Report: US Preparing Mexico Mission Against Cartels That Would Include Troops and Drone Strikes
According to NBC News, the Trump administration is
considering going through with the plan even if the Mexican government objects
by Dave DeCamp | November 3, 2025
The Trump administration has begun developing detailed
plans to send US troops and intelligence officers into Mexico to target cartels
in operations that would include drone strikes, NBC News reported on Monday, citing current and former US officials.
The report said that US military personnel have
already begun training for the potential mission, though a deployment is not
imminent. Many of the troops would come from Joint Special Operations Command
(JSOC) and would operate under the authority of US intelligence agencies, with
involvement from CIA officers.
Unlike the current US bombing campaign against alleged
drug boats in the waters of Latin America, which the Trump administration is
conducting without legal authority, the idea of the campaign in Mexico would be
to keep it secret and not publicize attacks.
The NBC report said the
administration wanted to operate in coordination with the Mexican government
but was also considering conducting the campaign without Mexico’s approval,
which would mark a significant violation of the country’s sovereignty. Mexican
President Claudia Sheinbaum has increased law enforcement cooperation with the
US and has allowed the CIA to ramp up surveillance flights along the border,
but she has repeatedly ruled out US military intervention in her country.
“The United States is not going to come to Mexico with
the military,” Sheinbaum said in August. “We cooperate, we collaborate, but there is not
going to be an invasion. That is ruled out, absolutely ruled out.”
The Mexican leader has also condemned US strikes on boats in the region, saying she
“doesn’t agree” with the policy. The US recently bombed several alleged drug
vessels in the Eastern Pacific, and in one case, the Mexican Navy had to rescue a survivor.
The Trump administration has not provided any evidence
to back up its claims that the boats it has been targeting were carrying drugs
and has admitted to Congress that it doesn’t know the identities of the people
it has killed. Since the bombing campaign began on September 2, the US military
has extra-judicially executed 64 people at sea.
The strikes on boats and the push toward regime change
in Venezuela have come under increasing scrutiny from both Democrats and
Republicans in Congress due to the lack of transparency and lack of legal
authority.
“People were very frustrated in the information that
was being provided. It was a bipartisan briefing, but people were not happy
with the level information that was provided, and certainly the level of legal
justification that was provided,” Rep. Mike Turner (R-OH) said after a briefing on the
military campaign.
The NBC report signals that the
potential US bombing campaign in Mexico, which would target alleged cartel
targets, would have even less transparency since the idea is to do it in
secret.
In response to the report, a senior administration
official told NBC, “The Trump administration is committed to
utilizing an all-of-government approach to address the threats cartels pose to
American citizens.”
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