Blood in the Blue: New SOUTHCOM Commander Orders Deadly Pacific Strike as Caribbean Leaders Split on “Shoot-to-Kill” Policy

The high-seas execution of the Trump administration’s “Operation Southern Spear” claimed two more lives yesterday, marking a bloody debut for the new head of U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM).

2026-02-06 20:06:19 - VI News Staff

On Thursday, February 5, 2026—just hours after assuming command at the Pentagon—U.S. Marine Gen. Francis L. Donovan authorized a “lethal kinetic strike” on a vessel in the Eastern Pacific. The strike, which targeted a boat allegedly operated by “Designated Terrorist Organizations,” brings the campaign’s death toll to at least 128 people across 38 targeted vessels since September.

A Regional House Divided

While the U.S. military frames these strikes as “deterrence through strength,” the political fallout is fracturing the Caribbean. The debate has moved past simple diplomacy into a visceral clash between human rights and raw security.

In Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar doubled down on her support for the militarized approach. “I have no sympathy for traffickers,” Persad-Bissessar stated, in a sentiment that has echoed across the region’s more embattled nations. “The U.S. military should kill them all violently.”

Conversely, the CARICOM Bureau continues to cling to the 1986 “Zone of Peace” declaration, warning that the lack of consultation with regional governments is turning the Caribbean into a non-international armed conflict zone. Critics, including human rights groups, argue the “narco-terrorist” designation allows the U.S. to bypass due process, effectively carrying out extrajudicial executions on the open ocean.



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