The United States War Department (USA) confirmed a new attack this Thursday in Caribbean waters, where three people who were on board a boat died.
The information about this aggression perpetrated by Washington was disseminated by the US Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, through his social networks, who argues the attacks under the excuse of a supposed fight against drug trafficking.
According to Hegseth, the vessel on which they carried out the lethal kinetic attack was identified as property of a terrorist organization, which was allegedly used for drug trafficking.
The murder of the three men who were on the boat left no American casualties, said Secretary of War, who warned that the attacks will continue if these alleged groups continue trafficking drugs. An action that the US considers to be harassment towards the country.
Since the US began its executions under the excuse of combating drug trafficking in international waters, a total of 17 boats have been attacked and destroyed in the Caribbean and the Pacific, where some 70 people have been murdered.
Survivors of previous attacks carried out by the US
Of the few survivors left by the attacks perpetrated by the USthe Attorney General’s Office of Colombia reported that it will not carry out a criminal investigation against Jonathan Obando Pérez, one of the survivors of the attack on the alleged drug submarine in the Caribbean, considering that there is no evidence that links him to criminal acts.
Telesur points out that a source in the New Granada Public Ministry indicated that there is no type of evidence that demonstrates Obando’s relationship with drug trafficking gangs.
The Colombian, who spent 10 days recovering in a Bogotá hospital, also has no criminal record or connection to the crime.
Ecuadorian survivor released for not having ties to drug trafficking
Another of the survivors of the imperial attacks in the Caribbean Sea, Andrés Fernando Tufiño, was released in Ecuador, as no link with drug trafficking gangs was proven.
In this way, the imperial version falls, in which it alleged that the people who crewed the submersible were drug traffickers, which further increases the doubt whether the actions of the United States in the Caribbean and the Pacific are truthful.
