In a breathtaking midnight assault, the US Navy obliterated the $12 billion floating drug fortress Santa Muerte after a 15-month global manhunt—rescuing hundreds of hostages and ending one of the world’s most powerful criminal empires in just 9 minutes, a stunning victory that redefined modern warfare and global justice.

Exclusive: US Navy warship holding survivors from strike on Caribbean  vessel, sources say | Reuters

In a mission that stunned the world and left intelligence communities reeling, the United States Navy confirmed it had carried out a high-precision strike on Santa Muerte, a colossal floating drug fortress operating in international waters of the Pacific Ocean.

The top-secret operation—codenamed Iron Tide—was executed at 02:47 a.m.

local time on Thursday after more than 15 months of covert surveillance involving satellites, submarines, and human intelligence assets spread across five countries.

According to Pentagon officials, Santa Muerte had become one of the most elusive and dangerous criminal operations ever constructed on the high seas.

The $12 billion vessel was described by one defense analyst as “a hybrid between a cruise ship, an oil rig, and a fortress,” complete with radar-jamming systems, anti-aircraft defenses, and luxury quarters for its cartel leaders.

But it wasn’t just drugs hidden onboard—the Navy discovered hundreds of hostages, believed to be scientists, engineers, and trafficked civilians forced to maintain the ship’s elaborate systems.

Rear Admiral Thomas Keene, who oversaw Operation Iron Tide from the command center in Pearl Harbor, called the strike “a turning point in modern maritime warfare.

” Speaking to reporters, Keene said, “This was not just about narcotics—it was about dismantling a floating nation of organized crime.

We neutralized a threat that had been invisible for too long.”

Eyewitnesses from a nearby cargo ship reported seeing “a flash of light across the horizon, followed by a deep tremor through the waves.

” Within minutes, the sky was filled with unmanned aerial vehicles circling in perfect formation as the Navy’s stealth bombers launched precision-guided munitions.

 

US Navy detains two survivors of strike against alleged drug boat | CNN  Politics

 

Submarines positioned beneath the vessel deployed electronic countermeasures to disable communications, effectively isolating Santa Muerte before the first impact hit.

The entire operation lasted 9 minutes and 32 seconds—an astonishingly brief window for an assault of such complexity.

By dawn, the once-mythical ship had been reduced to smoldering wreckage drifting in the Pacific.

Sources confirm that Navy SEAL teams swiftly boarded the remains of the fortress to secure survivors and retrieve critical data believed to expose the financial networks behind the operation.

What makes this mission even more remarkable is its near-perfect execution.

Pentagon spokesperson Lt.Col. Rachel Donovan confirmed there were “zero civilian casualties,” a feat she described as “a testament to the precision and ethics of our armed forces.”

Investigators now believe Santa Muerte had ties to at least six international cartels and operated as a self-sustaining base for narcotics production, weapons trading, and cybercrime.

Intelligence leaks suggest that the ship’s power core and encrypted communication systems were maintained by kidnapped engineers from South America and Eastern Europe, while its security forces were drawn from elite mercenary groups.

In the aftermath of the strike, images leaked from classified Navy drones show portions of the vessel’s remains floating amid oil fires—twisted steel, shattered luxury decks, and cargo containers filled with synthetic opioids and gold bars.

One recovered data drive allegedly contains evidence of offshore accounts linked to political figures across three continents, though the Pentagon has refused to comment on these claims.

 

US Navy strengthens presence near Venezuela to combat drug trafficking |  Fox News

 

President William Rhodes addressed the nation hours after the mission, praising the operation’s success while acknowledging its symbolic weight.

“Last night, justice was delivered not through vengeance, but through precision, discipline, and courage,” he said from the White House Situation Room.

“The men and women of our military have shown that even in the darkest corners of the ocean, America stands for order and humanity.”

As the international community reacts, speculation continues about how Santa Muerte managed to evade detection for so long.

Defense analysts suggest the vessel was protected by deep-sea refueling submarines and constantly changed its flag and location using falsified maritime data.

“It was like chasing a ghost,” said a retired intelligence officer familiar with the case.

“Every time we thought we had her, she vanished.

Until now.”

While cleanup operations continue at the strike site, global law enforcement agencies are racing to decode the data retrieved by the Navy.

If confirmed, the information could unravel one of the largest financial crime networks in history—stretching from the jungles of Colombia to the corporate boardrooms of Europe and Asia.

For now, the world can only marvel at how a single, silent night on the Pacific Ocean reshaped the fight against global crime.

The name Santa Muerte may have been erased from the waves—but the ripples of Operation Iron Tide are only just beginning.