US used camouflaged civilian plane in Venezuela drug boat attack, raising war crime concerns. Netherlands ends cooperation over lethal tactics.
Secret Aircraft Operation Raises War Crime Questions
The United States military used a secret aircraft painted to look like a civilian plane during its controversial September 2025 attack on an alleged drug boat near Venezuela, according to a New York Times investigation. The camouflaged aircraft had no visible weapons or military markings, raising serious questions about potential violations of international humanitarian law.
Eleven Killed in Initial Attack
The September 2nd strike killed all eleven people aboard the Venezuelan speedboat, which the Trump administration claimed was carrying drugs and members of the Tren de Aragua criminal gang. The operation became even more controversial when military forces were ordered to conduct a second strike against two survivors clinging to wreckage, killing them as well.
'This appears to be a clear case of perfidy - pretending to be civilians to trick enemies,' said retired Major General Steven J. Lepper, a military law expert. 'Under the Geneva Conventions, this could constitute a war crime.'
Operation Southern Spear Casualties Mount
The attack was part of Operation Southern Spear, a U.S. military campaign that has killed at least 115 people in 35 strikes on suspected drug trafficking vessels as of December 2025, according to Wikipedia records. The Pentagon claims all strikes are lawful under U.S. and international law, but human rights groups and legal experts have raised alarms about extrajudicial killings.
Netherlands Withdraws Cooperation
The Dutch government has scaled back its cooperation with the U.S. on anti-drug operations in the Caribbean, limiting its role to Dutch territorial waters around Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao. Defense Minister Ruben Brekelmans announced the Netherlands will no longer participate in independent American drug operations in international waters.
'The Americans have chosen a different route by shooting suspects rather than arresting them,' Brekelmans said in a statement. 'That is really up to them to do, we are not part of that.'
International Legal Concerns
Legal experts question whether the U.S. attacks meet the 'armed attack' threshold required for self-defense under the UN Charter. The strikes occurred without UN Security Council approval and in international waters, where different maritime laws apply.
The White House maintains that the attacks are justified because the U.S. is in an 'armed conflict' with non-state drug groups. However, critics argue this represents a dangerous expansion of military authority and sets a troubling precedent for extrajudicial killings outside traditional war zones.
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