Norms Impact
Hegseth Makes Fun of War Crimes With Twisted AI Children’s Book Meme
A sitting defense secretary publicly mocks lethal “double-tap” targeting while asserting wartime authority in a non-war theater, eroding the core norm that state killing must be lawful, necessary, and accountable.
Dec 1, 2025
⚖ Legal Exposure
Sources
Summary
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted an AI image depicting Franklin the Turtle launching a missile at “drug boats” days after reporting that he ordered lethal strikes on an alleged drug boat off Trinidad. The conduct reflects a shift toward normalizing and publicly celebrating extrajudicial lethal force as an instrument of policy under asserted “armed conflict” authority. The practical consequence is a lowered barrier to unlawful killing, with accountability weakened by propaganda, legal theories of convenience, and chain-of-command insulation.
Reality Check
This conduct signals a future where executive officials can order killings and then launder them through memes and manufactured “armed conflict” narratives, shrinking our due-process culture into a kill-first bureaucracy. If the reported order included bombing wounded survivors clinging to wreckage, that implicates the law of armed conflict’s prohibition on attacking persons hors de combat and can expose perpetrators and commanders to U.S. war-crimes liability under 18 U.S.C. § 2441, as well as conspiracy and aiding-and-abetting theories under 18 U.S.C. § 371 and § 2. Even if lawyers blessed the operation, legal sign-off is not a shield for an unlawful order—this is precisely how institutional accountability collapses and our rights become optional at the point of force.
Legal Summary
The article alleges the Defense Secretary ordered the killing of all persons on a boat and that subordinates conducted a second strike to kill surviving individuals clinging to wreckage—conduct widely characterized as a war crime (“double-tap”) and potentially a grave LOAC violation. If the administration’s “armed conflict” theory is accepted, exposure aligns with federal war-crimes liability; if it is rejected, the same facts can support unlawful homicide theories. The public “lawyer approved” claim does not neutralize exposure where the alleged order and targeting of survivors could be manifestly unlawful.
Legal Analysis
<h3>18 U.S.C. § 2441 — War crimes (grave breaches / serious violations of Common Article 3)</h3><ul><li>Allegation: Hegseth gave a direct order to “kill every single person” on an alleged drug boat; after an initial strike left survivors “hanging onto the burning wreck,” a subordinate ordered a second strike (“double-tap”) to ensure they were killed.</li><li>Killing persons who are hors de combat (wounded, shipwrecked, or otherwise incapacitated and not actively participating) is a paradigmatic LOAC violation and can constitute a war crime if an armed-conflict framework is asserted (as the administration reportedly does).</li><li>Command-level verbal direction and subsequent compliance by Special Operations personnel supports command responsibility and intent; the asserted lawyer-approval defense is not determinative if the order was manifestly unlawful.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 1111 — Murder (within special maritime and territorial jurisdiction / federal nexus-dependent)</h3><ul><li>If the “armed conflict” theory is legally unfounded (as alleged by Sen. Van Hollen), the described lethal strikes could be treated as unlawful homicide rather than lawful acts of war.</li><li>The reported instruction to kill all persons on a boat that “posed no military threat” supports malice/intent; however, jurisdictional and immunities/authority defenses would require factual and legal development beyond the article.</li></ul><h3>Uniform Code of Military Justice (10 U.S.C. ch. 47) — Unlawful orders / law of war offenses (for military actors; potential command culpability)</h3><ul><li>The article describes a chain where a Special Operations commander implemented the Secretary’s instruction via a second strike; executing an unlawful “kill survivors” order is a classic law-of-war/UCMJ exposure for involved personnel.</li><li>As a senior civilian directing military force, the alleged order functions as the operative command impetus, elevating exposure for instigating/ordering LOAC violations even if carried out by uniformed subordinates.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 371 — Conspiracy (agreement to commit offense against the United States)</h3><ul><li>The described sequence (directive to kill everyone; subordinate implements a second strike to fulfill that directive) supports an inference of coordinated action to accomplish an unlawful objective.</li><li>Gap: the article does not detail communications beyond the initial order and compliance, but the operational execution provides overt-act support if an unlawful killing theory is sustained.</li></ul><b>Conclusion:</b> The alleged “double-tap” killing of survivors to comply with a top-level order reflects prosecutable structural unlawful-use-of-force/LOAC criminal exposure (not merely political or procedural irregularity), with the strongest theory being war-crimes liability if the administration’s armed-conflict construct is asserted, or murder if it is not.
Media
Detail
<p>Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted an AI-generated image styled as a Franklin children’s book cover reading “A Classic Franklin Story: Franklin Targets Narco Terrorists,” showing the character in U.S. military gear firing a missile at men in boats from a helicopter, captioned “For your Christmas wish list …”.</p><p>The post followed reporting that the Trump administration has carried out boat attacks in the Caribbean Sea that have killed at least 80 people while asserting the targets were trafficking drugs to the United States.</p><p>On September 2, Hegseth allegedly gave a direct vocal order to kill every person on an alleged drug boat off Trinidad. After the initial strike, two people reportedly remained alive on the wreckage, and a Special Operations commander ordered a second strike to comply with Hegseth’s instruction, described as a “double-tap.”</p><p>Hegseth defended the operations as lawful under U.S. and international law and compliant with the law of armed conflict, stating they were approved by military and civilian lawyers.</p>