Updated
Updated · CBS New York · May 30
U.S. Strike Kills 3 on Suspected Drug Boat, Pushing Campaign Death Toll to 202
Updated
Updated · CBS New York · May 30

U.S. Strike Kills 3 on Suspected Drug Boat, Pushing Campaign Death Toll to 202

12 articles · Updated · CBS New York · May 30
  • Three men died in a Friday U.S. strike on a suspected drug-smuggling boat in the eastern Pacific, the third such attack this week in Washington's expanding campaign against cartel-linked vessels.
  • U.S. Southern Command said the boat was engaged in narco-trafficking for a designated terrorist organization and that Gen. Francis L. Donovan directed the strike, but it offered no evidence for the claim.
  • The latest attack lifted the toll from the strikes that began in early September to at least 202, a figure that has risen further because some people first reported as survivors have not been found.
  • Video released by the command showed the small vessel exploding in a fireball; the post came as Donovan met Cuban military leaders near the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay.
  • The campaign faces growing legal scrutiny after reports that a Sept. 2 attack included a follow-on strike on people fleeing the first blast, prompting some lawmakers to question whether it amounted to a war crime.
Is America's high-tech war on cartels forcing smugglers to create smarter, more resilient trafficking routes?
When does a drug smuggler become a terrorist deserving a missile strike instead of a trial?