About a month after Donald Trump first bragged about a military strike on a civilian boat in international waters that killed 11 people, the president spoke to the nation’s generals and admirals and commented on his handiwork. His comments were chilling.
Reflecting on the apparent fact that there are now fewer boats in Venezuelan waters because local fishermen are afraid that the U.S. might kill them, Trump told military leaders, “It’s amazing what strength will do.”
It was a glimpse into a twisted perspective. As the incumbent American president sees it, using the military to kill civilians in international waters reflects “strength.” Of course, by that logic, those who follow the rule of law are necessarily “weak” in Trump’s eyes.
As the deadly military operations continued and the White House claimed that it was targeting “narco-terrorists,” there was no shortage of questions as to whether the administration’s strikes were legal. Even John Yoo, the notorious former deputy assistant attorney general under George W. Bush, has suggested that the White House might be crossing a legal line.
It’s against this backdrop that The New York Times reported:
President Trump has decided that the United States is engaged in a formal ‘armed conflict’ with drug cartels his team has labeled terrorist organizations and that suspected smugglers for such groups are ‘unlawful combatants,’ the administration said in a confidential notice to Congress this week. The notice was sent to several congressional committees and obtained by The New York Times.
In other words, as far as the White House is concerned, the president isn’t murdering civilians with military strikes. Rather, he’s engaged in a lawful military campaign against drug cartels with which Trump has unilaterally “determined” the U.S. is in “armed conflict.”
The Times’ report, which has been independently verified by NBC News, added that the move reflects the president’s maximalist approach to sweeping wartime powers.
Geoffrey Corn, a retired judge advocate general lawyer who was formerly the Army’s senior adviser for law-of-war issues, argued that drug cartels are not engaged in “hostilities” — which would mean the White House is crossing a legal line.








