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A US strike on a suspected drug boat has the military in the hot seat. Its own law of war manual explains why.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth defended his role directing military attacks on suspected drug-runners during a Cabinet meeting at the White House on Tuesday.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth defended his role directing military attacks on suspected drug-runners during a Cabinet meeting at the White House on Tuesday.

  • The Pentagon’s law of war manual calls attacking a shipwrecked enemy an “illegal” act.
  • Reports allege a US drone strike targeted survivors of a drug-smuggling vessel in the Caribbean.
  • The White House and Pentagon have denied news reports saying Hegseth ordered the strike on survivors.

The Pentagon’s manual on the law of war doesn’t list every possible illegal order, but on some points, it’s explicit.

“Orders to fire upon the shipwrecked,” it says, “would be clearly illegal.”

The 1,200-page manual repeatedly stresses that a combatant who is unable to continue fighting is entitled to fundamental protections. It uses shipwreck survivors as a key example — which is why a September 2 counter-narcotics strike in the Caribbean is drawing intense scrutiny.

During the mission, which Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has said he watched live, the US military struck a suspected drug-smuggling vessel twice. The first strike appeared to kill nine people on the vessel; then the US military launched a second strike on the stricken boat that killed the two remaining survivors, The Washington Post reported last week, citing seven people with knowledge of the strike.

Hegseth called the Post report, which said the secretary had ordered a military leader to kill everyone onboard, “fake news.”

“Our current operations in the Caribbean are lawful under both US and international law, with all actions in compliance with the law of armed conflict — and approved by the best military and civilian lawyers, up and down the chain of command,” Hegseth said Friday.

The White House attributed the decision to conduct a second strike on the stricken vessel, executed “to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was eliminated,” to Adm. Frank Bradley, who now oversees Special Operations Command, instead of Hegseth.

Bradley has been summoned to a closed-door briefing with Congress on Thursday.

His oversight of the strike mission marks a departure from normal military operations, typically overseen by a geographic “combatant commander.” In this case, that would be the head of Southern Command, Adm. Alvin Holsey, whose retirement Hegseth unexpectedly announced last month; the admiral had been on the job for a year.

The Trump administration has said that the actions taken were legal. Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson said Tuesday that “Bradley made the right call.”

When asked by Business Insider for comment on the follow-up strike, public affairs officials referred Business Insider to Hegseth’s “X” post voicing support for Bradley.

The Defense Department released a video of a November 10 attack on a vessel in the Caribbean Sea that it said killed
The Defense Department released a video of a November 10 attack on a vessel in the Caribbean Sea that it said killed “4 male narco-terrorists.”

President Donald Trump has distanced himself from the strike, saying he “wouldn’t have wanted” a second strike, while also defending Hegseth, whom the White House said authorized Bradley to strike suspected drug-smugglers. “I’m going to find out about it, but Pete said he did not order the death of those two men,” Trump said.

Legal experts say that if survivors were targeted after their boat was destroyed, it would represent a clear violation of long-standing US military law governing the treatment of wounded, incapacitated, or shipwrecked combatants.

Killing an enemy combatant or, in this case, a suspected drug trafficker who has been shipwrecked is a “patent violation” of military law that would be obvious to everyone in the chain of command, said Dan Maurer, a retired Army judge advocate general who now teaches at Ohio Northern University’s law school.

“No one who is at all trained on the law of war would think that that’s OK,” Maurer told Business Insider on a phone call. “Whether they’re wounded or sick or a POW or shipwrecked at sea, unless they’re shooting at you, they are not a threat, and they cannot be attacked.”

“There’s actually an affirmative duty to pick them up, to rescue them, so they don’t drown,” he said.

The law of war manual says one of its core purposes is to protect people from unnecessary suffering, including the wounded, the sick, and the shipwrecked. The manual is based on international law, including the Geneva Conventions, which the US helped draft after World War II, Maurer said. Under those rules, combatants who cannot fight must be treated humanely, and in the case of those surviving at sea, rescued.

A person engaged in a suspected criminal act, but who is not an enemy fighter involved in war, is considered to be a “noncombatant” — force against such civilians is usually only authorized when they present an imminent risk to US forces.

Normally, maritime drug interdiction missions are conducted by the Coast Guard with occasional Navy support. While crews may use force in such operations, once a vessel has effectively been disabled and no longer presents a threat to personnel, Coast Guard crews shift to either rescue or detainment.

The Pentagon has described boat operators suspected of drug-smuggling as “narco-terrorists.” In January, the White House designated drug cartels and “other organizations” as Foreign Terrorist Organizations, unlocking additional military authorities.

Congress has not approved authorization for the use of military force for these operations. The legality of strikes on suspected smugglers is in question, with the latest reporting on the killing of survivors raising fresh concerns.

The US military has carried out dozens of strikes on suspected drug-trafficking vessels in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific since September, killing over 80 people. Two suspected drug-traffickers survived a separate strike in October. They were picked up by American forces and returned to their home countries.

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MrBeast is building a platform to connect creators and big advertisers

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - DECEMBER 03: (L-R) Andrew Ross Sorkin, MrBeast, and Jeff Housenbold speak onstage during The New York Times DealBook Summit 2025 at Jazz at Lincoln Center on December 03, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by David Dee Delgado/Getty Images for The New York Times)
MrBeast, whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson, center, is planning a move into a creator-marketer platform as he expands beyond YouTube in search of new revenue streams.

  • MrBeast is developing a platform to connect creators with major brand marketers.
  • The idea is to help Fortune 1,000 companies access the creator economy.
  • His company is also expanding into financial services and mobile phones.

MrBeast is building out a platform to match creators and marketers, the CEO of the top YouTuber‘s company said at The New York Times’ DealBook Summit on Wednesday.

Jeffrey Housenbold, CEO of Beast Industries, said the company was “building a two-sided marketplace in a global creator platform, matching creators with Fortune 1,000 marketers who want to be able to access the creator influencer economy in an efficient way to be able to build demand for their products and services.”

A spokesperson for the company said the marketplace was in the general-discussion phase and that there were no specifics to share yet.

An early 2025 fundraising pitch deck viewed by Business Insider said the company was exploring a creator marketplace. It described the marketplace as identifying creators that fit brands’ campaign goals, facilitating creator campaigns across platforms, and helping creators with monetization, viewership growth, and product launches.

MrBeast, whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson, has been expanding beyond his YouTube channel — which has over 450 million subscribers — and into other business lines for some time. He’s already in consumer products through his Feastables chocolate line, and has action figures and an Amazon show, “Beast Games.”

Housenbold on Wednesday ticked off other business lines the company was expanding into, including financial services and a mobile phone company.

Beast Industries took in over $400 million in revenue last year, according to investor materials viewed by Business Insider. The company lost money last year, mainly because of high costs in its media business, and has been on a push to cut costs as well as expand to new revenue lines.

As YouTube’s biggest creator, MrBeast could bring his clout to the creator-marketer matchmaking space, which has been growing as advertisers shift spending from traditional media to social media creators.

Ad spending on creators in the US is expected to hit $37 billion this year, growing four times as fast as the overall media industry, a November Interactive Advertising Bureau report found.

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