By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, December 03, 2025
Since September of this year, the United States military
has been blowing up boats allegedly trafficking drugs in the Caribbean.
Whether these attacks are legal is hotly debated.
Congress hasn’t declared war or even authorized the use of force against
“narco-terrorists” or against Venezuela, the apparent real target of a massive
U.S. military buildup off its coast.
The Trump administration has simply unilaterally
designated various—alleged—drug traffickers as “terrorists” or members of
“terrorist organizations,” and then waged war upon them. The administration’s
internal legal finding supporting all of this hasn’t been publicly released.
But whatever their case in private is, it was sufficiently weak that the
British government announced
in early November it would no longer share intelligence with the U.S. relevant
to the Caribbean operation over concerns about its lawfulness.
On Friday, the Washington Post dropped a bombshell
report about the first of these operations back in September. During the
strike, the Navy not only took out a suspected drug-trafficking boat—as had
been reported previously—but when survivors were spotted clinging to the
wreckage, the Special Operations commander overseeing the operation ordered a
second strike on the survivors to comply with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s
order to kill everyone involved.
“Hegseth gave a spoken directive, according to two people
with direct knowledge of the operation,” the Post reported. “‘The order
was to kill everybody,’ one of them said.”
Whatever you think about the broader Caribbean operation,
it is a simple fact that shooting survivors at sea is a war crime, under
American and international law. Of course, as
some suggest, since this operation is not a legal war, maybe it’s not a war
crime, just a crime-crime.
Later Friday, in a lengthy social media post,
Hegseth attacked the Washington Post’s report as an instance of the
“fake news … delivering more fabricated, inflammatory, and derogatory
reporting.”
What Hegseth didn’t do was directly deny the report.
Instead, he insisted that, “We’ve said from the beginning, and in every
statement, these highly effective strikes are specifically intended to be
‘lethal, kinetic strikes.’”
Declaring your intent was to kill everybody on the first
try isn’t a legal excuse to finish off unarmed survivors.
Hegseth offered follow-up posts that were boastful or
childish,
but did not deny the charge.
With even Republican members of Congress expressing grave
concerns, the official story changed from “fake news” to an actual denial. Trump
said that Hegseth told the president that he did not give any such illegal
order, “and I believe him, 100 percent,” adding that he “wouldn’t have wanted
that. Not a second strike.”
So it now appears the White House has confirmed there was
a second strike on the survivors, and conceded that it would at least be
against the president’s policy. Whether the White House will concede the strike
was unlawful remains to be seen. Indeed, exactly what happened remains murky.
It surely seems like someone gave an order for a second strike. And if it
wasn’t Hegseth, whoever that person was could be looking at a court-martial—or
given who the commander in chief is, a pardon.
But I don’t want to get ahead of the news.
Instead, I’ll make a few points.
First, a minor gripe: This administration and its
defenders need to be more selective in their use of the term “fake news.” I
have no problem calling a false story “fake news.” But if you know that a story
isn’t false, calling it “fake news” just sets you up to look like even more of
a liar or hypocrite down the road when you end up admitting the truth and
defending actions you once pretended were slanderous.
More importantly, the whole Caribbean strategy is
constitutionally and legally dubious. As a matter of foreign policy, it looks
more and more like a pretext for some kind of regime change
gambit
in Venezuela.
If the administration has evidence that justifies its actions, they should
share it with Congress and ask for permission to wage war.
Even more important: Illegal orders cannot be justified.
When a half-dozen Democratic members of Congress released a video saying that
the military shouldn’t follow “illegal orders,” the president and many of his
defenders became hysterical. Trump lamented that America has become so “soft”
that such “seditious behavior” isn’t punished by death anymore.
More sober critics of the Democrats complained that the
video sowed confusion in the ranks and hurt morale. I’m actually sympathetic to
that argument.
But you know what else sows confusion and hurts morale?
Issuing illegal orders—or even appearing to do so.
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