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HomeGlobal EconomyOn the United States' "Imminent" Military Intervention Against Mexico

On the United States’ “Imminent” Military Intervention Against Mexico

The Trump administration’s latest escalatory threat comes just days after Rolling Stone reported on a secret drug trafficking cartel operating out of Fort Bragg. 

Picture this scenario: Mexico’s government is grappling with an institutional crisis. Lawlessness is on the rise as Mexican drug cartels take their fight with US authorities to the streets of Houston and San Diego. One of the cartels launches a terrorist attack on the US embassy in Mexico City. These events spark a migration crisis as millions of Mexicans flood toward the US border, threatening the national security of the United States.

In response, the US military unleashes a three-pronged infantry attack against Mexico, one heading eastward through Brownsville towards Tampico, another from Fort Hood toward Monterrey and onto Guadalajara, and the third starting from Arizona and passing through Sonora. The land offensive is accompanied by a maritime attack on the port of Tampico and a lightening air assault on Mexico’s Santa Lucia airport.

Psychological warfare is also being waged to convince the local population that the US invasion is good for Mexico. At the same time, Mexico’s foreign minister executes a coup against the sitting president. Special forces launch an assault on the presidential residence of Los Pinos only to find that the president has already fled. The US invasion ends with a crippling attack on the remnants of the Mexican Army in the mountains of Zacatecas.

For the Pentagon this is child’s play. Within days the operation is complete and order is restored to Mexico. The new coup government installed in Los Pinos has already called for new elections and the cartels are on the back foot.

However far-fetched all of this may sound, it is one of the five post-Cold War scenarios war gamed by Caspar Weinberger, the former defence secretary under Reagan, in his 1998 book, The Next War. The book was cowritten with Peter Schweizer and features a foreword by Margaret Thatcher. In it Weinberger and Schweizer describe Mexico as the only country in Latin America that would be invaded within the United States’ future conflict scenarios.

The Next War serves, if nothing else, as confirmation that even way back in 1998 — eight years before Mexican President Felipe Calderon launched Mexico’s war on the drug cartels — US military commanders were contemplating a future invasion of Mexico on the pretext of the war on drugs.

In a 2009 review of The Next War, the Mexican military general and academic José Francisco Gallardo Rodríguez wrote that “Mexico has been appetising to the United States for some time, particularly now that the US seeks to maintain its global hegemony.” Gallardo Rodríguez describes the War on Drugs as the pretext by which “the US has historically sought to intervene economically, politically, socially, and militarily in Mexico.”

The Looming Threat of US Military Force

Today, the likelihood of a full-blown US military invasion of Mexico is, thankfully, low. However, the threat of a unilateral US military attack on Mexican drug cartel targets, with all the messy fallout that could entail, appears to grow by the day.

As the New York Times revealed a few days ago, “President Trump has secretly signed a directive to the Pentagon to begin using military force against certain Latin American drug cartels that his administration has deemed terrorist organizations.”

They include the Sinaloa Cartel, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, the Cartel del Noreste, the Gulf Cartel, La Nueva Familia Michoacana, the Venezuela-based Tren de Aragua, and the Salvadorian MS-13, all of which were designated as terrorist organisations back in February.

A more recent addition was the Venezuelan Cartel de los Soles, which Washington claims has close ties to Nicolás Maduro’s Chavista government. Some say the cartel doesn’t even exist. The US has also upped the reward on Maduro’s head from $25 million to $50 million. According to US Attorney General Pam Bondi, Maduro is “one of the largest drug traffickers in the world and a threat to US national security.”

From the Times’ article:

The decision to bring the American military into the fight is the most aggressive step so far in the administration’s escalating campaign against the cartels. It signals Mr. Trump’s continued willingness to use military forces to carry out what has primarily been considered a law enforcement responsibility to curb the flow of fentanyl and other illegal drugs.

The order provides an official basis for the possibility of direct military operations at sea and on foreign soil against cartels.

U.S. military officials have started drawing up options for how the military could go after the groups, the people familiar with the conversations said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive internal deliberations…

Unilateral military assaults on cartels would be a marked escalation in the long drive to curb drug trafficking, putting U.S. forces in a lead role on the front lines against often well-armed and well-financed organizations. A sustained campaign would also likely raise further issues related to Mr. Trump’s push to use the military more aggressively to back a variety of his policies, often in the face of legal and constitutional constraints.

As the article points out, “It remains unclear what plans the Pentagon is drawing up for possible action, and where any potential military operations might take place.” Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum has so far responded to the revelations by categorically rejecting the idea that the US might invade Mexico.

“The United States is not going to come to Mexico with their military,” she said during a daily news conference on Friday. “We cooperate, we collaborate, but there will be no invasion. It’s off the table, absolutely off the table.”

Is Trump Mad Enough?

Back in April, we asked whether the Trump administration was mad enough to launch drone attacks against Mexico. The US president has also discussed sending kill teams to take out cartel leaders. As we noted in the post, the potential fallout could include a rupture in relations between the world’s two largest trade partners, a massive upsurge in northward migration to the US, another US-sponsored forever war, this time on the US’ own doorstep, and the definitive disintegration of the USMCA trade agreement.

It would also make life a lot more difficult for the tens of millions of Mexican-Americans living in the US and the roughly 1.6 million USians living in Mexico. As NC reader Cristobal put it in a comment to that post, Trump seems determined to plunge Mexico and the US into a much fraughter co-existence:

For years the US has enjoyed the enviable security of being bounded by large oceans to the east and west, and weak and friendly nations to the north and south. Mr. Trump may, if he is not careful, end that privileged status. He could cause the neighbor to the south to become not so friendly.

Mexico may have a third card to play (maybe a trump card) in that the US southwest is as much Mexican as it is American. As the Tigres del Norte sing: I did not cross the frontier, the frontier crossed me (or words to that effect). If things get ugly there could be real problems.

And all in return for what?

Further militarising the war on drugs is unlikely to hamper the flow of drugs; it just creates yet more cycles of violence. We have already seen this play out in Colombia and Mexico, and is currently playing out in Ecuador. The Andean nation is experiencing its most violent year on record a year and half after Daniel Noboa’s US vassal government designated the drug cartels as terrorist organisations and declared an “internal armed conflict” against them.

Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum and her predecessor, Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador, have repeatedly made the point that there is no use waging a war on drugs in Mexico if nothing is done on the demand or supply side in the United States, the world’s largest narcotics marketplace. As Christopher Fettweis, a professor of political science at Tulane University in New Orleans, wrote in Responsible Statecraft last May, the drugs always find a way:

Those proposing the special forces “solution” to the fentanyl crisis do not appear to grasp the basic economics: supply will always find a way to high demand, and new narcotics entrepreneurs will always arise. When the Colombian cartels waned in the 1990s, one may recall, other suppliers quickly emerged in Mexico. If the current moles in Mexico are whacked, new ones will soon pop up elsewhere. Killing the middlemen of the drug trade never solves the problem.

While we’re on the topic of drug cartels, it’s interesting to see the word “cartel” being used to describe a drug-trafficking organisation in the United States. Not only that but said organisation is operating out of Fort Bragg — the same North Carolina military base that helped train up members of the Mexican Special Forces that ended up deserting and founding the Zetas, the notoriously violent cartel and insurrectionary group that terrorised Mexico during the first decade of this century.

 

As the Mexico-based US journalist Kurt Hackbarth notes in the following clip from the (often excellent) Soberania podcast, the word “cartel” is hardly ever used to describe US-based drug trafficking organisations.

The US’ Failed Kingpin Strategy

The US has been using the “kingpin” strategy of targeting the management and leadership of Mexico’s drug cartels for the best part of the past two decades, and all it seems to have achieved is to fuel more violence — and by extension, demand for US-made weapons. As we noted in our previous post, any blowback from a unilateral US military attack against Mexican targets would inevitably find its way across the US border and into US cities:

As the Ukraine war has shown, drone warfare is a massive leveller, allowing smaller or technologically less advanced nations or even non-nation actors to project power and defend themselves effectively against larger adversaries. They include… Mexico’s drug cartels.

Even the normally war-loving Atlantic Council cautions that a unilateral military action against Mexico would come with serious risks attached, especially given the capacity of Mexican drug cartels to retaliate against US targets:

Mexican cartels are not merely criminal organizations; they operate as paramilitary entities with deep financial resources, global supply chains, and sophisticated logistical networks that extend into the United States. It is unlikely that such groups would passively absorb US attacks. Instead, as history shows, cartels are highly likely to retaliate both pre-emptively and reactively. They possess a substantial capacity for terrorism that, when coupled with their established presence within the United States, could escalate conflict far beyond what proponents of a purely military solution may anticipate.

Trump has wanted to attack Mexico’s drug cartels since his first term in office. In 2020, the then-45th US president asked Mark Esper, his secretary of defence, about the feasibility of launching missiles into Mexico, to “destroy drug labs” and annihilate cartels. He even ventured that US involvement in such an attack could be kept secret. Esper refused to even entertain the idea, calling it crude, absurd, and counterproductive, for which he paid with his job.

But today Trump is surrounded by legions of yes-men and -women, while his obsession with launching an attack on Mexico seems to have grown.

Of course, it is also possible that the latest escalatory threat could just be a diversionary tactic aimed at taking US voters’ minds off certain unresolved issues at home.

There’s definitely a Wag-the-Dog whiff hovering over recent developments. The Trump administration is desperate to concentrate the minds of its MAGA voters on anything other than the Epstein scandal, and war tends to serve as an effective diversionary tactic while Mexico is fast becoming Trump’s favourite piñata.

It’s also possible that this is part of a negotiating tactic. Trump 2.0 is currently locked in trade negotiations with dozens of countries around the world, including Mexico, its largest trade partner. What better way of gaining leverage in those negotiations than to threaten to destroy your opponent? — at least from Trump’s vantage point.

US Ambassador Ronald Johnson claims Trump’s escalating war against Latin America’s drug cartels will be a win-win for both the US and Mexico, “two sovereign partners fac[ing] a common enemy: the violent criminal cartels”.

So, who knows? Maybe this is classic Trump bluff and bluster.

One thing is clear, though: when the good cop in the good cop/bad cop routine being played against you is a former CIA agent and Green Beret who led combat and counter-insurgency operations in El Salvador’s bloody civil war, you’re probably not in a very good place.

Also, let’s not forget the oodles of support within the Trump administration for direct military intervention against the drug cartels in Mexico, including among bigwigs like Vance, Rubio, Bondi and Hegseth. According to several sources cited by US crime journalist Ioan Grillo in an interview in July, US soldiers are already preparing at Fort Bliss for military operations on Mexican soil.

Just over a month ago, the Mexican security analyst Víctor Hernández Ojeda penned a sobering piece for El Universal warning that US military intervention in Mexico is “imminent”. A former presidential advisor on security matters (to former President Enrique Peña Nieto) and current director of the Latin American Institute for Strategic Studies, Hernández describes the article as “probably the most difficult text he has had to write during his career”:

Today, during his second presidential term, Donald Trump has what he did not have during his first term: 1) A broad political consensus around the idea of invading Mexico. 2) A decapitated defence department beholden to his whims. 3) An urgent political need for some kind of foreign policy victory in the face of the resounding failure of US diplomacy to contain the conflict in the Middle East…

The most radical and intransigent wing of the Republican Party has embraced and promoted the idea of invading Mexico. William Barr, Daniel Crenshaw, J.D. Vance, Pamela Bondi, are fully on board with declaring the cartels as terrorist organisations, and with viewing Mexico through the same lens of hostility and distrust that it reserves for nations such as Iran, Russia, China or North Korea.

Trump has exercised a ruthless retaliation against the civilian and military bureaucracy that dared to point out the childish nature of his invasion plan. In less than six months he fired the commander of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (General Charles Brown), the commander of the Navy (Admiral Lisa Franchetti), the commander of the Coast Guard (Admiral Linda Fagan), the second commander of the Air Force (General James Slife), among others.

The three main prerequisites for launching military strikes are already in place, warns Hernández:

Every military operation has three previous steps. 1) Reconnaissance of the terrain. 2) Concentration of human and material resources to be deployed. 3) Building the political consensus necessary to justify the operation in the eyes of the public.

This is where the likes of Dan Crenshaw, J.D. Vance and Pamela Bondi come into play, denouncing Mexico as a US adversary on a par with the likes of Iran, China and North Korea. This is all about preparing the psychological terrain for war among MAGA voters.

In an interview with the Mexican veteran journalist Julio Astillero, Hernández explained how Trump had amassed more than 10,000 troops — “a number we do not normally see” — on the US-Mexican border. At the same time, the US Navy has deployed two ships for intelligence gathering, one to the Pacific and the other to the Gulf of Mexico. But it is the aerial reconnaissance that is the most “brazen” aspect of the US’ war preparations, says Hernández:

“[W]e have had a constant stream of US military aircraft flying over and monitoring Mexican territory, all with their transponders turned on. What they are effectively saying to Mexico… is: ‘I don’t care if you know I’m here, because here I am and I am collecting intelligence on you.’”

Predictably, there is a small but highly vocal minority in Mexico that actually quite likes the idea of US military intervention — whatever it takes to get the somewhat left-of-centre MORENA party out of power and bring back the status quo ante. They seem to genuinely believe that the US armed forces would help whip Mexico into shape by finally driving a nail into the drug cartels’ coffin. Direct US influence would also help clean up Mexico’s corrupt institutions.

What they seem to wilfully ignore are the disastrous real-world results of US military interventions over the past decades, including the failed states and destroyed nations of Iraq, Libya and Syria. As Hernández points out in an article for El Économista, US military intervention would not be a solution to the crisis of violence that Mexico is currently suffering through, but would most likely aggravate it:

US soldiers are especially incompetent when it comes to conducting counterinsurgency and counterterrorism operations, with Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan being their greatest failures.

For personal reasons alone — Mexico is my beloved country-in-law (of almost 20 years), is home to friends and family alike, including my wife, who is currently visiting her parents in Mexico City, and will hopefully soon become my country of residence — I hope none of this happens. Mexico has already suffered enough, including the loss of more than half of its territory and tens of thousands of lives, at the hands of its northern neighbour.

But I have zero faith in the intentions of the US government towards Mexico, whether Trump is in the White House or someone more polished and presentable. As we have noted before, the real purpose behind Washington’s escalating war on the drugs cartels is geo-strategic. It is about regaining strategic dominance over its so-called “backyard” — primarily Mexico and Central America but also parts of South America — and its vast stores of precious resources, while also selling tons of US-made weapons along the way.

On the United States’ “Imminent” Military Intervention Against Mexico



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