Military Preparing Attacks on Mexican Cartels
Secret orders target cartels as the new terrorists
Aug 20, 2025
https://www.kenklippenstein.com/p/military-preparing-attacks-on-mexican
The Trump administration has directed the military to
prepare for lethal strikes against cartel targets inside Mexico, three military
sources tell us. The Top Secret planning order, issued in late Spring, directs
Northern Command (NORTHCOM) to manage the attack plans, which are to be ready
by mid-September.
Though U.S.-Mexico military relations are broad and
cooperative, any military action south of the border is considered extremely
sensitive for both Washington and the Mexican federal government and is rarely
discussed in public.
“Not only is Donald Trump uniquely focused on TCOs
[transnational criminal organizations, the official name for cartels], having
designated them terrorists in one of his first Executive Orders, but he has
shown himself to be willing to take unilateral action despite potentially
negative political ramifications,” says one senior intelligence official. He
and the other sources say that military action could be unilateral — that is,
without the involvement or approval of the Mexican government.
The unprecedented order was discussed at a July
meeting at NORTHCOM headquarters in Colorado Springs that was led by Colby
Jenkins, the unconfirmed Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations
and Low-Intensity Conflict. Within days, Gen. Gregory M. Guillot, commander of
NORTHCOM, hosted the two highest ranking Mexican military officials: Gen.
Ricardo Trevilla Trejo, Secretary of National Defense, and Adm. Raymundo Pedro
Morales Ángeles, Secretary of the Navy.
"Today, more than ever, the challenges we face
demand a joint, coordinated, and adapted response," Morales said after the
Colorado visit, trying to impress upon Pentagon and military leaders that any
potential operation be conducted by the two nations together.
To address the extreme political sensitivities and to
honor Mexico's sovereignty, operations inside Mexico have previously been
conducted by the CIA and the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), the
clandestine arm of the U.S. military that has been involved in targeted
killings in the Middle East. The New York Times has reported that the CIA has increased reconnaissance operations over
Mexico with its own drones, another indicator of increased preparations for
operations.
“NORTHCOM was previously sidelined in any Mexico
planning, the conventional special operations components mostly involved in
joint training with their Mexican counterparts and non-lethal missions such as
at-sea interdictions of shipments, but now it is being tasked to be the
hemispheric synchronizer, of a far larger magnitude” says the senior
intelligence official. One reason is that prospective attacks also have to
coordinate with the intelligence community at large, the FBI, and various
homeland security agencies (such as Border Patrol and ICE) who all now are
focused on Mexico (and are conducting their own operations inside Mexico).
NORTHCOM is already involved in Mexico in a host of
ways, including in combating the cartels. Gen. Guillot alluded to this in
recent testimony to Congress, where he said that his cooperation
with Mexico is already closer than at any point in history.
“It is already apparent the military-to-military
relationship between the United States and Mexico is robust and expanding as
both nations address the challenges posed by common threats to our citizens and
shared interests. The bonds between USNORTHCOM and our Mexican military
partners are broad, resilient, and focused on expanding our combined capability
to defend and secure North America from myriad state and non-state threats.
Countering competitor influence in the region remains a key priority for USNORTHCOM
and our Mexican military partners, and as a direct result, the U.S. and Mexican
militaries are more operationally compatible than at any point in our shared
history.”
That’s the overt side: countering Chinese influence
and investments in Mexico, thwarting Russian influence (and operations); and
stemming the flow of drugs, precursor chemicals and even weapons of mass
destruction components through Mexico.
Now, NORTHCOM has tasked its subordinate Special
Operations Command (called SOCNORTH) to undertake “operational preparation of
the battlespace” inside Mexico to set the stage for future military operations,
and to prepare cartel-related “target packages” for potential strikes and
“direct action” attacks on the ground against high-value individuals,
compounds, and supply chain targets associated in particular with the Sinaloa
Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. Direct attacks could also involve
air and drone strikes.
“Direct action” is a term special operations forces
use to describe small-scale offensive operations carried out by Army Green
Berets, Navy SEALs, or Marine Corps raiders. Think of the airstrikes on Iran
this summer as a kind of direct action, against a discrete target with a
“strategic” or national purpose.
There is one major difference when it comes to Mexico:
the political sensitivities involved. Unlike Iran, Mexico is a rich country
which, of course, borders the U.S. and cooperates with it in countless ways.
Independence from America is a major issue domestically, not to mention the
large Mexican-American population.
In congressional testimony by Gen. Guillot, he has also addressed increased
NORTHCOM intelligence collection.
GUILLOT: Recently we've been permitted to increase our
ISR [Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance], our intelligence
surveillance and reconnaissance to —
SEN. ROGER WICKER: Permitted by Mexico?
GUILLOT: No, by the department, sir. But we do have
intelligence sharing with Mexico to show them what we see. And we have
increased cooperation with Mexico to go address the cartel violence in terms of
sending more troops.
It is by no means clear that Mexico City would ever
approve any type of U.S. military action inside the country. In 2023, former
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador took the controversial step to
ask the Mexican legislature to approve increased operations (which was
described as “training”) by the Army 7th Special Forces Group. Those operations
commenced in February, when a small group arrived in Mexico to train their
counterparts.
Jenkins, the Acting Assistant Secretary told Congress
after the brief deployment that “SOCNORTH’s training of our capable Mexican SOF
[Special Operations Forces] partners are critical to … denying cartels or other
criminal organizations their desired end states.”
When Trump declared the cartels’ trafficking of drugs
and people into America an “invasion,” he wasn’t joking. Far from a rhetorical
flourish, it’s by now clear that the language he’s using has created the basis
for the military to prepare to respond to cartels in a similar way that it did
with terrorists after 9/11.
“We have to start treating them as armed terrorist
organizations, not simply drug dealing organizations,” Secretary of State Marco
Rubio said of the cartels in a recent interview.
Trump, military sources also tell me, is focused on
results, willing to ignore law, rules, and even policy recommendations in his
zeal to have “progress” towards his goals with regard to national security. For
the White House, the fentanyl crisis in America is one of the key measures of
the success of the new war on the cartels.
Fentanyl’s death toll represents a crisis, having
claimed the lives of over 225,000 Americans.
In a tense exchange, Chairman of the Armed Services
Committee Sen. Roger Wicker pressed Gen. Guillot on what progress his command
was making on fentanyl, stressing its death toll. Guillot replies, “I wouldn’t
say it’s better.”
WICKER: So, because time is limited, we had 225,000
in a three year space. Are we making any progress? Now it's 2025. Has it gotten
better?
GUILLOT: No, I, I wouldn't say it's better, but I do
think, Chairman, that we have a better foundation now that we've increased the
intelligence to, to make a rapid progress against this threat.
WICKER: It definitely needs to get better. And so
tell us what you need and, uh, thank you for your efforts. You got eight
seconds.
GUILLOT: More, uh, more ISR [Intelligence,
Surveillance and Reconnaissance] is the first. And then, uh, expanded
authorities would be required to, uh, um, more advise and assist types of
operations between our forces and the tier one Mexican forces.
(“Tier one” being another term for the clandestine
special operations forces, Guillot is here referring to Mexico’s equivalent to
Delta Force and SEAL Team 6 under the JSOC, called Fuerza Especial de
Reacción.)
The intelligence community’s annual threat assessment released in March put an unprecedented emphasis
on cartels, casting them as “the most immediate and direct threat to
America’s security.”
“Western Hemisphere-based TCOs [transnational criminal
organizations] and terrorists involved in illicit drug production and
trafficking bound for the United States endanger the health and safety of
millions of Americans and contribute to regional instability,” the assessment
reads. The document specifically mentions several cartels based in Mexico,
including Sinaloa and New Generation Jalisco.
Gen. Guillot is even more explicit, saying in February that Mexican cartels “threaten U.S.
sovereignty.”
“Transnational criminal organizations based in
Mexico continue to threaten US sovereignty and territorial integrity through
the production and trafficking of fentanyl and other illicit drugs, and the
facilitation of unlawful mass migration towards the US southern border.”
Asked in January if he would deploy special forces
into Mexico to take out cartels, President Trump replied, “Could happen.” Now, with the order to prepare
target packages inside Mexico, a far more likely and ominous possibility looms.
Not an invasion, not the “deployment” of U.S. special operators, not boots on
the ground, but the kinds of strikes that the U.S. military has become expert
at in the Middle East and South Asia.
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