Pentagon's War on Drugs Playbook: Did Military Intel Suggest 'Bloodshed at Sea'?

Post date: October 30, 2025 · Discovered: April 24, 2026 · 3 posts, 0 comments

An Institute for Defense Analyses report, obtained by The Intercept via FOIA, allegedly detailed the Pentagon's approach to the war on drugs. The document reportedly advocated for methods beyond mere counternarcotics policing.

Key takeaways from the report suggest that disrupting transnational organized crime required 'more “direct military action.”' Furthermore, the intelligence findings were allegedly derived from interviews with incarcerated top drug traffickers in the United States. An attorney’s client specifically claims this report proves a long-term military objective of 'bloodshed at sea.'

No direct commentary or contrasting user opinions were found in the available threads. The weight of the available material points only to the existence and specific, concerning recommendations within the leaked defense analysis, leaving the public to interpret the military's supposed pivot toward direct conflict.

Key Points

#1Pentagon interest in drug war methodology

The report suggests the Pentagon was seeking new ways to engage in the war on drugs.

Source Discussions (3)

This report was synthesized from the following Lemmy discussions, ranked by community score.

16
points
Internal Report Shows the Military Always Wanted to Join the Drug War
[email protected]·3 comments·10/30/2025·by cm0002·theintercept.com
9
points
Internal Report Shows the Military Always Wanted to Join the Drug War
[email protected]·0 comments·10/30/2025·by geneva_convenience·theintercept.com
2
points
Internal Report Shows the Military Always Wanted to Join the Drug War
[email protected]·2 comments·10/30/2025·by geneva_convenience·theintercept.com