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US strikes on Caribbean and Pacific kill over 60 people as investigations are demanded

According to the U.S. Secretary of Defense, the U.S. reported 13 strikes on vessels near Venezuelan shores and, more recently, the eastern Pacific Ocean. More than 60 people were killed. This is part of a growing military buildup along the Caribbean Sea.

U.S. officials have claimed, without providing any evidence, that the boats they bombed were carrying drugs. However, foreign leaders, members of Congress and legal experts, as well as the families of those killed, have demanded proof.

Venezuela claims that the U.S. attacks on suspected drug dealers off South America's coast are illegal and amount to murder, as well as an aggression against Venezuela, a sovereign South American nation.

The Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro accused Donald Trump seeking a regime change. This accusation was downplayed by the U.S. President, despite reports that the administration had been in close contact with Venezuela’s opposition.

In September, U.S. military forces increased their presence in the Caribbean. This included a nuclear sub and a group warships that accompanied the largest aircraft carrier on earth. Maduro responded by bolstering security and deploying tens and thousands of troops across the country.

The U.S. described some victims as Venezuelans while Colombian president Gustavo Petro said that others were his Colombians. The family of a Trinidadian believed to have been killed in a strike has demanded proof that he was a trafficker.

Here's a list of U.S. strike dates:

Trump announced that 11 people died in a strike against a vessel that was allegedly transporting illegal drugs from Venezuela on September 2. It is the first operation known since Trump's administration sent warships into the southern Caribbean. Venezuelan officials later denied that any of the 11 victims was a member of the Tren de Aragua group Trump cited.

Trump announced that three men were killed during a strike against another alleged Venezuelan drugs vessel in international waters. He added that the boat was headed to the U.S. He did not provide any evidence that the boat carried drugs.

SEPTEMBER 19, Trump announced that three men were killed during a second attack on a boat allegedly transporting drugs.

OCTOBER 3 – Four people died in a strike on a vessel suspected of carrying drugs just off the Venezuelan coastline, according to U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.

Trump claimed that six people had been killed in a new strike near Venezuela's coastline. He said they were drug dealers.

On 16 October, two people were killed by another attack in the Caribbean. It was the first time that survivors were involved, two Colombians and one Ecuadorian. They were quickly returned to their countries of origin. Colombia announced that its citizen would be "processed in accordance with the law." Ecuador has said that it does not have any evidence to hold its citizen, and has released him.

OCTOBER 17, 2017 - A strike killed three people. Hegseth claimed that the boat was owned by the National Liberation Army rebels (ELN), but Colombian President Gustavo Petro denied this, saying the boat was owned by a "humble" family. Hegseth has been denied by the ELN. Hegseth claimed that five people died in strikes on two vessels in eastern Pacific. He said they were drug smugglers. This was the first U.S. military strike in the Pacific after Trump's anti-drug initiative. Hegseth claimed that six people died in the Caribbean on October 24, claiming the vessel was run by the Tren de Aragua criminal gang. One survivor was left after three U.S. airstrikes against vessels that the U.S. claimed were transporting drugs to the eastern Pacific. Hegseth reported that Mexican authorities took charge of the search and rescue operation to find the sole survivor. Mexico's Navy announced that it would suspend the search four days later. Hegseth claimed that four men were killed during a strike on a vessel in the Eastern Pacific. Hegseth reported that three men were killed on a vessel operating in the Caribbean.

Hegseth reported that two men died in international waters of the Eastern Pacific in a vessel suspected to be a drug-trafficking vessel. Reporting by Michelle Nichols and Julia Symmes Cobb; Editing by Alistair Bell, Marguerita Choy, and Aurora Ellis.

(source: Reuters)