Colombia's President Gustavo Petro
Colombian President Gustavo Petro MAURO PIMENTEL/AFP via Getty Images

Colombian President Gustavo Petro decried the latest U.S. strike against a vessel off the Venezuelan coast, rejecting that those aboard were drug-traffickers.

"There are no narco-terrorists on those vessels. Narcos live in the U.S., Europe and Dubai," Petro said in a social media post.

"Poor Caribbean young men are aboard that boat. Launching missiles when interdictions can be carried, like Colombia does, breaks with the legal and universal principle of proportionality. Therefore, it's murder. The families of those young men need to get together," Petro added.

The attack in question was announced by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Friday. He said in a post of his own that, "on President Trump's orders," he directed a "lethal, kinetic strike on a narco-trafficking vessel affiliated with Designated Terrorist Organizations in the USSOUTHCOM area of responsibility."

Hegseth went on to detail that four people were killed in the strike, which was conducted "just off the coast of Venezuela while the vessel was transporting substantial amounts of narcotics - headed to America to poison our people."

"Our intelligence, without a doubt, confirmed that this vessel was trafficking narcotics, the people onboard were narco-terrorists, and they were operating on a known narco-trafficking transit route. These strikes will continue until the attacks on the American people are over!!!!" Hegseth concluded.

The new strike comes as the Trump administration continues to ramp up pressure on Venezuela's authoritarian government. On Wednesday, Trump declared cartels as unlawful combatants and said the U.S. is now in a "non-international armed conflict" with them.

The Associated Press detailed that the decision was notified to Congress members on Wednesday. Some lawmakers briefed on the decision, however, voiced their frustration at the Pentagon's inability to provide a list of the designated terrorist organizations in the conflict, the report added.

The outlet also noted that senators believe the decision shows the administration is seeking a new legal framework for its actions in the Caribbean, which includes several strikes against vessels it has claimed were carrying drugs and drug-traffickers.

Moreover, Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez claimed on Thursday that five U.S. jets approached the country's coastline on Thursday, an action he described as "military harassment."

"I am denouncing this military harassment in front of the world," the official said in a televised address. "This is a great threat."

Padrino didn't specify where the incident took place nor if the country's authoritarian government will respond to the sorties.

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