The idea America should invade Mexico has become increasingly mainstream among Trump administration officials and Republican lawmakers.
Summary
President-elect Donald Trump and his incoming administration are debating the extent of potential U.S. military action against Mexican drug cartels.
Options discussed include targeted airstrikes, cyberattacks, covert operations, and “soft invasions” using special forces. Trump has warned Mexico to curb fentanyl trafficking or face military intervention.
His key appointees, such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, support some form of military action, framing cartels as terrorist threats.
Critics fear this could escalate tensions with Mexico and spark significant international controversy.
For imports into the US, Mexico supplies about 70% of our vegetables and 50% of our fruit. For exports: In 2023 Mexico overtook China as the top importer of US exports.
Nah he's got that covered, hes going to charge us 25% more for all of them, destabilize the region further and wonder why the border issues increase instead of decrease, causing our international dealings to degrade further and respect to keep plummeting
I hate to admit it, but somehow Ben Shapiro was right. He wrote about this in his terrible, awful, no good, very bad book True Allegiance. Although the reason why that invasion started was due to border crossings. And it wasn't started by the president but by the governor of Texas.
The book is awful but I recommend listening to Behind the Bastards' (a podcast) reading of it because it is enlightening.
Another source close to Trump describes to Rolling Stone what they call a “soft invasion” of Mexico, in which American special forces — not a large theater deployment — would be sent covertly to assassinate cartel leaders.
Oh yeah, that went so well previously, why not try again?
/s
To be fair, the unofficial word has always been that our guys are doing a little more than what a civilian would consider training when they go on joint training missions in Central and South America. They aren't officially supposed to take part in any fighting but it's common knowledge that part of the faith in a partnership and the skills host forces have been taught is for the special forces guys training them to go on a few missions with them.
The reputation from those operations is a large part of why cartels don't want to bother feds or tourists anymore. They know if they end up on Uncle Sam's list then no amount of sovereignty is going to stop tier 1 forces from coming for them. Even if it has to be the CIA's Special Activities Group. (The guys who actually do "if you get caught, we don't know you" types of missions)
This is a large part of why a Cartel apologized for shooting tourists and handed over 5 members in 2023. They did not want to be on that list.
Now before anyone comes in here and says Trump's plan is no big deal, the entire calculus of this situation changes when the cartel leaders become indiscriminate targets. The status quo right now is a bit like old Chicago's legends, only Americans "in the game" are fair targets. We turn our heads and in return the cartels leave most Americans alone. That changes the second they go into self defense mode. They're going to take hostages, they're going to blow shit up in border communities, they're going make it as painful as possible.
In short, this is a great way to create an insurgency in the US South West.
If the cartels start openly fighting back on U.S. soil, this administration will immediately change the rules of engagement to shooting anybody who physically approaches the U.S. border overnight. I'm talking literally within hours. This is exactly what they want. They are looking for any excuse they can use to leverage support from border states in deploying automated defense systems.
There is no scenario where the cartels engaging in insurgency on U.S. soil does not result in immediate shock and awe military tactics in response. There will be no more consideration for civilian deaths. Anybody within shooting distance of the border will be designated as an enemy combatant. That's what will happen. Make no mistake about it.
You joke but this proposal would effectively be a declaration of war on heavily armed criminals who already run parts of the country. There's every possibility he destabilizes the place enough that surrendering Mexico City to the Zetas is how it ends.
Idk, seems to me like a successful insurgent. Maybe not an immediate result but, with no real punishment, and getting in anyway, he def got away with it, and rewarded for doing it to boot. If there are future (non sham) elections, the message is loud and clear, this I'd acceptable behavior.
Not remotely comparable. Different fighters with different experiences and motivations. Fighting next door vs. halfway around the planet changes logistics, uh, a teeny bit. Different US government and soldier motivations.
We've never done anything like this, no way to tell what will happen.
These morons are gonna roll tanks into downtown Santa Fe while a confused crowd gathers for the parade and Trump in a gold John Wayne helmet orders them to open fire.
Or they could save billions, AND make billions after, just by legalize, tax and regulate it. Once that happens, the cartels will die off on their own. But hey, the defense lobby is really strong... So.
Sorry to break it to you, but cartels are never gonna die off. They're not something that's currently happening in Mexico, they're the backbone of the Mexican economy and have been since the revolution war a hundred years ago.
More context: Cartels, although they weren't called that back then, are how the revolution war was financed. They basically rolled up into small towns and took everything that wasn't nailed down —including women— under the pretext that they needed it to "fight for freedom". When the revolution ended and they had no excuse to ransack villages anymore, they pivoted onto drugs. If drugs are legalized, they're just gonna pivot to something else. Right now, there's cartels who barely sell drugs and make most of their money through kidnappings and extortion.
Been screaming that for years, now it's too late. The cartels got wise and diversified their portfolio. We can no longer pull their teeth by legalizing.
Indeed, FFS, just legalize all of it. The WOSD has been far more harmful than the drugs themselves. But moneyed interests definitely want them illegal.
Oh don't think for a second he plans to actually go after the real cartels. He just wants an excuse to kill random Mexicans.
After his orders to kill people we'll have news reports from actual Mexicans saying the people he order killed weren't drug dealers. And they'll be right.
Brings me back to Reddit in the early days of the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Pessimism about war wasn't very welcome among the lulz at Russia's bluster about their prowess and impending parade in Kyiv. "Ukraine will win any day lol look Russia's shit is crap".
The USA is acting just like Russia. Leaders and people.
If it walks like a cuck, talks like a cuck, and cucks like a cuck, well...