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by Naveen Athrappully
Reporter
December 10, 2025
from
TheEpochTimes Website
Article also
HERE

The crew of USCGC James (WMSL 754)
poses for a group photo prior to
the offload
of more than 26,890 pounds of cocaine and marijuana
worth more than $198 million at Port Everglades
in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., on Dec. 8, 2025.
U.S. Coast Guard photo
by Petty Officer 1st
Class Diana Sherbs
Public Domain
The drug interdictions
have resulted in more than
$1.1 billion in
revenues
being denied for criminal groups...
More than 150,000 pounds of cocaine have been seized in the Eastern
Pacific Ocean since the launch of
Operation Pacific Viper, the U.S.
Coast Guard (USCG) said in a Dec. 9
statement.
Operation Pacific Viper, launched in early August,
directs U.S. forces to the Eastern
Pacific Region to counter criminal groups and cartels, essentially
cutting off drug and human smuggling activities before they reach
U.S. shores.
According to the Coast Guard, a dose of 1.2 grams of cocaine is
enough to kill a person, with the seized quantity equating to more
than 57 million potentially lethal doses.
Department of Homeland Security Secretary
Kristi Noem said:
"Operation Pacific Viper has proven to be a crucial weapon in the
fight against foreign drug traffickers and cartels in Latin America
and has sent a clear message that we will disrupt, dismantle, and
destroy their deadly business exploits wherever we find them."
"In cutting off the flow of these deadly
drugs, the Coast Guard is saving countless American lives and
delivering on President Trump's promise to Make America Safe
Again and reestablish our maritime dominance."
The Eastern Pacific Ocean continues to see significant drug
shipments from South and Central America.
Hegseth defends second september 'Drug Boat'
strike
Under Operation Pacific Viper, the Coast Guard has deployed
additional assets, such as tactical teams and aircraft, to interdict
and seize the shipment of drugs.
According to the
USCG, 80 percent
of all seizures of narcotic shipments bound for the United States
take place at sea.
A major drug seizure under the operations took place on Dec. 2 when
Coast Guard Cutter Munro seized more than 20,000 pounds of cocaine
in a single interdiction.
This was the "largest at-sea interdiction"
conducted by the Coast Guard since March 2007.
In November, the crew of the
Coast Guard Cutter James carried out
multiple seizures over several days, taking custody of 19,819 pounds
of cocaine.
The drug interdictions have resulted in denying over $1.1 billion in
revenue for criminal organizations.
"By disrupting the flow of cocaine and other bulk illicit drugs, the
Coast Guard is cutting off revenue that fuels the ability for narco-terrorists
to produce and traffic illegal
fentanyl, threatening American
communities," the USCG said.
The Trump administration has also engaged in deadly military sea
strikes against drug traffickers.
One of the recent strikes was conducted on Dec. 4 against an alleged
drug trafficking boat in the Eastern Pacific after Secretary of War
Pete Hegseth
ordered a "lethal kinetic strike" on the vessel, the
U.S. Southern Command (USSOUTHCOM) said in a Dec. 4 post on X.
"Intelligence confirmed that the vessel was carrying illicit
narcotics and transiting along a known narco-trafficking route in
the Eastern Pacific.
Four male narco-terrorists aboard the vessel
were killed," SOUTHCOM said.
There has been criticism over the strikes.
On Dec. 4, Congress held
classified briefings discussing an attack in September in the South
Caribbean that killed two individuals.
Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.) told reporters that a video he saw during
the briefing he
attended was "one of the most
troubling things" he's seen while in public service.
"You have two individuals in clear distress without any means of
locomotion, with a destroyed vessel, were killed by the United
States," he said.
Speaking at the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley,
California, on Dec. 6, Hegseth
justified the strikes against drug
trafficking vessels.
"If you're working for a designated terrorist organization and you
bring drugs to this country in a boat, we will find you, and we will
sink you.
Let there be no doubt about it," he said.
"President Trump can and will take
decisive military action as he sees fit to defend our nation's
interests. Let no country on Earth doubt that for a moment."
More than 80 suspected traffickers have been killed in the strikes
so far.
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