US bombing drug cartels? It'll likely fail.
The president reportedly signed a directive to begin
targeting narcotics traffickers — a bad idea that will fail, again
Aug 11, 2025
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/trump-drug-cartels/
In 2020, during the last year of the Trump
administration’s first term, President Trump asked then-Defense Secretary Mark
Esper a shocking question: why can't the United States just attack the Mexican
cartels and their infrastructure with a volley
of missiles?
Esper recounted the moment in his memoir, using the
anecdote to illustrate just how reckless Trump was becoming as his term drew to
a close. Those missiles, of course, were never launched, so the entire
interaction amounted to nothing in terms of policy.
Yet five years later, Trump still views the Mexican
cartels as one of Washington’s principal national security threats. His urge to
take offensive action inside Mexico has only grown with time. Unlike in Trump’s
first term, using the U.S. military to combat these criminal organizations is
now a mainstream policy option in Trump’s Republican Party. According to the
New York Times, Trump has signed a presidential directive allowing the
Pentagon to begin using military force against specific cartels in Latin America, and U.S. military officials are now in the process
of studying various ways to go about implementing the order.
While this may come as a shock to some foreign policy
commentators, it shouldn’t. Trump, Vice President JD Vance, Defense Secretary
Pete Hegseth, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. (and short-lived national security
adviser) Mike Waltz and U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ron Johnson have all left the
door open to military force, whether it takes the form of striking
fentanyl-production facilities by air or deploying U.S. special operations
forces to take out top cartel leaders on Mexican soil.
The Trump administration wasted no time going down this road. The
CIA is engaging in
more surveillance flights along
the U.S.-Mexico border, and inside Mexican airspace, to gather information on
key cartel locations. The U.S. national security bureaucracy was already in
preliminary discussions about the possible use of drone
strikes against the
cartels as well. And on February 20, the U.S. State Department designated six
Mexican cartels as
foreign terrorist organizations, which is designed to deter Americans from
working with the cartels and lay the foundation for future strikes.
This is all good politics for Trump, who recognizes
implicitly that getting tough on Mexico economically and politically is red
meat for his base. But politics isn’t nearly as important as policy, and the
policy implications of U.S. military operations in Mexico — even if the purpose
is a noble one — is riddled with costs and make managing the problems the Trump
administration ostensibly cares about even harder.
First, we should remember one thing right off the bat:
using the military to tackle cartels is not a new phenomenon. The Trump
administration may present this as some magic solution that will win the drug
war once and for all, but the reality is bullets and bombs have been lobbed at
the narco-traffickers repeatedly to little positive effect. Successive Mexican
governments since the turn of the century, from the conservative Felipe
Calderón to the leftist Andres Manuel López Obrador (AMLO), have relied on the
military under the presumption this was the best way the Mexican state could
pressure criminal organizations into extinction.
Calderón, for instance, declared a full-blown war on
the cartels immediately after his election in 2006, deploying tens of thousands
of Mexican troops into some of the country’s most violent states. Despite
lambasting the military-first strategy during his own presidential campaign,
Enrique Peña Nieto largely continued Calderón’s strategy with a special
emphasis on targeting
so-called “kingpins” of
the narcotrafficking world. When AMLO entered office in 2018, he tried to get
the Mexican army back into the barracks but wound up expanding their authority
and rushing Mexican soldiers into hot spots, like Culiacan, whenever
large-scale violence broke out.
The result was a bloodbath. Rather than submit to the
state’s diktats, the cartels fought the Mexican state with ever greater levels
of force. Politicians, police officers and soldiers were all targeted and
killed with greater frequency. Areas of Mexico previously insulated from cartel
violence were suddenly drawn into the maelstrom. Although senior
narcotraffickers were killed and captured in the process, Mexico’s cartel
landscape was shattered into a million different pieces; as my colleague
Christopher McCallion and I wrote in July, the demise of the cartel’s senior leadership merely
opened up these organizations to extreme bouts of infighting between
replacements who sought to grab the crown.
The end product was a massive uptick in Mexico’s
homicide rate, which is now three
times greater than
it was before Calderón declared war almost two decades ago.
Of course, the Trump administration is unlikely to
mimic the Mexican government’s past strategy entirely. It’s hard to envision
tens of thousands of U.S. troops deploying to Tamaulipas, Guanajuato or
Sinaloa, sealing off neighborhoods, establishing checkpoints and conducting
offensive operations against cartels that in some instances have more firepower
than the Mexican army. If Washington is going to do anything militarily, it’s
more likely to come in the form of air power. Bombing fentanyl manufacturing plants
would be more economical and wouldn’t involve U.S. ground forces, so the risk
to U.S. personnel would be much lower.
Still, if the objective is to bomb the cartels into
submission or convince them to stop producing and shipping drugs across
America’s southern border, then an air campaign will fall flat. We can say this
with a reasonable degree of certainty because there’s first-hand experience to
go by. The U.S. Air Force did something similar in Afghanistan in 2017-2018,
taking out opium labs in Taliban-controlled areas to deprive the Taliban
insurgency of the revenue it needed to wage the war.
But as the Special Inspector General of Afghanistan
Reconstruction reported, the bombing campaign failed to do anything of
significance. The U.S. air campaign didn’t dent the Taliban’s revenue streams
to the point where it made a negotiated resolution on U.S. terms possible. As
David Mansfield, the world’s leading expert on Afghanistan’s drug patterns,
wrote in a 2019
report, “it is hard to
see how the campaign offered anything in terms of value for money, with the
cost of the strikes and ordnance used far outweighing the value of the losses
to those involved in drugs production or potential revenues to the Taliban.”
Why would Mexico be any different than Afghanistan? If anything, denting cartel revenue via an air campaign would be even more difficult than it was with respect to the Taliban. Unlike heroin, fentanyl is a synthetic drug that can be easily produced, isn’t particularly labor intensive and doesn’t require acres upon acres of poppy fields that can be easily located. Sure, the United States is bound to find some of these facilities, but the cartels responsible for production will still have a monetary incentive to set up shop somewhere else. Fentanyl nets the cartels billions of dollars every year; this is a very large financial resource that the Sinaloa and New Jalisco Generation cartels — or frankly anyone in the business — will be hard pressed to pass up.And if even if they magically did find a new line of work, other players would step into the void to increase their own market share.These are only several problems associated with treating the U.S. military as a panacea to the drug problem. But the important thing to take away is that effectively declaring war on Mexico, America’s top trading partner and neighbor with which we share a nearly 2,000 mile-long border, presents the illusion of progress without actually making any. And it will inject immense tension in a U.S.-Mexican relationship that Washington should be strengthening, not undermining.
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