๐ง๐ต๐ฒ ๐๐น๐ผ๐ฏ๐ฎ๐น ๐๐ฒ๐ฎ๐ ๐ฏ๐ ๐๐ฒ๐ฟ๐ฎ๐น๐ฑ ๐๐ฎ๐ฐ๐๐ฎ๐ฟ๐๐ฎ
This could have been a scene from a movie but it was real: a scorching Texas day, the sun beating down on a stretch of desert near El Paso. A black helicopter buzzes low, kicking up dust as federal agentsโDEA, FBI, Border Patrolโgrip their gear, nerves on edge.
Theyโre watching a small plane land onto a dusty field. It is July 25, 2024, and theyโve got their eyes on Ismael โEl Mayoโ Zambada, the Sinaloa Cartelโs big boss, a guy blamed for drowning the U.S. in fentanyl. The plane lands, and it is chaosโagents swarm out, shouting in Spanish and English, guns up. Zambada, this ghost who had dodged them for years, gets hauled off in cuffs alongside Joaquรญn Guzman Lopez, another cartel kingpin.
That takedown ended a decades-long chase. Now, with the U.S. labeling cartels like Sinaloa as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs), scenes like that might not be so rare anymore. It is a gutsier, messier fight against drugs coming our way.
Fast forward to February 19, 2025. The U.S. State Department, with Marco Rubio at the helm, drops a bombshell: eight Latin American cartels and gangsโSinaloa, Jalisco New Generation, MS-13, even Venezuelaโs Tren de Araguaโare officially Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs). This has US President Donald Trumpโs signature, pushing it through an executive order, and it is a loud signalโAmerica is done playing nice with drug lords, especially over fentanyl tearing through their towns.
So, what does this mean for U.S. cops and soldiers going after these cartels in Mexico, on US soil, along the border, or even here in the Philippines?
I canโt help but think back to Duterteโs โtokhangโ daysโthose brutal years that still sting. This U.S. move has me curious, and genuinely concerned too, so letโs dig into it.
Calling Cartels Terrorists Like ISIS
This FTO designation lets the U.S. hit these groups hardโfreeze their cash, slap sanctions, maybe even send in the military. This follows reports of CIA surveillance using MQ-9 Reaper drones buzzing over Mexico, scoping out cartel drug labs. Trump has been loud about treating them like al-Qaeda or ISIS. It is not a new ideaโboth Barack Obama and Trump explored similar designations but backed away due to diplomatic tensions with Mexico. Now, with Trumpโs return to office, it is full steam ahead.
It feels a lot like Duterteโs drug war here, kicked off in 2016 with tokhang and those High-Value Target (HVT) sweeps. Back then, it was all about nailing users and big shots alikeโthousands died, officially over 6,000, though human rights groups estimate over 12,000. Who doesnโt remember the knocks at night, the dread of someone pointing the wrong finger, and all the arguments about whether the bloodshed was worth it? The U.S. plan has a different legal flavor, but it is stirring up the same big questionsโhuman rights, whoโs in charge, does it even work?
What It Means for U.S. Moves and Tren de Araguaโs Mess
Mexico is a tricky spot. The FTO designation doesnโt explicitly authorize U.S. military incursions into Mexico, but experts warn it could pave the way. Think back to how they took down Pablo Escobar in Colombiaโcould that happen south of the border? Mexico is not keen, though. Their president, Claudia Sheinbaum, says it will stomp all over their turf, and Trumpโs talk of special forces missions, like against ISIS, has folks worried cartels might hit backโmaybe at American tourists or diplomats.
In the U.S. and along that 2,000-mile border with Mexico, the new policy is a boost for border cops. Border Patrol and ICE can lean on anti-terror tricksโmore cameras, grabbing cartel moneyโmoves they couldnโt do as easily before.
The crackdown has now become more urgent after a crooked Border Patrol officer was caught and exposed to have ties to the Juarez cartel. This is how deep the cartelโs influence goes and this is why the new U.S. administration is pushing hard.
Then thereโs Tren de Aragua from Venezuela, another name on the FTO list. The TDA gang has made big news in the U.S. when they took over an apartment building in Aurora, Colorado. Early this year, cops shut down โThe Edge at Lowryโ after it turned into a nightmareโkidnappings, torture of migrants, all tied to TDA gang members. It hits close to home, reminding me of how our drug gangs in the Philippines used to run roughshod over neighborhoods.
Cartels Right Here in the Philippines
Hereโs where it gets real for us: the Sinaloa Cartel has been in the Philippines, and that is no secret since Duterteโs popular (or infamous) matrix revealed the connections. Back in 2013, cops raided a spot in Lipa, Batangas, nabbed 84 kilos of shabu, and traced it right back to Sinaloa. PDEA says Sinaloa has been using Philippine ports as a pit stop, shipping drugs to the U.S. and beyond.
Worse, theyโve teamed up with Chinese/Asian gangs like Sam Gor, a big player in meth trafficking. Reuters says those two are tight, moving stuff through Southeast Asian portsโincluding ours. There is no denying that Mexican cartels arenโt just a far-off problem; theyโre here, working with local crews and Chinese triads.
Can the U.S. Chase Them Here?
So, could U.S. agents swoop in and bust these cartels on Philippine soil? From what Iโve pieced together, it is not that simple. Their laws tie the hands of the FBI, DEA, anybodyโthey canโt just roll in and start rounding folks up without our say-so. The Philippines calls the shots here, and theyโd have to sign off, probably through some deal like a mutual legal assistance treaty.
Whatโs more likely is the Americans teaming up with our PNP or PDEA, like they did during Duterteโs war when U.S. intel helped spot targets. Without going in themselves, they could pass us tips through the DEA, freeze cartel cash with U.S. Treasuryโs Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), or snag somebody big and extradite themโthink El Chapoโs 2019 trial. They might even train Philippine police or military, though that makes me nervous after all the mess from tokhang.
No way theyโre sending drones or commandos here, thoughโthat would break international rules and tick off Manila big time. Duterte hated American meddling, and Marcos Jr.โs careful about it too. Plus, Mexicoโs already pushing back on U.S. movesโsame vibe here if they overstep.
Whatโs the Law Say Now?
Legally, this FTO designation means cartel guys can get hit with anti-terror charges. These include โmaterial support to terroristsโ (look up 18 U.S.C. ยง 2339A), drug running (21 U.S.C. ยง 841), money launderingโwhich could lock them up for decades, even life.
U.S. authorities can freeze and confiscate cartel money too, choke their operations. But hereโs the catch: U.S. law does not let their military go after American citizens or residents unless theyโre straight-up terrorists, like funding ISIS.
Tokhang skipped all the legal nicetiesโearned us an ICC stink-eye. The U.S. plan has a more legal structure, but it still smells like it could overreach, especially if they start flexing in Mexico or leaning on us too hard.
What Can the U.S. Actually Do?
Theyโve got options. Drones, intel swaps with Mexico and Philippines, tighter border checksโthatโs all in play without stepping on toes too much. It fits their Department of Homeland Securityโs six-pillar plan which focuses on smugglers and migrant networks. If they get the go-ahead, special forces or airstrikes could take out cartel honchos in Mexico, like theyโve done with ISIS. But folks like The Guardian warn it could turn into a Vietnam-style mess. Here in the Philippines? No chance without our okay.
The U.S. could buddy up with Mexico, us, and nearby countriesโthink how we work with ASEAN on drugs. Problem is, Mexico has been dragging its feet and Filipinos are touchy about outsiders. The Sinaloa-Sam Gor connection is also a tangled web โwhat happens if U.S. operations against cartels lead to Chinese fatalities? Come to think of it.
Whatโs It Mean for Us Here?
Duterteโs drug war left us rawโtokhang turned neighbors against neighbors, but some swore it was the only way to stop the syndicates wrecking lives. This new U.S. push against cartels feels familiar, although more legally structured. It could still lead to civilian harm or diplomatic fallout if unchecked. Here in the Philippines, where drugs keep creeping back despite Duterteโs past campaign, this new U.S. policy is a nudge to focus on fixing people (rehabilitation), building trust, not just swinging fists with brute force.
This fightโours against local gangs, theirs against cartelsโis all about balancing citizensโ safety and human rights. The Trump administrationโs new war on cartels is just beginning. Its ripple effects may reach far beyond American shores, including here in the Philippines, where the shadows of Mexican cartels and their partner Chinese syndicates loom large.