Maine Writer

Its about people and issues I care about.

My Photo
Name:
Location: Topsham, MAINE, United States

My blogs are dedicated to the issues I care about. Thank you to all who take the time to read something I've written.

Saturday, June 06, 2026

Donald Trump and Pete Hegseth are killing innocent people at sea, like the humans they target are in a video game!

 Echo article published in USA Today by Cybele Mayers-Osterman

US boat strikes killed (like in evil video games) over 200 innocent people. Service members have questions? But, Donald Trump could preemptively pardon service members for acts committed during his term.
Maine Writer comment- Donald Trump cannot pardon the guilt experienced by many who were ordered to kill innocent people without evidence of them having engaged in any crimes. 

U.S. military killed more than 200
πŸ˜“πŸ˜žπŸ˜‘people in strikes on boats in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific in the last nine months in what legal experts and former military lawyers broadly agree constitute illegal military orders that service members should refuse to follow.

While there is no record of troops refusing to follow these orders, at least a handful of service members grappling with these questions have sought legal advice, according to anonymous hotlines for U.S. military members.


Before the Trump-era boat strikes, the United States viewed the drug trade as a law enforcement issue and tasked the Coast Guard with interdicting boats trying to bring drugs into the country.

The military has published dozens of videos of the attacks on social media – grainy, black and white videos taken from above of boats speeding through the water before they explode into balls of flame.

And Trump officials continue to say the attacks are lawful. 
❓

At a June 2, 2026, Senate budget hearing, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said every boat strike "has a legal officer on the deck that has to make a determination about whether the call is legal or not."

The Pentagon referred USA TODAY's questions to U.S. Southern Command, which oversees military operations in South America and the Caribbean. The command said in a statement: "All operations are conducted deliberately and lawfully, in full compliance with U.S. and international law, including the law of armed conflict." 


"All targeting criteria are developed according to legal, operational, and intelligence requirements."

Since the first strike on Sept. 2, scores of legal experts and former military lawyers have characterized the strikes as extrajudicial killings or murders. Members of the military are required by U.S. law to refuse illegal orders.

Dan Maurer, a retired Army lieutenant colonel and former military lawyer, said he hoped the boat strikes would serve as an (
unethical❗) example for future generations.

"It’s going to be a shameful episode in the history of American military operations, and I hope it becomes a case study in what not to do," he said.

Maine Writer- sadly but inevitably, reparations must be paid from the United States to the countries where illegal boat strikes killed so many innocent people. Humans are not "video games".β—πŸ˜‘




Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home