A familiar script played out late Friday when the usual suspects in the press unleashed a barrage of breathless reports on U.S. military actions in the Caribbean. According to their telling, American forces under the Trump administration are somehow flouting international norms in a desperate bid to look tough. But Pete Hegseth, the Secretary of War, isn’t buying it—and neither should anyone who values straight talk over scripted outrage.
In a pointed statement on X, Hegseth called out the “fake news” for what it is: a recycled playbook of fabrication and character assassination aimed at our troops. “As usual, the fake news is delivering more inflammatory, and derogatory reporting to discredit our incredible warriors fighting to protect the homeland,” he wrote.
The operations in question? Targeted strikes designed to dismantle the narco-trafficking networks that have turned American streets into killing fields. These aren’t vague “raids” or half-measures; they’re “lethal, kinetic strikes” meant to sink cartel speedboats laden with fentanyl and eliminate the terrorists behind them.
Hegseth laid it out plain: Every target hit is tied to a designated terrorist organization, as classified by U.S. law. The cartels aren’t just smugglers—they’re enemy combatants waging chemical warfare on our families.
“The declared intent is to stop lethal drugs, destroy narco-boats, and kill the narco-terrorists who are poisoning the American people,” he said.
It’s a stark pivot from the previous administration’s approach, which treated the border like a revolving door for cartels, unvetted migrants, and Afghan nationals with questionable ties. Under Biden, the policy was catch-and-release on steroids, letting millions pour in while overdose deaths climbed past 100,000 a year.
Hegseth didn’t mince words: “The Biden administration preferred the kid gloves approach… The Trump administration has sealed the border and gone on offense against narco-terrorists. Biden coddled terrorists, we kill them.”
This isn’t bluster; it’s policy with teeth. Just days earlier, on November 26, Hegseth announced plans to ramp up troop and aircraft deployments across the region to choke off drug flows at their source. Speaking in Santo Domingo alongside Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader, he emphasized partnerships with allies to build a hemispheric shield against the cartels’ reach. Reuters reported the move as a clear signal: The U.S. is done playing defense. These efforts fall squarely under U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), where troops have long patrolled against trafficking, but now with renewed authority to act decisively.
Of course, the blowback was predictable. Critics on the left, from cable talking heads to anonymous X accounts, trotted out tired accusations of Geneva Convention violations and war crimes. One reply demanded declassification of legal opinions, implying some shadowy overreach, while another invoked future “tribunals” with all the subtlety of a bad spy novel.
Keith Olbermann, never one to pass up a punchline, dubbed Hegseth “Secretary of War Crimes.” It’s the same crowd that once defended open borders as “humanitarian” while cities drowned in opioid wreckage. Their sudden piety on international law rings hollow when you consider how they shrugged off the Taliban’s resurgence or Iran’s proxy militias under the old guard.
But let’s cut through the noise: These operations are rock-solid under both domestic and global standards. Hegseth stressed that every move complies with the law of armed conflict, vetted by military and civilian attorneys from the ground up. The strikes target active threats—armed traffickers mid-shipment—not bystanders. International law has long recognized non-state actors like cartels as legitimate targets when they engage in sustained violence against civilians, especially when tied to terrorism designations.
The U.S. has invoked similar authority before, from drone campaigns against ISIS to counter-narcotics ops in Colombia. If there’s a conspiracy here, it’s not in the Pentagon—it’s in the media’s rush to shield the real criminals profiting from dead American kids.
Hegseth’s resolve shines through in his closing: “Our warriors in SOUTHCOM put their lives on the line every day to protect the Homeland from narco-terrorists—and I will ALWAYS have their back.”
That’s not just rhetoric; it’s a lifeline for the families who’ve lost loved ones to the cartels’ trade. Since taking office after a nail-biting Senate confirmation—edged out by Vice President Vance’s tiebreaker—Hegseth has moved fast to refocus the military on core threats. He’s overhauled acquisition processes to deliver weapons quicker, axed distracting studies on social trends, and prioritized homeland defense over endless foreign entanglements. The results? A sealed border, fewer crossings, and now, direct action against the poison pipelines.
The pushback only proves the point: When you start winning against entrenched interests—be it cartels or their apologists in the press—the attacks get personal. But Hegseth and the troops aren’t fazed. They’re delivering justice, one strike at a time, for the communities under siege.
If that’s a “war crime,” then God help the criminals who fear it most. America deserves leaders who fight like this—unapologetic, effective, and always for the forgotten at home.





All legacy media needs terminated. It will destroy our country if allowed to continue. Those who own it are traitors and need executed!
In an otherwise excellent article why did you feel the need to give any import to that lunatic Olbermann? Ignore him and his ilk.