UNITED STATES-Democrats demand probe into Caribbean boat strikes.

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WASHINGTON, CMC – As United States President Donald J. Trump expands the US military build-up in the Caribbean, Democratic legislators are demanding that the Department of Justice (DOJ) investigate the US military’s strikes on suspected narco-trafficking vessels in the Caribbean Sea as crimes.

Congressmen Ted Lieu and Jamie Raskin, the Ranking Member of the House of Representatives’ Judiciary Committee, have sent a letter to US Attorney General Pam Bondi demanding that the DOJ open a criminal investigation into the Trump administration’s lethal military strikes in the Caribbean.

The members cite “deeply troubling reporting” that, on September 2, 2025, following an initial strike on a small vessel in international waters off Venezuela, US forces carried out a second attack on two survivors clinging to the wreckage, raising “serious concerns that senior Defense Department officials ordered or condoned conduct that violates both the laws of war and federal criminal law.

“To be clear, the entire Caribbean operation appears to be unlawful. Congress has never authorized military force against Venezuela; a boat moving towards Suriname does not pose a clear and present danger to the United States; and the classified legal memoranda the Trump administration has offered us to justify the attacks are entirely unpersuasive,” they wrote in the letter.

They said deliberately targeting incapacitated individuals constitutes a clear violation of the Department of Defense’s Law of War Manual, which expressly forbids attacks on persons rendered helpless by shipwreck.

“Such conduct would trigger criminal liability under the War Crimes Act if the administration claims it is engaged in armed conflict, or under the federal murder statute if no such conflict exists.”

The lawmakers claimed that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has offered “shifting and contradictory” explanations for the September 2 incident, including “claims of confusion due to the ‘fog of war’ and assertions that he delegated or did not personally issue an order to kill survivors.

“Issuing or executing a general order to kill survivors is unlawful under any circumstances, and ‘acting pursuant to orders’ is not a defense when those orders are manifestly illegal. Any suggestion that classified or prior Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) memoranda could immunize the targeting of survivors after an initial strike is legally baseless.”

The legislators said prior OLC opinions were limited to congressionally authorized armed conflicts against enemy combatants posing imminent threats, “conditions that are plainly absent here.”

Lieu and Rankin said that even conservative legal scholar John Yoo, former deputy assistant attorney general and author of the “now infamous” OLC torture memos, which “condoned and defended torture by US officials, has said that the administration violated both federal law and the law of war.

“Outside of war, the killing of unarmed, helpless men clinging to wreckage in open water is simply murder. The federal criminal code makes it a felony to murder within the ‘special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States,’ which is defined to include the ‘high seas.’”

Lieu and Rankin said it is also a federal crime to conspire to commit murder and are demanding that Bondi investigate Hegseth’s “apparent and serious violations of federal criminal law.

In remarks from the Senate floor last Thursday, US Democratic Senator Peter Welch raised alarm about Trump’s mobilisation of National Guard troops, warships, and fighter jets to the Caribbean, urging the US Congress to enforce the War Powers Act before the United States embarks on another unauthorized war.

The senator said that the Trump administration has not provided Congress with adequate information about its recent military strikes in the region, and demanded transparency and accountability for attacks that have killed nearly 100 people.

“The question is: Why are our warships, a carrier group, and support assets in the Caribbean? They are not there for drug interdiction. The reason they’re there is obvious, and it’s even acknowledged. President Trump wants Maduro gone. He wants regime change,” Welch said.

In October, Welch voted in support of a War Powers Act Resolution to stop Trump’s “unconstitutional attacks” in the Caribbean Sea and urged the Senate to question Trump’s legal authority to take the United States to war.

Under pressure to publicly release a video of a boat strike that killed survivors in the Caribbean Sea, Hegseth declined to do so.

“Of course, we’re not going to release a top secret, full, unedited video of that to the general public,” Hegseth told reporters last Tuesday.

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