U.S. Southern Command announced intensified maritime operations across the Caribbean under Joint Task Force Southern Spear, a coordinated effort aimed at securing key sea lanes, disrupting illicit trafficking networks, and safeguarding U.S. national interests. Working in close coordination with the U.S. Coast Guard, the Department of Homeland Security, and other federal partners, Navy and Marine Corps forces are intercepting suspect vessels, enforcing sanctions, and monitoring regional compliance.

Launched in late 2025, Joint Task Force Southern Spear reflects Washington’s broader commitment to regional security within the Southern Command area of responsibility. Video released alongside the announcement shows Navy and Marine boarding teams conducting inspections and interdictions at sea, underscoring the task force’s operational focus on drug trafficking, sanctions evasion, and transnational criminal activity.

On January 23, 2026, the task force carried out a lethal kinetic strike against a narco-trafficking vessel operating in defiance of U.S. sanctions. The action was conducted under directives from Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and marked the third such operation this month targeting vessels linked to Venezuelan oil trafficking and cartel supply chains. U.S. officials stated that the vessel posed an active threat and was engaged in activities tied to sanctions evasion and organized crime.

Defense officials emphasized that the operations are designed to deter criminal networks, protect maritime commerce, and prevent hostile actors from exploiting the Caribbean as a transit corridor. The increased tempo of interdictions highlights the administration’s willingness to use decisive force alongside law enforcement and regulatory measures to disrupt illicit maritime activity.

The Southern Spear mission signals a renewed U.S. posture in the region, combining military readiness with interagency cooperation to reinforce stability, uphold sanctions regimes, and counter the expanding influence of transnational criminal organizations across the Caribbean basin.