Operation Southern Spear: Lethal Drone Strikes on Caribbean and Pacific Drug Boats
A sustained campaign of Hellfire missile strikes on suspected drug boats has killed at least 95 people without due process, public evidence of drug trafficking, or identification of the dead. Legal experts widely classify these as extrajudicial killings and crimes against humanity.
Since September 2, 2025, the US military has conducted at least 26 drone strikes on vessels in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean under Operation Southern Spear, killing at least 95 people. The very first strike included a 'double tap' follow-up attack that killed shipwrecked survivors clinging to wreckage.
Executive summary
What this record documents
- At least 95 people killed in 26+ Hellfire missile strikes on boats in the Caribbean and Pacific since September 2, 2025, with no public evidence the boats were carrying drugs.
- The very first strike on September 2, 2025 included a 'double tap' โ two survivors clung to wreckage for 45 minutes before a follow-up strike killed them. The total death toll from this single incident was 11.
- The Washington Post reported that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave a verbal order to SEAL Team Six to 'leave no survivors.' The Pentagon denied the report.
- The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights demanded the strikes be halted. Lawfare analysis concluded the strikes meet the Rome Statute definition of crimes against humanity.
- ICC jurisdiction may apply through vessels registered to Rome Statute member states including Venezuela, Colombia, and Ecuador.
Timeline
Sequence of events
September 2, 2025
First strike โ 'double tap' kills shipwrecked survivors
MQ-9 Reaper drone fires Hellfire missile at a vessel in the Caribbean. After the initial strike disables the boat, two survivors cling to wreckage for approximately 45 minutes. Frank Bradley, then head of JSOC, orders a follow-up strike that kills the survivors. Total death toll: 11.
October 31, 2025
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights condemns strikes
Volker Turk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, publicly states that the US attacks in the Caribbean and Pacific violate international human rights law and demands they be halted.
November 28, 2025
CNN reports on double-tap strike
CNN publishes detailed reporting confirming the US military carried out a second strike killing survivors on a suspected drug boat.
December 5, 2025
The Intercept details 45-minute gap before follow-up strike
The Intercept reports that survivors clung to wreckage for 45 minutes before the US military killed them, raising serious questions about deliberate targeting of shipwrecked persons.
December 15, 2025
Death toll reaches at least 95 across 26+ strikes
Cumulative reporting establishes at least 26 strikes and 95 deaths. Lawfare and Human Rights Watch publish analyses concluding the strikes constitute crimes against humanity and extrajudicial killings.
March 25, 2026
Strikes continue into 2026
A strike killing 4 people is reported on March 25, 2026. The campaign shows no signs of halting despite international condemnation.
Analysis
Reporting, legal context, and impact
What Happened
Beginning September 2, 2025, the US military launched a sustained campaign of lethal strikes on vessels in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean under "Operation Southern Spear," claiming to target drug traffickers. As of March 25, 2026, at least 26 strikes have been conducted using Hellfire missiles fired from MQ-9 Reaper drones, killing at least 95 people. The number has continued to rise with strikes ongoing into 2026.
The administration has not publicly released evidence that any of the targeted boats were carrying drugs. It has not publicly identified any of the people killed.
The Double-Tap Strike of September 2, 2025
The very first strike established the pattern of the campaign. After an initial Hellfire missile disabled a boat and killed several occupants, two survivors were observed clinging to wreckage in open water. They remained there for approximately 45 minutes. Frank Bradley, then head of Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), ordered a follow-up strike that killed the shipwrecked survivors. The total death toll from this single incident was 11.
The Washington Post reported in November 2025 that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave a verbal order to SEAL Team Six to "leave no survivors." The Pentagon denied this.
Killing shipwrecked persons who have ceased fighting is specifically prohibited under the Geneva Conventions and the Pentagon's own Law of War Manual.
Legal Analysis
Legal experts have reached a striking degree of consensus on these strikes. Charlie Trumbull, writing in Lawfare on December 16, 2025, concluded that the strikes meet the legal definition of crimes against humanity under Rome Statute Article 7 โ murder as part of a widespread or systematic attack against a civilian population. Human Rights Watch separately concluded that the strikes constitute extrajudicial killings under international human rights law.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, publicly demanded the strikes be halted in October 2025, stating they violate international human rights law.
A key legal question is ICC jurisdiction. While the United States is not a party to the Rome Statute, the ICC may exercise jurisdiction over crimes committed against nationals of member states or aboard vessels flagged to member states. Venezuela, Colombia, and Ecuador are all Rome Statute parties, and victims may include nationals of these countries.
The ACLU has filed a FOIA lawsuit seeking the legal justification the administration relies upon. As of March 2026, no justification has been publicly released. Multiple families of victims have filed legal challenges through the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
Why This Is Classified Extreme
This incident receives an extreme severity classification because:
- Scale: At least 95 people killed across 26+ strikes, with the campaign ongoing and the death toll still rising.
- Deliberate killing of the shipwrecked: The double-tap strike โ waiting 45 minutes before killing survivors clinging to wreckage โ is specifically prohibited under both the Geneva Conventions and the Pentagon's own manual.
- No due process: The people killed were afforded no legal process. No evidence of drug trafficking has been publicly presented. The dead have not been identified.
- Expert consensus: Lawfare, Human Rights Watch, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, War on the Rocks, and Just Security have all published analyses concluding these strikes are unlawful.
- Systematic nature: 26+ strikes over months constitute a systematic campaign, meeting the threshold for crimes against humanity under Rome Statute Article 7.
International Law Violations
The following international law provisions are implicated:
- ICCPR Article 6 (Right to Life): Arbitrary deprivation of life without legal process.
- Rome Statute Article 7 (Crimes Against Humanity): Murder as part of a widespread or systematic attack. Legal experts at Lawfare have concluded this threshold is met.
- Geneva Conventions (Protection of the Shipwrecked): The double-tap strike killed persons who had ceased fighting and were in a state of distress at sea. This is a clear violation.
- Pentagon Law of War Manual: The US military's own rules prohibit killing shipwrecked persons.
- ICCPR Article 14 (Due Process): No judicial or quasi-judicial process preceded any of these killings.
- UN Principles on Extra-legal Executions: The strikes meet the definition of summary executions โ killings carried out by agents of the state without legal process.
Source documents
Primary records
ACLU FOIA Lawsuit for Legal Justification of Boat Strikes
FOIA lawsuit seeking the administration's legal justification for the strikes.
Linked reporting
Reporting and secondary sources
- The Administration's Drug Boat Strikes Are Crimes Against Humanity Lawfare
- US Military Boat Strikes Constitute Extrajudicial Killings Human Rights Watch
- Q&A: US Military Operations in the Caribbean, Pacific Human Rights Watch
- US attacks in Caribbean and Pacific violate international human rights law OHCHR
- US military carried out second strike killing survivors on a suspected drug boat CNN
- Boat Strike Survivors Clung to Wreckage for 45 Minutes Before U.S. Military Killed Them The Intercept
- Rights Groups Sue Trump Administration for Legal Justification of Deadly Boat Strikes ACLU
- International Criminal Liability and U.S. Boat Attacks War on the Rocks
- Expert Q&A on the U.S. Boat Strikes Just Security
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