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UN Urges Restraint as U.S. Defends Caribbean Strikes and Venezuela Sounds Alarm

The White House now treats the campaign as an armed conflict with cartels, and a Senate effort to curb it narrowly failed.

Overview

  • At an emergency Security Council session, UN officials warned of rising regional risks, said they cannot independently verify U.S. accounts of the incidents, and urged compliance with international law.
  • The U.S. says it carried out four lethal strikes on suspected drug boats since early September near Venezuela, reporting 21 deaths and framing the operations as lawful self-defense.
  • Washington has expanded naval and air deployments and created a counter-narcotics Joint Task Force, with officials vowing to use the military to disrupt trafficking routes.
  • Venezuela denounced the strikes as violations of sovereignty, requested the UN meeting, and warned of a potential U.S. attack as Russia and others pressed for de-escalation.
  • A Senate war-powers resolution to limit the operations failed 51–48, while UN human-rights experts called a strike unlawful and urged a full, independent investigation.