What began as targeted strikes in the Caribbean in early September has grown into a sustained campaign that now reaches into the eastern Pacific, and Americans should take notice that our military is being used to protect our homeland from the poison flowing over the border. The White House and U.S. Southern Command have openly acknowledged the operations as part of a broader effort to interdict narcotics on the high seas, and the expansion into Pacific waters shows this is not a one-off stunt but a deliberate strategy.
The Wall Street Journal’s Equipped team recently broke down the two platforms doing the heavy lifting: the AC-130J Ghostrider gunship and the MQ-9 Reaper drone. These are not toys or symbolic gestures — they are proven tools of precision, persistence, and lethality that let commanders act decisively when large volumes of illicit drugs are streaming toward American streets.
The AC-130J Ghostrider is the modern gunship built on the C-130J airframe, fitted with a Precision Strike Package that includes trainable 30mm and 105mm guns plus underwing precision munitions and Hellfire capability. In short, it brings overwhelming, controlled firepower from standoff ranges and is designed for interdiction and armed reconnaissance — exactly the kind of platform you want against fast-moving narco-vessels.
Complementing the Ghostrider are MQ-9 Reaper drones, long-endurance remotely piloted aircraft that can find, fix, and finish targets with sensors and weapons that have been battle-tested for years. The Reaper’s ability to loiter for hours, feed real-time targeting data, and employ Hellfires or precision-guided bombs gives commanders options to strike moving maritime targets without putting sailors or aircrews unnecessarily at risk.
The administration has framed these operations as part of an armed conflict with narcoterrorists, and that framing reflects a hard truth: cartels and their enablers are responsible for far more American deaths and community devastation than many conventional threats. Critics and some lawmakers are demanding legalities and transparency, but the country has a right — and a duty — to use the tools at its disposal to stop fentanyl and cocaine from flooding our neighborhoods.
Let’s be clear about what the alternative is: endless hearings and press releases while drugs continue to ravage families. Washington’s hand-wringing plays into the hands of cartel bosses and anti-American regimes that harbor them. Americans who work hard and pay taxes are entitled to a government that defends them with competence and force when needed.
Yes, the government should be accountable and commanders should follow the law, but accountability does not mean paralysis. The precision sensors and weapons on the Ghostrider and Reaper give our military the best chance to hit the bad actors while sparing innocents — and that is a higher moral standard than letting traffickers operate unmolested.
Our focus now must be simple: support the men and women in uniform carrying out a difficult mission, demand that civilian leadership provide clear rules of engagement and lawful oversight, and insist that both parties in Washington put national security above partisan theater. If stopping the flow of death-dealing drugs requires bringing modern American firepower to the hunt, then we should be proud that our nation has the will and the tools to do it.

