Close Menu
FSNN NewsFSNN News
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Legal & Courts
    • Tech & Big Tech
    • Campus & Education
    • Media & Culture
    • Global Free Speech
  • AI & Crypto
    • AI & Censorship
    • Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance
    • Blockchain & Decentralized Media
  • Opinions
    • Debates
  • Video/Live
  • Community
  • Freedom Index
  • About
    • Mission
    • Contact
    • Support
Trending

Today in Supreme Court History: December 7, 1941

12 minutes ago

Bitcoin Cash gains nearly 40% to become ‘best performing’ L1 of the year

26 minutes ago

Trump Thinks a $100,000 Visa Fee Would Make Companies Hire More Americans. It Could Do the Opposite.

1 hour ago
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Discord Telegram
FSNN NewsFSNN News
Market Data Newsletter
Sunday, December 7
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Legal & Courts
    • Tech & Big Tech
    • Campus & Education
    • Media & Culture
    • Global Free Speech
  • AI & Crypto
    • AI & Censorship
    • Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance
    • Blockchain & Decentralized Media
  • Opinions
    • Debates
  • Video/Live
  • Community
  • Freedom Index
  • About
    • Mission
    • Contact
    • Support
FSNN NewsFSNN News
Home » Defending the Summary Execution of Suspected Drug Smugglers, Trump Declares an ‘Armed Conflict’
Media & Culture

Defending the Summary Execution of Suspected Drug Smugglers, Trump Declares an ‘Armed Conflict’

News RoomBy News Room2 months agoNo Comments7 Mins Read1,261 Views
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
Defending the Summary Execution of Suspected Drug Smugglers, Trump Declares an ‘Armed Conflict’
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link

Listen to the article

0:00
0:00

Key Takeaways

Playback Speed

Select a Voice

This week, President Donald Trump sought to justify his new policy of summarily executing suspected drug smugglers by declaring that his targets are “unlawful combatants” in an “armed conflict” with the United States. But that terminology, which Trump deployed in a notice to Congress, does not change the reality that he has authorized the military murder of criminal suspects who pose no immediate threat of violence.

So far, Trump has ordered three attacks on speedboats in the Caribbean Sea that he said were carrying illegal drugs, killing a total of 17 people. The first attack was a September 2 drone strike that killed 11 people on a boat that reportedly “appeared to have turned around before the attack started because the people onboard had apparently spotted a military aircraft stalking it.” On September 15, U.S. forces blew up another speedboat in the Caribbean, killing three people whom Trump described as “confirmed narcoterrorists from Venezuela.” Four days later, Trump announced a third attack that he said killed three people “affiliated with a Designated Terrorist Organization” who were “conducting narcotrafficking.”

Contrary to Trump’s implication, that designation does not turn murder into self-defense. “The State Department designation merely triggers the government’s ability to implement asset controls and other economic sanctions under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) and other statutes,” Georgetown law professor Marty Lederman noted after the first attack on a suspected drug boat. “It has nothing to do with authorizing [the Defense Department] to engage in targeted killings…which is why the U.S. military doesn’t go around killing members of all designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations.”

According to White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly, Trump’s literalization of the war on drugs is fully consistent with international law. “The president acted in line with the law of armed conflict to protect our country from those trying to bring deadly poison to our shores,” she told The New York Times this week. “He is delivering on his promise to take on the cartels and eliminate these national security threats from murdering more Americans.”

That framing is logically, morally, and legally nonsensical. The truth is that Americans like to consume psychoactive substances that legislators have deemed intolerable, and criminal organizations are happy to profit from that demand. The fact that Americans who use illegal drugs sometimes die as a result—a hazard magnified by the prohibition policy that Trump is so eager to enforce—does not transform the people who supply those drugs into murderers.

If it did, alcohol producers and distributors, who supply a product implicated in an estimated 178,000 deaths a year in the United States, would likewise be guilty of murder. And by Trump’s logic, they would be subject to the death penalty based on nothing more than the allegation that they were involved in the alcohol trade.

There is obviously something wrong with an argument that would justify the execution of brewers, vintners, distillers, liquor store owners, and bartenders based on their complicity in alcohol-related deaths. Even during national alcohol prohibition, the government did not treat bootleggers as murderers, even when they were smuggling booze into the United States, which according to Trump’s reasoning posed a deadly threat to “national security.”

The current drug prohibition regime is more severe in several respects, but it still deploys the death penalty only in rare cases. Federal law authorizes the execution of people who commit murder in the course of drug trafficking. It also notionally allows the death penalty for drug trafficking involving very large quantities: at least twice the amounts that trigger a mandatory life sentence, which are in turn 300 times the amounts that trigger a mandatory 10-year sentence.

Those death-penalty thresholds include 600 grams of LSD, three kilograms of methamphetamine, six kilograms of PCP, 60 kilograms of heroin, 300 kilograms of cocaine, and 60,000 kilograms of marijuana. But no death penalties have been imposed under these provisions, and it is not clear whether they would be constitutional.

In the 2008 case Kennedy v. Louisiana, the Supreme Court held that the Eighth Amendment’s ban on “cruel and unusual punishment” precludes execution except for “crimes that take the life of the victim.” But the Court added that it was not addressing “crimes defining and punishing treason, espionage, terrorism, and drug kingpin activity, which are offenses against the State.”

Trump has made no secret of his desire to execute drug dealers, and he thinks he has found a legal way of doing that without seeking new legislation or going to the trouble of arresting and trying suspects. The trick, he thinks, is to equate drug smuggling with violent aggression, define drug interdiction as an “armed conflict,” and treat suspected drug smugglers as “unlawful combatants” who can be killed at will, regardless of whether they are actually engaged in violence.

The Bush and Obama administrations tried something similar with alleged terrorists, which provoked considerable debate about the scope of the government’s asserted license to kill, especially as it pertained to U.S. citizens on U.S. soil. But in that case, Congress had authorized military action against Al Qaeda and its allies, and the targets were accused of plotting literal attacks on Americans.

In this case, by contrast, there is no such congressional authorization, and Trump deemed his targets worthy of assassination simply because they allegedly were trying to supply Americans with politically disfavored intoxicants. Calling them “narcoterrorists,” as the Trump administration habitually does, cannot supply a moral or legal justification for killing them in cold blood without anything resembling due process.

Drug cartels “illegally and directly cause the deaths of tens of thousands of American citizens each year,” Trump’s notice to Congress says. The president therefore has “determined” that drug cartels are “nonstate armed groups” whose actions “constitute an armed attack against the United States,” the notice adds. “Based upon the cumulative effects of these hostile acts against the citizens and interests of the United States and friendly foreign nations, the president determined that the United States is in a noninternational armed conflict with these designated terrorist organizations.”

Geoffrey Corn, formerly the U.S. Army’s senior adviser on the law of war, told the Times that Trump has not established the “hostilities” required for an “armed conflict” against the United States because (as the Times dryly puts it) “selling a dangerous product is different from an armed attack.” In Corn’s view, “This is not stretching the envelope. This is shredding it. This is tearing it apart.”

Former State Department lawyer Brian Finucane is “not surprised that the administration may have settled on such a theory to legally backfill their operations.” But among other problems with that theory, he said, “it is far from clear that whoever they are targeting is an organized armed group such that the U.S. could be in a [noninternational armed conflict] with it.”

Cardozo Law School professor Gabor Rona calls Trump’s policy “utterly unprecedented.” If the people whose deaths Trump ordered “were running illicit drugs destined for the United States, the proper—and entirely feasible and precedented—response would have been interdiction, arrest, and trial,” Rona writes. “The Trump administration’s summary execution/targeted killing of suspected drug dealers, by contrast, is utterly without precedent in international law. In fact, there is precedent for considering such attacks, when committed on a widespread or systematic basis, to be a crime against humanity. Former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is currently facing charges in the International Criminal Court for exactly that reason.”

Trump, however, is a big fan of Duterte, who likened himself to Adolf Hitler while urging the murder of drug offenders. During his first term, Trump bragged about his “great relationship” with Duterte, who he said was doing “a great job” in tackling substance abuse. Now Trump seems bent on copying Duterte’s bloodthirsty example.

Read the full article here

Fact Checker

Verify the accuracy of this article using AI-powered analysis and real-time sources.

Get Your Fact Check Report

Enter your email to receive detailed fact-checking analysis

5 free reports remaining

Continue with Full Access

You've used your 5 free reports. Sign up for unlimited access!

Already have an account? Sign in here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
News Room
  • Website
  • Facebook
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

The FSNN News Room is the voice of our in-house journalists, editors, and researchers. We deliver timely, unbiased reporting at the crossroads of finance, cryptocurrency, and global politics, providing clear, fact-driven analysis free from agendas.

Related Articles

Media & Culture

Today in Supreme Court History: December 7, 1941

12 minutes ago
Media & Culture

Trump Thinks a $100,000 Visa Fee Would Make Companies Hire More Americans. It Could Do the Opposite.

1 hour ago
Debates

How E.O. Wilson Survived Academia’s First Cancel Culture

11 hours ago
Media & Culture

This Week In Techdirt History: November 30th – December 6th

17 hours ago
Media & Culture

“As Colossal a Collection of Excuses and Projection as the Court Has Seen in 25 Years on the Bench,” Says Court About Lawyer’s Response in Fabricated Citation Dispute

18 hours ago
Media & Culture

Join Me in Donating to Reason

19 hours ago
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Bitcoin Cash gains nearly 40% to become ‘best performing’ L1 of the year

26 minutes ago

Trump Thinks a $100,000 Visa Fee Would Make Companies Hire More Americans. It Could Do the Opposite.

1 hour ago

French banking giant BPCE to launch in-app crypto trading: Report

2 hours ago

South Korea to impose bank-level liability on crypto exchanges after Upbit hack: Report

5 hours ago
Latest Posts

Debunking The Yen Carry Trade Unwind Alarms

7 hours ago

Ether supply squeeze looms with exchanges holding lowest levels since 2015

7 hours ago

Bitcoin buries the tulip myth after 17 years of proven resilience says ETF expert

8 hours ago

Subscribe to News

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

At FSNN – Free Speech News Network, we deliver unfiltered reporting and in-depth analysis on the stories that matter most. From breaking headlines to global perspectives, our mission is to keep you informed, empowered, and connected.

FSNN.net is owned and operated by GlobalBoost Media
, an independent media organization dedicated to advancing transparency, free expression, and factual journalism across the digital landscape.

Facebook X (Twitter) Discord Telegram
Latest News

Today in Supreme Court History: December 7, 1941

12 minutes ago

Bitcoin Cash gains nearly 40% to become ‘best performing’ L1 of the year

26 minutes ago

Trump Thinks a $100,000 Visa Fee Would Make Companies Hire More Americans. It Could Do the Opposite.

1 hour ago

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2025 GlobalBoost Media. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Our Authors
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

🍪

Cookies

We and our selected partners wish to use cookies to collect information about you for functional purposes and statistical marketing. You may not give us your consent for certain purposes by selecting an option and you can withdraw your consent at any time via the cookie icon.

Cookie Preferences

Manage Cookies

Cookies are small text that can be used by websites to make the user experience more efficient. The law states that we may store cookies on your device if they are strictly necessary for the operation of this site. For all other types of cookies, we need your permission. This site uses various types of cookies. Some cookies are placed by third party services that appear on our pages.

Your permission applies to the following domains:

  • https://fsnn.net
Necessary
Necessary cookies help make a website usable by enabling basic functions like page navigation and access to secure areas of the website. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.
Statistic
Statistic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Preferences
Preference cookies enable a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in.
Marketing
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.