15 September 2025

Trump's drug war is now a real shooting war

Joel Mathis

The old "war on drugs" slogan is no longer hyperbole. President Donald Trump is claiming the right to kill suspected drug traffickers, last week approving a deadly attack on a suspected drug-running boat off Venezuela.

The American war on drugs is "officially a war, not a mere law enforcement action," said Axios. By designating traffickers as "terrorists," Trump has claimed the "right to kill them before they or their drugs reach this country." Other suspected "narcoterrorists" will "face the same fate," said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. But the boat strike has drawn sharp criticism at home and abroad. The killing of crime suspects was a "murder anywhere in the world," said Colombian President Gustavo Petro. "What if we make a mistake and they happen to be people fleeing the Venezuelan dictator?" said Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) on Newsmax.
'Act of war'

Trump has crossed a "line that dates back to the Revolution," said The Atlantic. Crime-fighting has "traditionally been outside" the scope of the U.S. military's mission. In the wake of the United States' revolt against an "overbearing" British Empire, officials governed with a sense that the military "should defend the country from external threats but not be used to routinely enforce the law." Under Trump, the "mission has changed."

The Venezuela strike "was an act of war," said Julio Ricardo Varela at MSNBC. Trump produced a "blurry video" of the deadly explosion, but that does not prove "who was aboard, what they were doing or whether drugs were even present." In truth, Venezuela "doesn't really produce that much cocaine." But its anti-American government provides a "ready stage" for a president who has "built his return to power on projecting American strength abroad" with actions reminiscent of 19th-century U.S. adventurism in Latin America. The U.S. is "again using a familiar script to justify actions that will destabilize a hemisphere."

"Is it awesome to see bad guys getting blown up? Sure," said Jim Geraghty at the National Review. But is it consistent with the American Constitution and laws that mostly prohibit the "use of the American military in domestic law enforcement"? That is murky. If the government is going to "bomb and shoot up Venezuelan drug cartels," that is probably the "sort of thing that ought to be authorized by Congress."

'Testing the limits'

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