Did a military lawyer witness the Venezuela 'double tap' boat strike? Experts say one should have
The Pentagon’s account of the September 2 "double tap" strike that killed two survivors of an initial attack on a suspected Venezuelan drug boat is coming under renewed scrutiny after...
By Fox News · Fox News
The Pentagon’s account of the September 2 "double tap" strike that killed two survivors of an initial attack on a suspected Venezuelan drug boat is coming under renewed scrutiny after ABC News reported that a military lawyer was present when Adm. Frank "Mitch" Bradley authorized the follow-on strike. The new detail raises a sharper legal question: if real-time legal counsel was available, what advice did the judge advocate general (JAG) provide when Bradley approved a second round of lethal force? Pentagon officials have framed the operation as a counterterrorism mission targeting members of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua criminal network. Experts say that distinction matters because U.S. counterterrorism missions normally embed a JAG in the operations center to determine whether a target remains lawful — oversight not typical for routine maritime counter-narcotics patrols. Todd Huntley, a former Navy JAG officer at U.S. Special Operations Command, said the presence of a lawyer would fit that framework. "In normal maritime counter-narcotics operations, a JAG isn’t advising in real time because those missions rarely involve lethal force," Huntley said. "But these strikes are being handled as counterterrorism strikes. The targets just happen to be on the water." In those missions, he said, the JAG participates directly in the real-time targeting cycle. "The JAG works with intelligence and operations personnel to make sure the target is lawful, that the planned strike is lawful, and whether the commander has the authority to approve it or needs to send it higher." He emphasized that commanders, not attorneys, ultimately make the call. "JAGs only advise. They can’t override the commander’s decision." TRUMP ANNOUNCES US MILITARY CONDUCTED 'LETHAL STRIKE' ON VENEZUELAN DRUG BOAT IN CARIBBEAN The central legal dispute now turns on the condition of the survivors at the time of the second strike. According to ABC News , U.S. personnel believed the two men in the water may have…