‘Kill them’: Trump says no Congress nod needed to attack ‘narco-terrorists’

‘Kill them’: Trump says no Congress nod needed to attack ‘narco-terrorists’

While Congress will be informed of operations, the recent spate of bombings of ships in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean will be followed by strikes on land, as President Donald Trump has stated that attacks on alleged “narco-terrorists” do not need a declaration of war.

Trump told reporters at the White House on Thursday, “Well, I don’t think we’re going to necessarily ask for a declaration of war.”

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“I believe we will simply kill those who enter our country with drugs,” he said. OK? Trump declared, “We’re going to kill them.”

The US president echoed similar threats he has made in recent weeks that include expanding his administration’s attacks to the territories of nations Washington accuses of allowing drug cartels to smuggle narcotics into the US. “Now they]drugs] are coming in by land… you know, the land is going to be next,” the president said.

At least 37 people have died in what Washington has hailed as a military operation against “narco-terrorists” so far, but the US military hasn’t provided any evidence to back up its claims of criminality. At least nine vessels have been attacked by the US military in the Caribbean and Pacific since early September.

US naval ships, F-35 fighter jets, a nuclear submarine, and thousands of troops have been dispatched to the Caribbean region as a result of Washington’s growing combat against samoyed Latin American drug cartels.

Venezuelan and Colombian presidents Gustavo Petro and Nicolas Maduro have been accused of involvement in drug trafficking by the US in an additional offensive.

Venezuela claims that the US is conducting its anti-cartel campaign as part of a plot to overthrow President Maduro, who claimed on Wednesday that his armed forces have 5, 000 Russian surface-to-air missiles in order to counter any US military intervention in his nation.

As US forces are deployed in waters off Venezuela’s coast, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has warned the country against any military assaults.

According to flight tracking data, at least one US B-1B bomber flew over the Caribbean Sea off Venezuela on Wednesday, which is the second US airpower show in a week, according to the AFP news agency.

A B-1B bomber made a U-turn and headed north on Wednesday afternoon before disappearing from view before disappearing from view.

Trump responded to the question “it’s false” at a White House event before stating that the US is “unsatisfied with Venezuela for a number of reasons.”

The military described the mission as a “proactive deterter adversary threats, enhance crew training, and ensure the global force readiness necessary to respond to any contingency or challenge,” as a result of US-based B-52 bombers circled off Venezuela’s coast for several hours last week.

“Every international law is broken,” declares the statement.

Trump added that “the entire world should now be aware” that drug cartels, some of which the US has labeled “foreign terrorist organizations,” are the “ISIS]ISIL of the Western Hemisphere.

Pete Hegseth, US defense secretary, compared Trump’s expanding operations against Latin American drug gangs to the so-called “war on terror” of the US.

In a post on social media on Wednesday, Hegseth stated that there will be no refuge or foreboding, but instead, “these cartels are waging war on our border and our people” and that there will be only justice.

A chorus of voices voices voices calls for Washington to attack ships in international waters that are suspected of smuggling drugs as a violation of international law, including Colombia’s president Claudia Sheinbaum.

We do not share the same views, of course. International laws dictate how operations must be conducted in international waters when alleged illegal drug or weapon transportation occurs. Sheinbaum said on Thursday that the United States government has been informed of this.

Petro, a Colombian who has been at odds with Trump since being referred to as a “thug” by the US president, claimed on Thursday that the US is “carrying out extrajudicial executions” that “violate international law.”

“Military bombings in the Caribbean are prohibited by Amnesty International. In a post on social media above a news report about Trump’s attacks on ships in the Caribbean, which has since expanded to the Pacific, Petro stated that all international law is broken in the Caribbean.

Source: Aljazeera

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