Trump UNLEASHES Lethal Strike on Narco-Terrorists

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U.S. forces under President Trump deliver another lethal strike on narco-terrorists in the Eastern Pacific, killing two while rescuing three survivors—proving America First border security works despite elite obstruction.

Story Highlights

  • U.S. military’s kinetic strike targets drug boat operated by designated terrorist groups, killing 2 narco-traffickers.
  • Three survivors rescued by U.S. Coast Guard, no American injuries reported in ongoing Operation Southern Spear.
  • Part of 47 strikes by March 2026, eliminating 163 traffickers and disrupting routes feeding U.S. drug crisis.
  • Directed by Trump, announced by Defense Secretary Hegseth, emphasizing national security over globalist inaction.

Latest Strike Details

The U.S. military executed a lethal kinetic strike on Thursday against a low-profile vessel in the Eastern Pacific, a known narco-trafficking corridor off Colombia’s coast. U.S. Southern Command confirmed the boat belonged to designated terrorist organizations like Colombia’s National Liberation Army. Two narco-terrorists died in the attack. Three survivors received rescue from the U.S. Coast Guard. SOUTHCOM released unclassified video Friday morning via X post. No U.S. personnel faced harm. This action aligns intelligence-driven operations to protect American borders from fentanyl floods.

Operation Southern Spear Under Trump

President Trump launched Operation Southern Spear in September 2025 with a Navy airstrike on a Venezuelan boat in the Caribbean, killing 11 traffickers. The campaign expanded to the Eastern Pacific in October amid the Iran war. Strikes escalated rapidly: 21 October killed 2 off Colombia; 27 October targeted 4 boats, killing 14 with one Mexican rescue. By 9 November, two boats yielded 6 deaths. Directed by Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announces via social media. Gen. Francis Donovan leads SOUTHCOM execution. Cumulative efforts hit 47 strikes on 48 vessels by March 2026.

Rising Toll and Border Impact

By late March 2026, operations eliminated 163 alleged traffickers across 15 Caribbean and 31 Pacific strikes, plus 3 presumed dead. The 27 October action marked the deadliest day with 14 killed. Mexican Navy assisted limited rescues, like 96 hours post-strike. These disruptions target routes pumping drugs into U.S. communities, fueling overdoses and crime. Trump administration frames narco-groups as terrorists justifying lethal force in international waters. No civilian casualties reported. Efforts counter years of open-border policies under prior regimes that overwhelmed ICE and communities.

Short-term wins deter specific routes while long-term militarization risks trafficker retaliation or strained Latin ties. U.S. officials cite intelligence confirming narco-ops. Coastal areas in Colombia and Mexico feel operational proximity. Domestically, border hawks applaud; internationally, human rights voices question proportionality.

Shared Frustrations Across Divides

Americans left and right unite in distrust of federal elites prioritizing reelection over crises like drug invasions eroding the American Dream. Conservatives hail Trump’s decisive action against globalist-fueled chaos, illegal flows, and inflation-tied overspending. Liberals decry militarism yet share rage at deep state corruption failing families. UN experts label strikes extrajudicial, breaching charters, but lack evidence of civilian harm. True patriots demand accountability: secure borders enable hard work, not cartel dominance. Government must serve citizens, not obstructors in Congress.

Sources:

U.S. military strikes alleged drug boat in Eastern Pacific, leaving 3 survivors (U.S. Southern Command announcement).

ABC News: U.S. military strikes alleged drug boat in Eastern Pacific.

Wikipedia: United States strikes on alleged drug traffickers during Operation Southern Spear.