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Rubio and Hegseth inform lawmakers about boat strikes following congressional frustration

Members of the Senate, and the House of Representatives were briefed by top Trump administration officials on Wednesday regarding strikes on suspected drug-trafficking boats near Venezuela. This came after Congress expressed frustration over a lack of transparency in the operation.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth spoke for an hour with Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate and members of senior national security committees. They discussed U.S. attacks on vessels in Caribbean and Pacific waters that have resulted in the deaths of dozens of people.

The Trump administration has insisted that the boats targeted for attack were carrying drugs without providing any evidence or explaining publicly the legal justification of the decision.

The administration officials told several senators and members of the House who attended the briefing that the boats carried cocaine and not fentanyl and provided their legal justification.

Legal experts claim that the strikes could violate international law, as well as U.S. laws prohibiting murder and assassination.

Trump's Republican colleagues said that they were satisfied with the briefing.

House Speaker Mike Johnson called the intelligence on the vessels "exquisite" but said that the U.S. was aware of who was aboard the boats "almost down to the person".

Johnson, when asked to clarify, said: "What I have learned from what I have read so far, I am confident that we are highly reliable. Here are the cartels. Here are the cartels. This is deliberate. They are not just randomly on a boat. "They are trying to bring in illegal immigrants, which is a great danger to the American people."

Tensions with CARACAS

The strikes between Washington and Caracas have heightened tensions, especially since Trump has ordered a major build-up of military forces in the area and stated that his administration would carry out attacks against drug-related targets within Venezuela.

The president of Colombia, a longtime U.S. ally, is in a dispute with Trump about the attacks, which have claimed Colombian lives. Trump has imposed sanctions against him.

Mark Warner, top Senate Intelligence Democrat, stated that the failure of the administration to explain publicly its actions including the legal justification had damaged the trust of the U.S. Public and Latin American partners.

Warner stated that "Kinetic Strikes without Interdicting and Demonstrating to the American Public that these are full of drugs and bad guys is I think a huge error that undermines the confidence in the Administration's actions."

Warner last week attacked the administration for holding an informational briefing about the strikes without including Democrats.

In a rare show of bipartisan frustration, lawmakers from both parties criticized the Pentagon on Tuesday for failing to brief them on national security matters and claiming that top defense officials sometimes appeared to undermine Trump's policies.

Elbridge Colby, the Pentagon's top policy official whom Trump renamed as the Department of War on Wednesday, denied that he was not fully advising Congress on national security matters. This suggests a growing rift between the Pentagon and senators of both parties. (Reporting and editing by Patricia Zengerle, Bo Erickson)

(source: Reuters)