “I want those boats taken out, and if we have to, we'll attack on land also,” the president said, praising the precision of U.S. strikes that he credited with “saving hundreds of thousands of lives.”
The administration reports that sea-based fentanyl smuggling has dropped by over 90% due to the aggressive maritime interdiction campaign launched earlier this year. Naval commanders, empowered by Trump’s designation of major cartels as terrorist organizations, now have expanded authority to treat cartel-controlled vessels as hostile targets.
One of the clearest examples came on September 2, when a Venezuelan narco-trafficking vessel attempted to evade interdiction. After initial engagement, Admiral Mitch Bradley authorized a second precision strike to ensure the ship’s complete destruction—a move the administration says prevented a major fentanyl shipment from reaching U.S. shores.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth fully backed the decision, rejecting criticism and emphasizing the life-or-death stakes. “Admiral Bradley made the correct decision to ultimately sink the boat and eliminate the threat,” Hegseth said. “We have his back, and the American people are safer.” He added that cartels operating through state-protected channels in Venezuela, Colombia, and elsewhere should now understand that their vessels are legitimate military targets under Trump’s orders.
Senior defense officials noted that the new doctrine blends intelligence-driven targeting, rapid drone response, and naval aviation support to ensure that no trafficking vessel can escape once flagged. The administration argues that this model has not only disrupted cartel supply chains, but also reasserted U.S. naval dominance across the Caribbean corridor.
Trump highlighted the broader mission: protecting American communities from a drug crisis fueled by foreign criminal networks. With fentanyl overdoses still devastating families nationwide, the president said the United States will continue to escalate pressure until every maritime smuggling route is shut down. “Pinpoint attacks save lives,” Trump said. “We’re doing what no other administration had the courage to do.”