U.S. military strikes drug trafficking vessel in Eastern Pacific again, causing 3 deaths, cumulative death toll reaches 185
The U.S. military has again struck a suspected drug trafficking vessel in the Eastern Pacific, resulting in 3 deaths. This brings the cumulative death toll from related operations to 185, raising questions about legality and potential "extrajudicial killings" from legal experts and human rights organizations.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: April 27, 2026 at 17:22
- 🔍 Collected: April 27, 2026 at 17:31 (9 min after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 27, 2026 at 22:03 (4h 31m after Collected)
Central News Agency
(Central News Agency Washington 26th comprehensive foreign report) The U.S. military announced today that it struck a vessel "involved in drug trafficking activities" in the Eastern Pacific, resulting in the deaths of three men. The U.S. has launched dozens of similar attacks in recent months, with legal experts and human rights groups questioning their legality.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) statistics show that the cumulative death toll from this wave of U.S. operations has reached at least 185 people.
Similar to previous attacks, the U.S. Southern Command (U.S. Southern Command) posted on social media platform X after the operation, stating that the hit vessel was "operated by groups identified as terrorist organizations," and intelligence confirmed it was sailing along known drug trafficking routes, with no U.S. military personnel injured.
The Trump administration began these strike operations in September last year, but has so far failed to provide conclusive evidence that the hit vessels were involved in drug smuggling, leading to controversy over the legality of the operations.
Legal experts and human rights groups believe that these attacks may constitute extrajudicial killings, as the targets are clearly civilians who do not pose an imminent threat to the United States. (Translator: Kao Chao-fen / Editor: Chang Cheng-chien) 1140427
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(Central News Agency Washington 26th comprehensive foreign report) The U.S. military announced today that it struck a vessel "involved in drug trafficking activities" in the Eastern Pacific, resulting in the deaths of three men. The U.S. has launched dozens of similar attacks in recent months, with legal experts and human rights groups questioning their legality.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) statistics show that the cumulative death toll from this wave of U.S. operations has reached at least 185 people.
Similar to previous attacks, the U.S. Southern Command (U.S. Southern Command) posted on social media platform X after the operation, stating that the hit vessel was "operated by groups identified as terrorist organizations," and intelligence confirmed it was sailing along known drug trafficking routes, with no U.S. military personnel injured.
The Trump administration began these strike operations in September last year, but has so far failed to provide conclusive evidence that the hit vessels were involved in drug smuggling, leading to controversy over the legality of the operations.
Legal experts and human rights groups believe that these attacks may constitute extrajudicial killings, as the targets are clearly civilians who do not pose an imminent threat to the United States. (Translator: Kao Chao-fen / Editor: Chang Cheng-chien) 1140427
Choose to stand with facts, every sponsorship you make is a force to protect press freedom.
Download the Central News Agency "First-hand News" APP to grasp the latest news instantly.
Text, images, and audio/video on this website may not be reproduced, publicly broadcast, publicly transmitted, or utilized without authorization.