In a targeted counter-narcotics operation, U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) executed precision airstrikes against three vessels allegedly operated by designated terrorist organizations engaged in narcotics trafficking. The military action, authorized by SOUTHCOM commander General Francis L. Donovan, resulted in eleven fatalities among suspected narco-terrorists operating the vessels.
According to official statements released Tuesday, the coordinated strikes occurred during the night of February 16th through Joint Task Force Southern Spear operations. Intelligence surveillance confirmed the vessels were actively transiting established drug trafficking corridors before being engaged with lethal kinetic force.
The tactical breakdown reveals four casualties occurred aboard the first vessel in the Eastern Pacific, followed by four additional fatalities on a second vessel in the same region. A third strike in the Caribbean waters eliminated three more individuals. No U.S. military personnel sustained injuries during the operations.
This recent engagement marks the seventh such intervention against suspected drug-smuggling vessels in 2024, continuing a pattern of intensified counter-narcotics efforts. Historical data indicates these latest strikes bring the total to at least 41 operations against narcotics trafficking networks, resulting in 144 casualties across Caribbean and Eastern Pacific regions since the program’s inception.
SOUTHCOM, which oversees U.S. military operations throughout Central America, South America, and the Caribbean basin, maintains that these missions are critical to disrupting transnational criminal organizations whose activities directly threaten national security interests. The command’s strategy focuses on intercepting maritime drug transportation routes that fuel terrorist activities and contribute to the U.S. opioid crisis.
