
The United States military has carried out a strike on a vessel in the Caribbean, the Pentagon says, as tensions swirl following former President Donald Trump’s recent online comments threatening military action over reports of killings of Christians in Nigeria.
What Happened
According to a post by Pete Hegseth, identified as Secretary of War, on X (formerly Twitter), the US military executed a kinetic strike on November 6, 2025 against a vessel allegedly operated by a Designated Terrorist Organization. The strike took place in international waters and is part of an ongoing campaign the US describes as targeting narco-terrorist networks that traffic drugs through the Caribbean.
Hegseth’s post said the campaign has conducted 17 vessel strikes to date, killing 70 people and destroying 18 vessels. The statement added that no US personnel were harmed in the latest operation and that three male suspects aboard the targeted vessel were killed.
“Vessel strikes on narco-terrorists will continue until the poisoning of the American people stops,” the post read in part. “At the direction of President Trump, the Department of War carried out a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel trafficking narcotics in the Caribbean.”
Context: Trump’s Comments on Nigeria
The operation comes amid a charged international climate after Mr. Trump — via his Truth Social account — warned of potential military intervention in Nigeria in response to alleged attacks on Christian communities. Those comments sparked debate and concern among diplomats and observers, who warned that threats of force could complicate regional stability and diplomatic ties.
US Rationale and Message
Officials framing the Caribbean strikes say the actions are aimed squarely at disrupting international drug trafficking that harms American communities. Hegseth’s message was blunt: narco-traffickers and affiliated violent groups face lethal force if they continue to endanger civilians.
The strikes raise several questions:
What verification processes were used to identify the targeted vessel and those aboard? How will regional partners and international law bodies respond to lethal strikes in international waters? Could the rhetoric surrounding Nigeria affect wider US engagement in Africa or diplomacy with Nigerian authorities?
Bottom Line
US officials describe the Caribbean operation as part of an ongoing counter-narco campaign authorized at the highest levels. At the same time, heated rhetoric about Nigeria has elevated diplomatic sensitivity, making further statements and clarifications from Washington and Abuja likely in the coming days.

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