Suspected smuggling boat struck twice by military was reportedly moving drugs to South American country, not US – live | Trump administration

Suspected smuggling boat struck twice by military was reportedly moving drugs to South American country, not US – live | Trump administration

Suspected drug smugglers killed in September attack were moving drugs to Suriname, not US – report

The US admiral who directed an attack on suspected drug smugglers in the Caribbean on 2 September told lawmakers this week that the small boat destroyed by the US military is a series of strikes was moving narcotics to a larger vessel bound for the South American nation of Suriname, not the United States, two sources with direct knowledge of the testimony told CNN.

That information seems to contradict the case made for the attack by Donald Trump when he wrote on social media, hours after the four strikes on the boat, including those that killed two survivors clinging to the wreckage: “The strike occurred while the terrorists were at sea in International waters transporting illegal narcotics, heading to the United States.”

As the former Pentagon lawyer Ryan Goodman points out, the testimony of Adm Frank Bradley, that the drugs were bound for Suriname, makes it unlikely that they were ultimately destined for the US.

“Suriname is a transit country for South American cocaine, the majority of which is likely destined for Europe,” according to the US state department’s 2025 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report.

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Key events

A federal judge in San Francisco cast a skeptical eye on the Trump justice department’s argument at a hearing on Friday that Donald Trump should be allowed to keep members of the California national guard under federal control for as long as he likes.

Trump initially federalized more than 4,000 California national guard troops in June, in response to protests in Los Angeles against federal immigration raids, but that number dropped to several hundred by late October, with only about 100 troops remaining in the Los Angeles area now.

At the hearing, US district court judge Charles Breyer said, “like diamonds, it’s forever; that’s the position of the federal government”, according to Chris Geidner, a legal journalist who listened to the proceeding.

“No crisis lasts forever,” Breyer added. ”I think experience teaches us that crises come and crises go. That’s the way it works.”

He pressed justice department lawyer Eric Hamilton for evidence that state authorities were either unable or unwilling to help keep federal personnel and property in the area safe.

“Is every violent protest a rebellion?” Breyer asked.

The government lawyer suggested that the hurling of a pair of inert Molotov cocktail explosive devices at a federal building that houses immigration offices in LA this week meant that there is still “at least a danger of rebellion.”

California officials have asked Breyer to issue a preliminary injunction returning control of remaining California national guard troops in Los Angeles to the state. Breyer did not immediately rule. He previously ruled the administration’s deployment of the California national guard was illegal, before an appeals court stayed his temporary restraining order.

“The national guard is not the president’s traveling private army to deploy where he wants, when he wants, for as long as he wants, for any reason he wants, or no reason at all,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said after the hearing.

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Original Title: Suspected smuggling boat struck twice by military was reportedly moving drugs to South American country, not US – live | Trump administration
Source: www.theguardian.com
Published: 2025-12-06 07:36:00
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