2 tons of cocaine are seized after being chased by speedboat in the Pacific Ocean off Colombia, according to a video
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Colombia’s navy seized more than two tons of cocaine after pursuing a speedboat loaded with drugs and fuel in the South Pacific Ocean, authorities said Wednesday, as the world’s largest cocaine-producing country faces pressure from the United States to combat drug trafficking.
The operation was carried out about 140 nautical miles from Tumaco, located in the extreme southwest of the country, in the Nariño region, on the Pacific coast, the Navy reported in a publication on social networks. Authorities said they found 2,000 kilograms of cocaine (4,400 pounds) and 270 gallons of fuel on the so-called “speed boat.” Three Colombian citizens on board were arrested.
The navy released video of the interception, showing armed officers boarding the ship while three suspects were ordered to lie face up in front. Authorities also released images showing piles of suspected drugs arranged in rows on the shoreline after the operation.
The Navy said the seizure of drugs, estimated to be worth more than $95 million, prevented “the distribution of approximately 4.9 million doses on the streets of the world.”

The seizure comes as the Trump administration has continued its military campaign against alleged ships transporting drugs off South America in the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. Those attacks, which began in September, have killed more than 100 people.
Trump has criticized President Gustavo Petro, calling the Colombian leader a “sick man” and hinting at possible military action in the country. However, the two leaders spoke Earlier this month, a Colombian official familiar with the conversation told News themezone that the call was “very positive,” describing it as a “180° change” in rhetoric from both sides.
Trump invited Petro to the White House and Petro told News themezone He would go “to stop a world war.”
Relations between the United States and Colombia have been strained for months, with the Trump administration accusing the Colombian government of failing to contain a surge in cocaine production. In October of last year, Trump called petro an “illegal drug leader” and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced sanctions against Petro and his familystating that he “has allowed drug cartels to flourish and refused to stop this activity.” The United States also removed Colombia from list of allies in the war on drugs.
However, Colombia has made several major drug seizures in recent months. In November, the nation announced its biggest cocaine bust in a decade, with 14 tons confiscated in its main Pacific port.
That same month, Colombian navy divers in a port on the Pacific coast found more 450 pounds of cocaine under a ship that was preparing to set sail for Europe. That seizure occurred a few days after the Navy announced that it had confiscated more than seven tons of drugs from two speedboats and a “narco-submarine,” also in the Pacific Ocean.

In:
- drug cartels
- Colombia
- Cocaine


