The sea carries evidence of Trump's airstrikes to Colombia
A roar echoed in the windless afternoon air. Seconds later, smoke began to billow from the sea as if the horizon were on fire.
Watching from the shore on Nov. 6, Erika Palacio Fernández pulled out her phone, she said, unaware that what she was recording was the only verified, independent video known to date of the aftermath of an airstrike in the Donald Trump administration's campaign against what it calls “narcoterrorists.”
Two days later, on that same shore, a boat beached. charred 30 meters long. Then, two mangled bodies. Then, charred drums, life jackets and dozens of packages that were observed by The New York Times and that were similar to others that have been found after anti-drug operations in the region. Most of the packages were empty, although traces of a substance that looked and smelled like marijuana were found on the lining of some.
The charred flotsam appears to be the first physical evidence of the U.S. campaign that has destroyed 29 vessels and killed more than 100 people in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific. All other vessels hit are assumed to have sunk along with their crew and cargo. The US military has offered no evidence that the vessels it has destroyed were carrying illicit substances or belonged to criminal networks.

A Times analysis determined that the remains of the vessel corresponded to those of one that featured a video posted by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on the night of November 6, hours after Palacio recorded his video. Hegsheth discret of aataque is not a 1920-19 operada. I'm not sure if it's true or not.