Pentagon Reveals Attacks in Latin America Are Just the Beginning
Quick Insights
The Bottom Line
The Pentagon revealed U.S. military operations against Latin American drug cartels are expanding far beyond initial strikes across the region.
How This Affects You
U.S. military operations in Latin America could affect drug trafficking patterns and prices in the U.S., though the article does not specify direct domestic impact.
AI Summary
Joseph Humire, the acting assistant secretary of war for homeland defense and Americas security affairs, told House lawmakers that U.S. military operations against Latin American drug cartels are expanding far beyond initial strikes, with "Operation Total Extermination" in Ecuador representing just the start of a broader regional campaign. The Pentagon has conducted at least 46 attacks since September 2025 across the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific—destroying 48 vessels and killing nearly 160 civilians—and is now shifting to land-based strikes, with Humire confirming "Yes, ranking member" when asked if the War Department would conduct "a lot more terrestrial strikes." The Trump administration has forged agreements with 17 partner nations as part of the Americas Counter Cartel Coalition and is simultaneously pursuing regime-change operations in Venezuela (where it abducted President Nicolás Maduro in January) and Cuba, with Trump repeatedly suggesting he will annex or "take" Cuba before focusing on the Iran conflict. Humire indicated the U.S. would not rule out unilateral strikes across Latin America, though he said current operations are "partner-led," and the administration has leveraged military pressure in Venezuela to coerce Cuba and Nicaragua into compliance with U.S. interests. Legal experts and the Pentagon's own commanders have raised concerns about the constitutional and international law violations underlying this expanding military campaign, which operates largely without congressional oversight or named targets.
What's Being Done
The Trump administration is expanding regional operations through the Americas Counter Cartel Coalition with 17 partner nations and conducting regime-change operations in Venezuela and Cuba.
This article is part of a story we're tracking:
Should this be getting more attention?
You Might Have Missed
Related stories from different sources and perspectives
GlobalChina is losing ports, power and presence in Latin America
For the first time in decades, Chinese influence in Latin America is beginning to lose ground.
PoliticsVoice of America journalists allege Trump is making news outlet a propaganda source
Some journalists at Voice of America charged in a lawsuit Monday that the Trump administration — while largely shutting down the government-run outlet that provides news around the world — has turned what remains into a voice for propaganda.
AI & WarfareBehind the Curtain: How Anthropic's Pentagon deal could get revived
<p>Here are two hard truths the Pentagon and <a href="https://x.com/SeanParnellASW/status/2027072228777734474" target="_blank">Anthropic</a> won't state bluntly about their feud over unfettered AI use in warfare:</p><ol><li>Anthropic's AI is vastly better for warfare than any other AI on the market. It could take ChatGPT, Gemini or Grok months to come close, insiders tell us.</li><li>Anthropic will take a massive, long-term financial hit if it remains blacklisted by the government as a "national security supply chain risk." We're talking tens of billions of dollars in direct and indirect contracts in the coming years, the insiders say.</li></ol><p><strong>Why it matters: </strong>Anthropic is suing the Trump administration for nixing use of Claude, the company's large language model, after the company refused to allow its AI to be used for fully autonomous warfare or mass surveillance of Americans (which the Pentagon says is <a href="https://x.com/SeanParnellASW/status/2027072228777...
PoliticsDHS funding talks in limbo after Trump insists GOP pass SAVE America Act
Senate talks aimed at ending the 38-day DHS shutdown hit a new roadblock after President Trump called on Republicans to hold out for passage of the SAVE America Act.
PoliticsWelcome to America! Trump names ‘manosphere’ troll as tourism envoy
<p>White House says Maga influencer appointed to role for tourism, exceptionalism and American values</p><p>Donald Trump’s appointment of Nick Adams, the “alpha male” Australian turned American internet provocateur as a new special presidential envoy on Tuesday, could give fuel to theories that the White House is deliberately trolling the world.</p><p>The president nominated the Sydney-born Maga influencer, who has a history of theatrically inflammatory and Islamophobic comments, as ambassador to Malaysia in July, but the Senate returned the appointment without a confirmation vote in January and Trump did not re-submit him.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/24/trump-nick-adams-presidential-envoy">Continue reading...</a>
Government TransparencyPentagon Wants It to Be Illegal for Reporters to Ask “Unauthorized” Questions
The Trump admin wants to criminalize a key part of journalists doing their jobs — a broadside attack on a free press. The post Pentagon Wants It to Be Illegal for Reporters to Ask “Unauthorized” Questions appeared first on The Intercept .

US uses hundreds of Tomahawk missiles on Iran, alarming some at Pentagon, WaPo reports - Reuters
<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMi1AFBVV95cUxQaWlEeG1iQ3BYdWtGQXlGT09ieHV5cTJic05XT3pHaWpHOWtFVTBhd3I0d0o2WlhlaUZpb3RCMXVhdi1RNXRUdkpuMjU4LWJOd3NISWlnRy1aMFVCTFNGNHZ3UUljQ1RYYXdrcTl1MkJ1aDJKdE9NUHBJUWtZZVNHRmJhMmtMMV9nR1FCZ3FsN09OOE01NDBHdUVLMjNZXzNZSGNkdmo3dmVua2M5dHV4b2l2MlRDSFJFTTlMbEpOZkZ4QVl0a0FWd0VnMDRKeVBwWVd2SA?oc=5" target="_blank">US uses hundreds of Tomahawk missiles on Iran, alarming some at Pentagon, WaPo reports</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">Reuters</font>
Did this story change how you see things?
Stories like this only matter when people see them. Help us get verified journalism in front of more eyes.
The Verity Ledger curates verified investigative journalism from trusted sources only.
See our sourcesMost Read This Week
Fentanyl found inside Barbies sold at Missouri discount store, police say

Senate deal reached to cap insulin costs

Pentagon's limits on press access unconstitutional, US judge rules - Reuters

The West's historic snow drought could bring water shortages, wildfires

Washington ignores America's fiscal cliff


