US Boat Strikes Turn US Service Members Into Murders Now Seeking Preemptive Pardons From Trump
President Donald Trump could preemptively pardon service members for acts committed during his term.
Etienne Note: One of the saddest consequences of “government,” statism, and the hidden curriculum of unquestioning obedience slipped to kids in the organized crime government’s mandatory schools, scouting programs, and basic training is many are turned into murderers for not having the courage to ignore obviously immoral orders like killing people in boats without a trial or even an investigation.

Demonstrators protest U.S. military strikes on boats near Venezuela
Demonstrators gathered outside the White House to protest U.S. military strikes on boats near Venezuela and the buildup to a possible ground assault.
By Cybele Mayes-Osterman / USA TODAY
The U.S. military has killed more than 200 people in strikes on boats in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific in the past 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.
Since then, the Trump administration has released no evidence that any of the suspected narco-trafficking boats carried drugs or that their occupants worked for drug cartels. It has never identified the people it killed – just a handful of names have been published in news reports. Family members of victims filed a federal lawsuit naming their relatives, whom they allege were murdered by the United States.
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 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 U.S. military has published dozens of videos of its strikes on boats in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific.
U.S. SOUTHERN COMMAND, via REUTERS
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,” it said.
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 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.
Legal hotlines get calls from boat strike operators
Two organizations that provide anonymous legal advice for military members grappling with orders they fear are illegal said they had received calls from service members concerned about the legality of the boat strikes, some from people directly involved in them.
Steve Woolford, a resource counselor with Quaker House and the GI Rights Hotline, said he spoke with about four service members involved in the operation who were seeking legal and ethical guidance. One discussed helping plan a strike, and two others were ordered to execute strikes, he said.
“I think this is exactly what was described as a war crime,” Woolford said one caller told him.
Woolford said some of these callers were connected to lawyers, but he wasn’t aware of anyone who had refused an order or taken legal action. Callers are “more scared now that they’d be punished if they did bring something up,” he said.

Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth has compared drug cartels to terrorist groups like al-Qaida and said the boat strikes act as a deterrent to drug traffickers.
Maria Alejandra Cardona, REUTERS
Brenner Fissell, the vice president of the National Institute for Military Justice, said the institute’s Orders Project, which also advises service members questioning if their orders are legal, receives a “steady but small number of calls,” including from service members concerned that the boat strikes are illegal, he said.
Some have expressed a “sense of being asked to do things that one is deeply conflicted with the morality of doing,” he said.
“There’s a general perception that no one is ever going to be prosecuted for this because Trump will be able to issue pardons preemptively,” he added.
If a service member refuses to follow an order, the case may be brought before a military judge to determine whether the order was lawful. However, before that call is made, service members could be removed from duty immediately.
Eugene Fidell, who teaches military law at Yale Law School, said the Pentagon could scrap any charges about illegal orders to strike boats if they arose through the military justice system.
Trump could also preemptively pardon service members for acts committed during his term. “The next administration might find its hands tied in terms of prosecuting anybody for obeying such an order, because President Trump may pardon everybody in sight,” Fidell said.
Service members who object to war based on their beliefs can seek conscientious objector status with the military and be released from deployment.
More: Are Trump’s Venezuelan boat strikes legal? Why Dems want answers.
More than 100 people have contacted the Center on Conscience and War, a nonprofit that helps service members apply to file as conscientious objectors, since late February, according to Mike Prysner, the center’s director.
Asked whether any service members involved in the boat strikes had refused to follow an order or been reprimanded for doing so, U.S. Southern Command said it “does not comment on unconfirmed reports, speculation or administrative matters.”
Commander who led boat strikes retired early
Speculation swirled around the early retirement of Adm. Alvin Holsey, who led U.S. Southern Command through the first few months of the boat strikes. Holsey left the high-level job after barely a year in December.
Holsey has not spoken publicly or given interviews since he left, but some news outlets reported that he had raised concerns about the strikes.

The family of Chad Joseph, a Trinidadian man, is suing the U.S. government for his alleged unjust killing.
Andrea de Silva, REUTERS
The boat strikes, and videos of them posted to U.S. Southern Command's social media, have continued apace under Gen. Francis Donovan, Holsey's successor.
Second strike on survivors heightens ethical concerns
The simmering concerns surrounding the boat strikes boiled over last year following news reports that the first-ever boat strike in September left two survivors that the military killed in a second, "double-tap" strike about 40 minutes later.
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