BIG NEWS
- One government job per household: INDIA bloc releases manifesto for Bihar elections
- EC announces second phase of SIR of electoral rolls in 12 states, UTs
- Delhi conducts successful trial for artificial rain; 1st cloud seeding likely on Oct 29
- Justice Surya Kant, who ruled on Article 370, Lakhimpur Kheri and Pegasus cases, set to be next CJI
4 killed in latest US strike on alleged drug boat in Eastern Pacific: Hegseth

Public Lokpal
October 30, 2025
4 killed in latest US strike on alleged drug boat in Eastern Pacific: Hegseth
Washington : Four people were killed in the latest U.S. military airstrike on an alleged drug boat in the Eastern Pacific on Wednesday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced in a social media post.
It follows strikes against four alleged drug vessels in the Eastern Pacific on Monday that killed 14 people, according to Hegseth.
Overall, this marks the 14th such strike carried out by the U.S. since the attacks began on Sept. 2, targeting alleged drug boats in the Pacific and Caribbean and killing more than 60 people total.
In announcing the latest strike on Wednesday, Hegseth said that, at the direction of President Donald Trump, the Defense Department "carried out a lethal kinetic strike on yet another narco-trafficking vessel operated by a Designated Terrorist Organization in the Eastern Pacific."
"This vessel, like all the others, was known by our intelligence to be involved in illicit narcotics smuggling, was transiting along a known narco-trafficking route, and carrying narcotics," he continued.
Four men alleged to be "narco-terrorists" on board the vessel were killed, according to Hegseth, who posted a video of the strike that was labeled "unclassified."
Hegseth did not say where the boat had originated.
Hegseth's announcement of the latest strike came the same day the Trump administration briefed more than a dozen senators on the military campaign off the coast of Venezuela -- but invited only Republicans, according to a top Democrat who called the move "indefensible and dangerous."
Excluding lawmakers because of their political party is a major departure from protocol. Lawmakers rely on details about military and intelligence operations -- many of them classified -- to do their job overseeing Pentagon policy and its massive $1 trillion budget.



