Schumer Demands Answers: Why the Pentagon Is Withholding Unedited Strike Footage From Congress

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer is escalating pressure on the Trump administration after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth refused to provide Congress with the full, unedited video of U.S. strikes on an alleged drug boat near Venezuela on September 2. Schumer warns that continued secrecy raises a disturbing question: what is the Pentagon trying to hide?
The controversy comes ahead of a classified all-senators briefing scheduled for tomorrow, where Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are expected to address U.S. military operations in the Caribbean. Senators say the briefing must finally clarify what happened during the boat strikes and explain the broader U.S. posture near Venezuelan waters.
Schumer says he asked Hegseth directly last week to release the full strike footage to every senator. He argues the request is basic congressional oversight, not a political stunt. Instead of agreeing, Hegseth said he needed more time to “study” the issue, despite the strikes occurring more than three months ago.
That response has only intensified scrutiny. Senators are not asking for edited clips or Pentagon summaries. They want raw, uncut footage that shows the full sequence of events before, during, and after the strikes. Without primary evidence, lawmakers say oversight becomes little more than blind trust.
The stakes go beyond one incident. Schumer and others warn that limited disclosure has historically fueled mission creep, where small, poorly explained actions escalate into long, costly conflicts. The lack of clarity around U.S. objectives near Venezuela has already raised alarms across Congress.

Concerns deepened further after reports of a near mid-air collision between a U.S. Air Force tanker and a civilian JetBlue aircraft, allegedly involving a disabled transponder. Lawmakers view the incident as a stark reminder of how quickly operational errors can spiral into catastrophe.
At the center of the debate is a constitutional principle: civilian control of the military depends on transparency to Congress. Senators authorize funding, approve force posture, and represent the public’s consent. That role collapses if evidence is withheld without a clear legal justification.
Schumer’s message is blunt. If the footage shows nothing problematic, there is no reason to hide it. If it does reveal mistakes, that is exactly why Congress must see it. Oversight exists to prevent tragedies and wars born in secrecy, not to justify them after the fact.