InFormer Defense Secretary Claims Trump Proposed Launching Missiles Into Mexico to ‘Destroy the Drug Labs,’
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/05/us/politics/mark-esper-book-trump.html
Excerpt:
President Donald J. Trump in 2020 asked Mark T. Esper, his defense secretary, about the possibility of launching missiles into Mexico to “destroy the drug labs” and wipe out the cartels, maintaining that the United States’ involvement in a strike against its southern neighbor could be kept secret, Mr. Esper recounts in his upcoming memoir.
One such idea emerged from Mr. Trump, who was unhappy about the constant flow of drugs across the southern border, during the summer of 2020. Mr. Trump asked Mr. Esper at least twice if the military could “shoot missiles into Mexico to destroy the drug labs.”
“They don’t have control of their own country,” Mr. Esper recounts Mr. Trump saying. When Mr. Esper raised various objections, Mr. Trump said that “we could just shoot some Patriot missiles and take out the labs, quietly,” adding that “no one would know it was us.” Mr. Trump said he would just say that the United States had not conducted the strike, Mr. Esper recounts, writing that he would have thought it was a joke had he not been staring Mr. Trump in the face.
In the fall of 2019, a push was made within the United States government to designate Mexican-based cartels not only as Drug Trafficking Organizations (DTO) but as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTO) as reported by Borderland Beat. Based on the mere definitions many drug cartels have committed acts akin to terrorist activity, with the main difference being the end goal of many of the terrorist-like activities committed by cartels is for monetary gain.
In defense of the sovereignty of the nation, Mexico fought back against the designation, “Mexico would never accept,” Mexico’s Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said. While the U.S. and Mexico have a history of cooperation in combating the cartels, principally through sharing intelligence, Mexico’s concern would be that U.S. forces would potentially move against targets independently, violating Mexico’s sovereignty.
Mexico’s Senate president, Ricardo Monreal, a member of the president’s party, said via Twitter on Tuesday night that the designation would allow the U.S. government “to use legal and institutional means that would permit it to act unilaterally in our territory with the justification of pursuing those groups.”
Currently, no Mexican DTOs are on the terrorist list. Colombian FARC Dissident groups were recently added to the terrorist list, they control large portions of the cocaine trade in that country but largely to fund their political objectives and paramilitary operations.
Many of the consequences of the two different designations are similar; from the freezing of assets, and sanctioning of companies/organizations and persons to refusing them entry to the United States. The main difference for the designation of cartels as FTOs could allow the US military to conduct operations in Mexico and attack the cartels as part of the ongoing war on terror.
The official designation of a group as a Foreign Terrorist Organization triggers more robust means of combat under the Authorization for Use of Military Force act enacted in 2001, which is still in force today allowing military action against those associated with terrorist acts. Had the designation occurred, Trump could have justified military strikes against the cartels under that authorization.
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He has a book coming out so makes claims about Trump to boost sales IMO.