Senate blocks Adam Schiff's project to have the Trump administration release video of attack in the Caribbean
A new effort in the Senate to get the Trump administration to release video of attack in the Caribbean on September 2 failed
Senate Republicans blocked a motion, introduced by Democrat Adam Schiff (California), to require the administration of President Donald Trump to release video of the second military attack on a vessel in the Caribbean on September 2.
“This is going to come out "It's just a matter of how long we have to fight to make this available to the American people," Schiff said after his proposal failed. Republican Senator Markwayne Mullin (Oklahoma) blocked Schiff's consideration. "The public should see this, and I hope we have support to make it public," he said. “I found the legal and strategic explanations inconsistent, but I believe the American people should see this video. And every member of Congress should have that opportunity. I certainly want it for myself.”
The bill would require Hegseth to release the unedited video of the attacks against suspected designated terrorist organizations no later than 10 days after its enactment.
Within 15 days of its passage, the bill required the video of the attacks to be posted on the Pentagon website.
The Trump Administration has implemented more than 20 attacks against suspected drug-trafficking vessels, killing 95 people in actions questioned by the United Nations and organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.
Schiff has been part of a group of Democratic and Republican senators, including Tim Kaine (Virginia) and Ran Paul (Kentucky), and the leader of The Democratic minority, Chuck Schumer (New York), introduced a War Powers resolution to block military action against Venezuela, a country whose oil tanker was seized. “Last week we saw the administration distribute extensive footage of the seizure of an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela. Then,“Why not release the video of the second attack that the administration ordered on September 2?” Schiff asked on the Senate floor. Democratic Senator Alex Padilla, also from California, spoke before the vote on the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) to urge his colleagues to rein in what he called President Trump’s “reckless display of military force abroad,” as well as on U.S. soil. “Make no mistake: this year is anything but normal. What we have seen, in just one year of this second Trump administration, is the destruction of eight decades of bipartisan consensus on foreign policy and the dismantling of postwar alliances that have kept Americans safe for generations,” Padilla said. “And we have witnessed escalating abuses of power designed to enrich Donald Trump and his allies.”
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