Senate rejects measure to limit Trump's military strikes in Caribbean

Washington DC - The US Senate on Wednesday rejected a draft law that would ban Donald Trump from ordering new military strikes in the Caribbean.

A screen grab from a video posted by Donald Trump on his Truth Social account shows US military forces conducting a strike on a boat in the Caribbean Sea on September 15, 2025.  © HANDOUT / US President Donald Trump's TRUTH Social account / AFP

At least 21 people have been killed so far in the Trump administration's attacks, which it has claimed are necessary to protect the US from smuggled narcotics, particularly from Venezuela.

Many experts have questioned the legality of using lethal force in foreign or international waters against suspects who have not been intercepted or questioned.

The resolution in the Senate was rejected late Wednesday with 48 votes for and 51 against.

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Adam Schiff, a Democratic senator who led the initiative, said before the vote that the strikes "could set off an unintended conflict with Venezuela."

Nicolas Maduro, president of the oil-rich nation, has criticized the US military action as "armed aggression to impose regime change."

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Trump floats expanding US military action to land routes

Trump boasted on Sunday that lethal strikes on small boats near the Venezuelan coast have been so successful that "there are no boats" left in that area of the Caribbean. He added that military action could be expanded to land routes which the administration claims are used by drug traffickers.

Rand Paul, one of two Republicans who supported the text in the Senate, said beforehand that he wanted to ensure that military action abroad had congressional approval.

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"The US should not be blowing up boats without even knowing who's on them," he wrote on X.

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