PresidentĀ Donald TrumpĀ has determined the United States is engaged in “a non-international armed conflict” with drug cartels, according to a document notifying Congress of its legal justification for deadly U.S. strikes on boats off Venezuela.
The text of the document, which was reviewed by Reuters on Thursday, was briefed to lawmakers by the Pentagon’s top attorney this week as experts question the legality of killing suspected drug traffickers at sea instead of apprehending them and their cargo.
The U.S. military has blown up at least three suspected drug boats in the past month and killed at least 17 people, in what critics say is the latest effort by Trump to test the scope of his powers as U.S. president. The document describes those killed as “unlawful combatants.”
The document did not appear to provide any new legal rationale other than what Trump and his allies have said publicly, arguments that some former military lawyers say fail to satisfy requirements under the law of war.
It was not clear if the determination was intended to provide a justification for future military strikes on cartels, or if it was mainly to explain past actions.
LEGAL AUTHORITY FOR STRIKES IN QUESTION
Legal experts have questioned why the U.S. military is carrying out the strikes instead of the Coast Guard, which is the main U.S. maritime law enforcement agency, and why other efforts to halt the shipments aren’t made before resorting to deadly strikes.
“Applying a new label to an old problem does not transform the problem itself ā nor does it grant the U.S. president or the U.S. military expanded legal authority to kill civilians,” wrote Mark Nevitt, a former Navy lawyer who is now an associate professor at Emory University School of Law.
The Trump administration has argued so far that the strikes send a clear message to the drug cartels and noted that it designated them terrorist organizations earlier this year.