(NewsNation) — Frustration abounds for Democrats in the Senate and House regarding the information, or lack thereof, coming from the Trump administration regarding U.S. military strikes in the Caribbean that have killed at least 57 people in boats that are alleged to be smuggling drugs.
An outraged Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said that excluding Democrats from a Wednesday briefing for a select group of only Republican Senators is “corrosive not only to our democracy but downright dangerous for our national security.”
He explained that every Senator no matter their party has a constitutional role to play when the United States uses military force and “when you politicize decision making about putting our service members in harm’s way, you make them less safe.”
	
Hegseth announces new strike on alleged narco-trafficking boat, killing 4	
Warner said the briefing also included the Office of Legal Counsel’s opinion that tries to lay out legal justification for those strikes. That legal justification is something he said Secretary of State Marco Rubio had promised him but had not been provided yet.
“If you’ve got a valid legal opinion, wouldn’t you want to share it with every member? If you believe, I think the administration does, that we know these guys are bad guys, wouldn’t you want to catch them and show the world the drugs and show their history of bad activities?” said Warner.
Warner also chastised his Republican colleagues who attended, asking why they didn’t push back or walk out of the briefing when they saw no Democrats were present.
Senators Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and John Husted, R-Ohio, both told NewsNation they believe all Senators, including Democrats, should be included in these briefings.
House Democrats on the Armed Services Committee were included in a bipartisan hearing on these strikes on Thursday. However those who spoke to the press afterwards were frustrated by what they believe is unsatisfactory information and a lack of strategy to actually address drug trafficking, and fentanyl in particular since tens of thousands of Americans die from using the drug each year.
They also noted that no legal justifications were provided for the killings because the lawyers who were due to attend were pulled from the briefing.
	
US sending strike boats to Venezuela for ‘shock and awe’ effect: Senator	
Rep. Sarah Jacobs, D-Calif., called out the administration over concerns that only cocaine has been seized, not fentanyl, when fentanyl is often used to justify their actions. “They admitted that all of the narcotics coming out of this part of the world is cocaine. They talked a little bit about the connection between cocaine and fentanyl, although I’m not convinced that what they said was accurate. And I think it goes to show that this is actually not about addressing fentanyl and the deaths of Americans, which is a really huge problem that we should be addressing, this is not doing that.”
The Pentagon did not dispute the fact that only cocaine has been seized so far, with Chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell saying, “This morning, the Department held several committee briefings to ensure continued transparency with lawmakers. The Department is deeply concerned that Members of Congress are making public statements regarding information received in a classified briefing. The Department considers any unauthorized disclosure of classified information as serious breach of national security.”
None of the Republicans who attended the House briefing would give a comment to the press.
 
