Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has endorsed the idea of designating drug cartels as terrorist organizations and embedding at least “some” military forces at the border to facilitate efforts to secure the U.S. border against those cartels.
When Breitbart News host Matthew Boyle asked McCarthy about the idea of designating cartel organizations as foreign terrorist organizations, the House speaker replied, “I think you have to designate them.”
“You look what has gone on. These cartels are making billions of dollars human trafficking, right?” McCarthy added. “But they’re using weapons, they’re shooting. We’ve watched in broad daylight what they would do with no respect for life or for Americans.”
“I’ve met with the border agents many times. I think we’re going to have to embed some military to allow that technology to help secure it,” McCarthy told Boyle.
Action in Congress
In January, Reps. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) and Mike Waltz (R-Fla.) introduced legislation calling for an authorization for the use of military force (AUMF) to allow the U.S. military to target Mexican drug cartels facilitating drug trafficking into the United States.“The cartels are at war with us—poisoning more than 80,000 Americans with fentanyl every year, creating a crisis at our border, and turning Mexico into a failed narco-state,” Crenshaw, a retired U.S. Navy SEAL, said upon introducing the AUMF legislation.
“It’s time we directly target them. My legislation will put us at war with the cartels by authorizing the use of military force against the cartels. We cannot allow heavily armed and deadly cartels to destabilize Mexico and import people and drugs into the United States. We must start treating them like ISIS—because that is who they are.”
Waltz, a U.S. Army Special Forces Green Beret and colonel in the Florida Army National Guard, said, “Not only are these paramilitary transnational criminal organizations responsible for killing an unprecedented number of Americans, but [they] are actively undermining our sovereignty by destabilizing our border and waging war against U.S. law enforcement and the Mexican military.”
Waltz said the AUMF would give President Joe Biden “sophisticated military cyber, intelligence, and surveillance resources to disrupt cartel operations.”
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has condemned proposals for allowing U.S. military action against the cartels.
“We are not going to permit any foreign government to intervene in our territory, much less that a government’s armed forces intervene,” Lopez Obrador said in March as discussions about cartel violence peaked.