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If The Drug Cartels Are Terrorist Groups, Mexico Is Their State Sponsor
The Federalist ^ | 02/19/2025 | John Daniel Davidson

Posted on 02/20/2025 9:49:57 PM PST by SeekAndFind

The naming of the Sinaloa Cartel as a terrorist organization might mean the collapse of the Mexican government.

News broke Wednesday that the State Department has named eight Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations, including the Sinaloa Cartel and Jalisco New Generation Cartel, or CJNG, two of the most powerful criminal organizations in the country.

The naming of Sinaloa in particular is important because it implicates the Mexican state at the highest levels. Former Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and his ruling MORENA coalition are closely connected to the Sinaloa Cartel, as is his protégé and successor, President Claudia Sheinbaum. It’s not too much to say that if the Sinaloa Cartel is a terrorist organization, then MORENA and the Sheinbaum administration are its state sponsors.

There is a mountain of evidence for this. The Sinaloa Cartel has long been deeply invested in Mexican national politics, and began bankrolling López Obrador’s political career as early as 2006, when AMLO, as he is called in Mexico, ran for president and narrowly lost to Felipe Calderón, who launched the Mexican drug war by deploying the armed forces against the cartels.

Sinaloa first backed AMLO in exchange for promises that he would facilitate the cartels’ operations — an investment that paid off handsomely in the end. During his stint in office, from 2018 to 2024, AMLO did his utmost to protect the cartel not only from the United States but also from elements of the Mexican military and security establishment. And he didn’t really try to hide it. Not only did AMLO publicly pay his respects to the mother of former Sinaloa Cartel boss Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman Loera on one of his many trips to the Sinaloa headquarters town of Badiraguato, he also ordered the release of one of El Chapo’s sons after Sinaloa armed forces besieged the town of Culiacan, where the kingpin’s son had been detained by Mexican troops executing a U.S. arrest warrant.

In 2020, AMLO demanded the release of Gen. Salvador Cienfuegos, a former Mexican defense secretary who was arrested by federal agents in Los Angeles on drug trafficking and money laundering charges. Trump’s Attorney General William Barr foolishly agreed to release Cienfuegos as requested, whereupon Mexican authorities promptly cleared the former flag officer of all wrongdoing.

A cartoonishly corrupt series of events soon followed. AMLO accused the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration of fabricating drug trafficking charges against Cienfuegos, and on AMLO’s orders, Mexican prosecutors released hundreds of pages of files on the retired general they had obtained from their U.S. counterparts. Soon after this, according to a report on the Cienfuegos affair by ProPublica, “Joint operations against drug traffickers came to a standstill. U.S. agents reported being followed by what appeared to be Mexican army surveillance teams.” Mexico removed immunity for DEA agents and restricted their operations. This is more or less where things stand today in terms of U.S.-Mexico cooperation against the cartels.

All of which brings us back to the designation of the Sinaloa Cartel as a terrorist organization. In one of the first statements issued by the Trump White House concerning U.S. tariffs on Mexican goods, the Trump administration declared, “the Mexican drug-trafficking organizations have an intolerable alliance with the government of Mexico.”

This would seem to be a tacit acknowledgement of all that’s outlined above. And if Trump is serious about taking out these cartels, it might well mean the collapse of the Sheinbaum administration and the ruling MORENA coalition, which is closely tied to the Sinaloa Cartel.   

But precisely because of the symbiotic relationship between the Mexican state and the cartels, taking out the latter will not be simply a matter of sending armed drones to carry out precision strikes on targets south of the Rio Grande. Not that Trump is unwilling to pursue direct U.S. military action. Indeed, he floated the idea of striking the cartels in his first term, and more recently Republicans in Congress have introduced legislation for the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) against cartels trafficking fentanyl into the United States. But the problem in Mexico is more complicated than that.

Groups like Sinaloa and CJNG are not merely drug trafficking organizations — at least not anymore. Over the past two decades, the largest cartels in Mexico have become quasi-government actors, not just through the bribing of state officials at every level but also in some cases taking on the role of government actors. During the Covid pandemic lockdowns, CJNG gunmen regularly distributed food and other supplies in urban areas under their control — out in the open, in clearly marked CJNG vehicles. The people in these towns came to rely on the cartel during this time. Other cartels enforced curfews, travel restrictions, and various other pandemic protocols in their respective areas. The line between cartel and state became blurred.

With the 2018 election of AMLO, who campaigned on a slogan of “hugs, not bullets” with respect to the cartels, a new era of cooperation between Mexican officialdom and the cartels began. From the outset of his term, AMLO gave the Mexican military greater responsibilities than ever before, creating the Mexican National Guard as a kind of interior security service, tasking the military with major infrastructure projects, and relying on the armed forces for things like the distribution of the Covid vaccine. 

But as the Cienfuegos affair demonstrates, elements of the Mexican military are controlled by the major cartels, including Sinaloa, which kept President Calderón’s own security chief, Genaro García Luna, who is now facing a life sentence in a U.S. federal prison, in its pay for many years.

Naming these eight cartels as terrorist organizations is the right move, but dismantling them will require a combination of military, diplomatic, and economic tactics. Above all, it will require acknowledging how deeply enmeshed the cartels are with the Mexican government and recognizing that we have no partner in the Mexican state when it comes to the fight against the cartels. There’s no question that it’s in the American national interest to have a peaceful and stable southern neighbor. But for now, we must admit the truth: in Mexico, we don’t have a partner or an ally, we have an adversary, and we need to start acting like it.


John Daniel Davidson is a senior editor at The Federalist. His writing has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Claremont Review of Books, The New York Post, and elsewhere. He is the author of Pagan America: the Decline of Christianity and the Dark Age to Come.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Mexico; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: amlo; cartels; china; drugs; mexico; obrador; scheinbaum; sinaloa; terrorism
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1 posted on 02/20/2025 9:49:57 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

I would not be booking a trip to Mexico.

Soon we are going to be taking out these Cartels in an amazing show of shock and awe. When we do, we need our people out of there or they’ll be hostages or worse.

And we better get the cartel people out of here otherwise they are going to terrorize us here.

War is coming. It’s time.


2 posted on 02/20/2025 9:52:57 PM PST by Professional ( )
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To: SeekAndFind

Our NGOs are the equivalent of the Mexican cartels.

They’re both run by corrupt politicians.


3 posted on 02/20/2025 10:06:32 PM PST by aquila48 (Do not let them make you "care" ! Guilting you i9s how they. control you. )
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To: Professional

It should last about 46 minutes so I’ll keep a slot open from 8 to 9pm.

The US military isn’t the mexican army.

And allegiance to cartels in the US will dry up yesterday once the cartels are ashes.


4 posted on 02/20/2025 10:41:52 PM PST by dp0622 (Tried a coup, a fake tax story, tramp slander, Russia nonsense, impeachment and a virus. They lost.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I hope Patel finds out just how much drug cartel money has ended up in the pocket of prominent Democrats. I bet it’s a Carl Sagan number.


5 posted on 02/20/2025 10:44:16 PM PST by _longranger81
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To: SeekAndFind

Maybe the cartels hold the government hostage?

The cartels are actually financed by junkies, and every drug abuser I’ve me t was a Democrat

US Democrats fund the cartel because they have to have their blow and children to molest.

Change my mind.


6 posted on 02/20/2025 10:48:11 PM PST by Fai Mao ( The US government is run by pedophiles and Perverts for pedophiles and perverts.)
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To: All

Trump’s State Dept named eight Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations,
including the Sinaloa Cartel and Jalisco New Generation Cartel, two of the most powerful criminal organizations.

Naming Sinaloa is important b/c it implicates the Mexican state at the highest levels.
<><>ex-Pres López Obrador and his ruling MORENA coalition are closely connected to Sinaloa,
<><>as is his protégé and successor, President Claudia Sheinbaum.

It’s not a stretch to say that if Sinaloa is a terrorist organization,
MORENA and the Sheinbaum administration are its state sponsors.


7 posted on 02/20/2025 11:37:23 PM PST by Liz
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To: SeekAndFind

I’ve said so many times - Mexico is not a friend of the US. They are a threat.


8 posted on 02/20/2025 11:43:18 PM PST by llevrok (Keep buggering on!)
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To: dp0622
It should last about 46 minutes, so I’ll keep a slot open from 8 to 9pm.

I do not share that optimistic viewpoint. 46 weeks would be a better timeframe for initial planning. 104 weeks might be an upper end guess.

A new government in Mexico, explicitly submissive to the United States, and a 200-mile "Special Economic Zone" on the Mexican north border would be the outcome. There is no point in fighting "terrorist organizations" with half-measures or inadequate goals.

And allegiance to cartels in the US will dry up yesterday once the cartels are ashes.

I agree with you on this point. We can, and we will grind the Cartels into dust. It will take a lot longer and it will be much uglier than we want it to be. We had best be prepared to accept the costs, and I am not referring to money.

We will have war with Mexico, because it will be the least harmful of several bad pathways into the future.

9 posted on 02/20/2025 11:43:58 PM PST by flamberge (The times, they are a' changing.)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; BraveMan; cardinal4; ...

10 posted on 02/21/2025 12:23:34 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: flamberge
Fentanyl Link Between the Mexican Cartels and China

(From an article at Brookings EDU)

Now, there is another side, however, to the Chinese criminal involvement in this trade. And that is the role of Chinese money laundering operations, which are enormously powerful. Over the past five years or so have been catapulted to the top of the world’s money laundering networks. They long dominated money laundering in Asia, Australia. But over the past five years, we see Chinese money laundering networks just sweeping the globe and providing services to the large Mexican cartels, providing money laundering services to Italian mafia groups. And just dominating, the space. And those are very powerful networks. They are connected to the fentanyl precursor, nitazene brokers sometimes, sometimes they’re not connected to them, but it’s a very different class of actors.

[6:56]

Now to your question, Fred, how do these chemicals get to the Mexican cartels? Well, the core issue with synthetic drugs overall and specifically synthetic opioids, whether they’re the fentanyl class or the nitazene class, is that one needs small amounts of them to be able to smuggle them. And particularly in the case of synthetic opioids, one needs very small amounts. So, it’s rather easy to be shipping those precursors abroad. And most of the time they go by container ships. They leave ports in China like Hong Kong. Other ports along the coast of China, arrive in Mexico. In Mexico, they arrive principally into ports, Lázaro Cárdenas being one of them, and Manzanillo being another.

And then the Mexican criminal groups collect them there and making them into fentanyl and meth. Now, you know, there are significant Chinese presence in the port of Veracruz, and we know there is a lot of smuggling of contraband through Veracruz. It’s very possible that that port also has risen in significance in the smuggling of fentanyl and meth.

So, it's not just Mexico we will have to deal with here, if we are going to be shutting down the Mexican cartels. This is bigger than just Mexico.

11 posted on 02/21/2025 12:40:32 AM PST by 4Runner (Watch. Wallet. Gun. Right foot! Left foot! Sweet Liberty Valens! Thank God for Guns! --Denny Crane)
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To: 4Runner
So, it's not just Mexico we will have to deal with here, if we are going to be shutting down the Mexican cartels. This is bigger than just Mexico.

That post shows a great deal of insight into the larger picture.

The involvement of China is an important reason why the Mexican problem will not be solved in 46 minutes of tactical strikes on the Cartel leaders.

That action might be a good start to a much longer program of activities. But only a start.

12 posted on 02/21/2025 1:28:20 AM PST by flamberge (The times, they are a' changing.)
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To: SeekAndFind

This is correct. Mexico is at war with the US and they are using bodies as an invasion force, with the eventual intent of using these bodies to take territory.


13 posted on 02/21/2025 2:17:52 AM PST by Jonty30 (Groundhogs don't falsify their predictions for grant money, whereas climate scientists do. )
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To: Professional

“Soon we are going to be taking out these Cartels in an amazing show of shock and awe. When we do, we need our people out of there or they’ll be hostages or worse.”

Do a Michael Corleone on them. Hit the leadership of the cartels in one big operations.


14 posted on 02/21/2025 3:57:17 AM PST by EQAndyBuzz (Privatize the administrative state!)
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To: Professional

“Soon we are going to be taking out these Cartels in an amazing show of shock and awe. When we do, we need our people out of there or they’ll be hostages or worse.”

Do a Michael Corleone on them. Hit the leadership of the cartels in one big operations.


15 posted on 02/21/2025 3:57:41 AM PST by EQAndyBuzz (Privatize the administrative state!)
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To: SeekAndFind

We should have taken Mexico 100 years ago.


16 posted on 02/21/2025 3:59:58 AM PST by spincaster (i)
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To: SeekAndFind

Headline states the obvious. The cartels own Mexico and have since the 80s.


17 posted on 02/21/2025 4:11:00 AM PST by maddog55 (The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
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To: SeekAndFind

bkmk


18 posted on 02/21/2025 4:15:18 AM PST by ptsal (Vote R.E.D. >>>Remove Every Democrat ***)
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To: SeekAndFind

Poor America, so far from God, so close to Mexico.


19 posted on 02/21/2025 5:19:50 AM PST by ansel12 ((NATO warrior under Reagan, and RA under Nixon, bemoaning the pro-Russians from Vietnam to Ukraine.))
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To: spincaster

We did take Veracruz in 1914, if we had taken Mexico then the Mexican vote would have dominated the U.S. for the last 100 years.


20 posted on 02/21/2025 5:24:34 AM PST by ansel12 ((NATO warrior under Reagan, and RA under Nixon, bemoaning the pro-Russians from Vietnam to Ukraine.))
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