Thursday, February 26, 2026

FP - Argument An expert’s point of view on a current event. There Is No Military Solution to Mexico’s Cartel Problem Crime groups operate less like nations and more like banks. By Antonio De Loera-Brust, the United Farm Work

 Argument

An expert’s point of view on a current event.

There Is No Military Solution to Mexico’s Cartel Problem

Crime groups operate less like nations and more like banks.

By , the United Farm Work
The debris of a burned truck is seen on a road in Mexico. Behind it are green highway signs and mountainous terrain beneath a clear blue sky.
The debris of a burned truck is seen on a road in Mexico. Behind it are green highway signs and mountainous terrain beneath a clear blue sky.
A burned truck sits on a road after waves of retaliatory cartel violence rocked Jalisco state following the death of a major drug kingpin, seen near Tapalpa, Mexico, on Feb. 24. Ulises Ruiz/AFP via Getty Images

As recently as 2005, it was not only doable to drive from the U.S. cities of El Paso or San Diego to Mexico City—it was safe.

That’s no longer the case. Since 2006, Mexico has descended into a drug war that has made large parts of the country unsafe to travel in. That reality was on stark display on Sunday after Mexican troops killed the country’s most notorious drug boss. Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho,” commanded the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), which responded by killing government forces in attacks across Mexico. Some areas popular with tourists were impacted by roadblocks and car burnings.

Mexican forces killed El Mencho at President Claudia Sheinbaum’s orders—under U.S. pressure and with Washington’s intelligence support, but without U.S. troops. A U.S. military operation on Mexican soil is Sheinbaum’s red line in dealings with Washington, which appears to be eager to turn U.S. firepower against Mexican drug cartels.

In taking action against a major cartel leader, Sheinbaum is walking a tightrope. She has reversed her longtime stance against the U.S.-led war on drugs, which many Mexicans see as having initiated their long-standing insecurity crisis. (Anger about the war on drugs was a major reason that Sheinbaum’s Morena party first came to power in 2018.) At the same time, Sheinbaum is attempting to safeguard Mexican sovereignty and forestall the kind of intervention that U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to launch.

The Trump administration welcomed Mexico’s attack on CJNG and was quick to claim its share of the credit for El Mencho’s elimination. Yet the operation’s benefit to ordinary Mexicans is far less clear. The cartel’s reaction was swift and vicious. Actual casualty numbers are unclear, though at least 25 members of Mexico’s National Guard are reported to have been killed, with a total death toll of more than 70. Attacks occurred across Mexico’s Pacific coast, from Oaxaca to Baja California, grounding daily life to a halt and triggering widespread stay-at-home notices.

All day Sunday, Mexican forces worked to clear roadblocks and restore order over large swaths of the country. By Monday morning, the government claimed to have regained control. But violence is likely to continue, with CJNG due for a bloody succession battle and turf wars with competing cartels looking to take advantage of their rival’s weakness. Any reduction in the flow of drugs northward will be temporary, if it happens at all.

Yet the reaction of many pundits, politicians, and think tankers in both Mexico and the United States was as swift as it was predictable: to call immediately for further escalation and military action against cartels. Some influential MAGA activists and Republican officials spread false claims that cartels were targeting U.S. citizens in Mexico, prompting direct pushback from the Mexican Embassy in Washington.

Mexico’s opposition aimed to spin the chaos as evidence that Sheinbaum’s government is soft on cartels. Mexican Sen. Alejandro Moreno claimed that Sheinbaum leads a “narcogovernment,” never mind that she was the one to order the operation against CJNG in the first place. Meanwhile, U.S. lawmakers, including Miami Republican Rep. Carlos Gimenez, were quick to imply that direct U.S. military intervention remained on the table. Even Democratic Sen. Ruben Gallego joined the chorus, calling the Sheinbaum administration’s previous approach to cartels “soft.”

These responses miss the point. The lack of Mexican firepower was not a problem; the military successfully killed El Mencho. The problem is the operation’s aftermath: both the immediate retaliatory violence by the decapitated-but-still-very-much-alive CJNG and the deeper, unalterable reality that, as long as money can be made selling drugs, eliminating one cartel boss merely means ensuring his replacement. Mexicans have seen this movie enough times to know that the replacement will often be worse—and that he can emerge only after fierce bloodletting in brutal turf battles that all too often catch innocent civilians in the crossfire.

This is exactly how Mexico’s insecurity problem began. Smuggling to the United States has existed in Mexico ever since Prohibition-era bootleggers operated across the U.S.-Mexico border, if not earlier. Endemic corruption came alongside it; many a Mexican cop, soldier, or government official has taken their cut of the profits that can be made selling to Americans what their government won’t let them buy. Yet insecurity and mass violence for ordinary people because of the drug trade through Mexico is a relatively recent phenomenon, dating back to 2006.

Beginning that year, conservative President Felipe Calderón, with support and funding from the Bush administration, moved to militarily crush Mexico’s cartels. Many prominent cartel leaders were killed or captured while civilian deaths soared. But drug cartels are not nations, armies, or ideologically motivated groups that can be forced to surrender. Cartels are more like banks—economic actors filling a need in an enormous, if illicit, market that are willing to go to extreme measures to defend their equally enormous profits. Taking out an entire cartel from lowliest drug mule to the highest ranking narco can no more eliminate the drug trade than shutting down Bank of America would eliminate the financial sector.

Predictably, Calderón’s drug war has been followed by never-ending waves of violence. Succession battles ensued every time a prominent narco was eliminated, while new criminal groups emerged to take their part of the drug trade’s profits. Ironically, some of the most dangerous new cartels, such as Los Zetas, emerged from the very U.S.-trained Mexican military forces that had been tasked to take them out.

Two decades of worsening violence later, few of the cartel leaders from 2006 remain. Yet today’s cartels are stronger than before. Vast swaths of Mexico have gone from safe to unsafe; hundreds of thousands of Mexicans have been displaced, with many seeking asylum in the United States; and as many as 30,000 Mexicans are killed in crime-related violence each year. Killing another cartel leader just brings us back to square one.

It’s time to acknowledge what a raw deal the Mexican people receive in the U.S.-backed drug war. The United States’ enormous demand for illegal and dangerous drugs ensures that it will always be enormously lucrative to provide a supply. Meanwhile, the United States’ own bounty of military-grade weaponry—as well as Mexico’s supply of economically precarious young men—ensure that armed violence will always be a cheaply available option for drug suppliers, whether against the state or against the competition.

Mexican drug cartels are a problem with no military solution. Recognizing this does not mean throwing up one’s hands and ignoring the genuinely dangerous public health menace that is illicit drugs. In fact, harsher penalties against drug users in the United States—especially the affluent and privileged, who casually consume the product of enormous Latin American misery—could help reduce the demand that perpetuates cartel strength across the region. If young Mexicans are asked to die combating the drug cartels that smuggle cocaine, then the least that the United States can do is lock up some of the young Wall Street stockbrokers, Silicon Valley techies, and congressional staffers who routinely snort it.

Beyond punitive measures, much more should be done to address the realities of addiction in the United States, especially regarding opioids. The Trump administration has set a particularly bad example on this front by moving to cut programs that address opioid addiction, backing down only after significant backlash.

Recent U.S. diplomatic cooperation with China to address the flow of the precursor chemicals for fentanyl production has demonstrated that real results are possible in reducing the overall supply of drugs by preventing their manufacture. Similar strategies to limit the raw materials needed for drug production include investing in struggling crop substitution programs in Colombia, where longtime coca farmers need capital investment, access to markets, and technical assistance to make the transition to legitimate crops, such as banana and cacao, feasible.

Yet no single policy would be as effective in reducing the power of Mexican drug cartels as cutting off the flow of U.S. guns south of the border. This has been a long-standing priority for the Mexican government, which sought unsuccessfully to sue U.S. gun manufacturers in U.S. court. Washington’s record in this area is particularly checkered, with corrupt former U.S. service members and other federal officials often found to be selling taxpayer-funded weapons to Mexican cartels.

Passing the ARMAS Act, introduced by Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro of Texas, would be the most commonsense way to make sure cartels no longer have easy access to U.S. firearms. The legislative proposal would return authority over small arms exports from the Commerce Department to the State Department and require the creation of an interagency strategy to disrupt the flow of U.S. guns to Latin America, reversing a first-term Trump administration decision intended to promote U.S. small arms exports.

Tragically, addressing the root causes of both the supply and demand for guns and drugs does not seem to interest Trump. His administration does not value Mexican lives, as its harsh immigration policy indicates every day. Instead, the United States seems intent on pressuring the Mexican government into taking ever more provocative action against cartels—turning the country into a battleground, victimizing ordinary Mexicans, and then using the ensuing violence to ratchet up the pressure for further military action. All the while, the White House also appears poised to keep the U.S. border closed to the Mexican asylum-seekers the drug war creates.

Mexicans have been watching this movie nonstop since 2006. There is no happy ending; there are just endless bloody sequels. It’s time to write a new script.

This post is part of FP’s ongoing coverage of the Trump administrationFollow along here.

Antonio De Loera-Brust is the United Farm Workers communications director and the former special assistant to the U.S. secretary of state. He previously worked for Rep. Joaquin Castro and on the policy teams of the Julián Castro and Elizabeth Warren presidential campaigns. He is a native of Yolo County, California.

GREEK REPORTER - Mitsotakis Commits to Extending Evros Fence to Cover Entire Greco-Turkish Border - By Tasos Kokkinidis - February 26, 2026

 GREEK  REPORTER

Mitsotakis Commits to Extending Evros Fence to Cover Entire Greco-Turkish Border

Evros wall Greece
The expansion of the Evros fence would be bolstered by “increased personnel, improved coordination, and advanced technical surveillance.” Credit: AMNA

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis reaffirmed his commitment to extending the Evros border fence across the entire length of the Greco-Turkish land border during the 2nd Pre-Congress of New Democracy in Alexandroupoli.

“The fence will cover the entirety of Evros so that we remain permanently secure against any threat,” the Prime Minister stated. He further assured that the expansion would be bolstered by “increased personnel, improved coordination, and advanced technical surveillance.”

Recalling the 2020 border crisis

Reflecting on the events of February 2020, Mitsotakis noted that Greece successfully countered a “hybrid attack” at the border.

“We managed to secure the country and avert a development that I believe would have had dramatic consequences—not just for Greece, but for Europe as a whole,” he said. He argued that this moment catalyzed a fundamental shift in EU migration policy, as Europe finally “recognized the necessity of guarding the Union’s external borders.”

The Prime Minister took the opportunity to criticize those he accused of “weaponizing” the migration issue, referencing the 2022 controversy of “Little Maria”—a reported child death on an Evros islet that was later largely debunked.

“Some were obsessed with ‘Little Maria,’ the deceased girl who never existed,” Mitsotakis remarked.

Greece reports a significant drop in migrant flows

Other key cabinet members provided updates on the security and migration landscape:

  • Michalis Chrysochoidis (Minister of Citizen Protection): Declared the Evros border “impregnable,” noting that 75 kilometers (over 46 miles) of the fence are complete, with another 5 kilometers (3 miles) imminent. He highlighted that 1,200 border guards are now stationed in the region and claimed that illegal migration flows have been effectively neutralized.
  • Thanos Plevris (Minister of Migration and Asylum): Provided statistical context, noting that flows in the Eastern Aegean and Evros have decreased by 60%. “From 48,000 arrivals in 2024, we dropped to 21,000 in 2025,” Plevris stated, adding that pending asylum applications have been reduced to 26,000.

Federal Foreign Office - 26.02.2026 - Speech by Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul in the German Bundestag on the occasion of the motion by the coalition “Defending peace and security in Europe – solidarity with Ukraine on the anniversary of Russia’s war of aggression”

 

Speech
26.02.2026
Federal Foreign Office
shadow

Speech by Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul in the German Bundestag on the occasion of the motion by the coalition “Defending peace and security in Europe – solidarity with Ukraine on the anniversary of Russia’s war of aggression”

Monday I met Ukrainian soldiers who were visiting Berlin. All of them commandersOn  who had come straight from the frontline. Who have been fighting for four years. Who are now returning to the frontline. 
If anyone had asked them before Russia’s war of aggression began, let’s say six or seven years ago, what they wanted to do with their lives, I imagine none of them would have said: My plan for my life is to lie in trenches in the ice and the snow. To drive an engine to the frontline through a hail of kamikaze drones. To launch an attack on fortified positions. 
Before Russia’s full-scale invasion they were all civilians. A student. A GP. A social worker who used to work with addicts before the war. A historian. One was a theatre director. 
They had – and I’m putting this in inverted commas – “normal” lives, “normal” professions. Until the Kremlin forced them into a war that leaves them with only one choice: to fight. 
Because surrendering is not an option. 
Russia’s invasion has been criminal from the outset – yet for weeks, months now it has reached a new level of perfidiousness. For we are seeing how the Kremlin is subjecting Ukraine in the middle of the bitterest winter to a campaign of terror that is targeting the most vulnerable of the vulnerable. Children, old people, sick people. Schools, apartment buildings, hospitals, indeed entire neighbourhoods are without electricity, without heating, without water. In Kyiv alone we are talking about up to half a million people. 
Because Putin’s troops are deliberately destroying the civilian energy infrastructure. These attacks violate international law. They are war crimes and they are taking place every single day.
Putin is doing this to erode Ukraine from the inside. To break the Ukrainian people’s will to resist. Because he wants the country to bow to his brutality. 
However, the country and its people are not willing to bow. And for this, dear colleagues, hopefully with your support, I would like to express our greatest respect for the Ukrainian people and for their unwavering heroic courage, and also our gratitude. 
The Kremlin leaves us in no doubt about what it is trying to achieve. The destruction of the Ukrainian culture. The dissolution of its national identity. That is how imperial revisionism works. 
For at the end of the day, the Kremlin’s goal is to establish an illiberal world of autocracies which challenges the democratic West. 
Which undermines our liberal and democratic way of life.
Russia’s aggression against Ukraine is part of a larger attack on the rules-based international order. On Europe’s security architecture. That is what this brutal war of conquest is about. 
However, what Putin has underestimated is the resilience of the Ukrainian people. The courage of the Ukrainian soldiers. The national consciousness of an entire country. And the solidarity of the West and its ability to act, all the while standing firmly by Ukraine’s side.
That is why we are supporting Ukraine with additional air defence. 
That is why we are providing support to protect the energy infrastructure and repair energy plants. Not just for this winter, but also in preparation for the next one. 
That is why we in the European Union are putting together a 90-billion-euro assistance package. 
That is why we intend to further tighten our sanctions, which are hitting Putin and his war economy hard. 
That is why we are supporting Ukraine along its path towards EU membership. 
For Putin should be clear about one thing: Ukraine will not abandon the European path of reform that it has embarked upon. Institutionally, the country is already more closely linked to the West than ever before. 
And we Europeans have a clear goal in mind. We must achieve a just and lasting peace. 
Ukraine will only be able to attain this peace from a position of strength. We must put it in this position. 
That is why we will keep increasing the pressure on Putin through sanctions and with a united approach to tackle Russia’s shadow fleet.
That is why Russian assets worth billions will remain frozen. 
Yesterday, together with my colleagues, I outlined the united stance adopted by Poland, France and Germany in a newspaper article. We need to have more stamina than Putin – and we will have more stamina when it comes to supporting Ukraine.
Four years on, it is not only Ukraine that is a different country. Europe, too, is different than it used to be. 
A Europe that senses that we are standing at a crucial historic crossroads. 
For this reason we are taking a stand with our principles, with the values of our democracy and also with our political culture. 
I say this also with regard to Hungary. 
For I don’t believe it is right for Hungary to betray European sovereignty for the sake of its own fight for freedom.
In Europe we have already seen what it means when the law of the strong prevails. When the world is divided into spheres of power. 
Now, now more than ever, it is crucial that we as Europeans stand together and do not allow anyone to divide or provoke us, that we take a confident stance, that we embody European sovereignty.
Ukraine has four long years of war behind it. Four years of immeasurable sacrifice. Yet also four years of unbroken strength and remarkable heroic courage. 
Four years in which the country has defended its own freedom and the freedom of the whole of Europe. 
Our freedom. 
For this, we should be grateful. 

POLITICO News Politics - Mette Frederiksen announces Denmark will hold snap election on March 24 - FEBRUary 26, 2026 1:25 pm CET

 POLITICO

Yazar: Murat Yetkin / 26 Şubat 2026, Perşembe - ABD Elçisi Barrack Şimdi de Irak’ın İran Sınırında Ortaya Çıktı

 

ABD Elçisi Barrack Şimdi de Irak’ın İran Sınırında Ortaya Çıktı

/ / Siyaset

ABD’nin Ankara Büyükelçisi Barrack, Suriye’den sonra Irak ve İran

 dosyalarıyla ilgileniyor, yine Kürt gruplardan yararlanmak istiyor. 

Barrack (sağdan ikinci) ve ABD heyeti Süleymaniye’de KYB lideri 

Bafıl Talabani (soldan üçüncü) ve SDG lideri Mazlum Abdi (soldan 

ikinci) ile görüşürken. (Foto: X/BafelTalabani)


İki ülke heyetleri arasında 26 Şubat Cenevre görüşmelerinin ABD’nin İran’a saldırmasını durdurma ihtimali ABD’nin İran odaklı ağır askeri yığınağıyla giderek azalıyor.
Savaşı önleme çabalarında ümidi zayıflayan Ankara artık savaşın “ertesi gününe” hazırlanmaya başladı. Savaş sonucu Tahran’da rejim değişikliği olsa da olmasa da İran’ın parçalanması ihtimali, savaş çıkarsa gelebilecek göç dalgasından stratejik bakımdan daha kaygı verici Türkiye açısından.
Bu gergin görünümde biraz kenarda kalsa da önemi bulunan bir başka hareketlilik gözleniyor. Bu tali hareketliliğin başrolünde ise ABD’nin Ankara Büyükelçisi ve Suriye Özel temsilcisi Tom Barrack bulunuyor. Öyle anlaşılıyor ki, ABD’nin pek Ankara’da durmayan Ankara Büyükelçisine Suriye’nin yanı sıra Irak dosyası da verilmiş ve birazdan göreceğiniz nedeniyle bunun İran boyutu da bulunuyor.
Suriye’de Şam-SDG anlaşmasını (Türkiye’nin SDG/PKK üzerindeki görünmez baskısının da yardımıyla) bağlayan Barack son 10-15 gündür ortalarda görünmüyordu. Bunu safça Epstein dosyalarına bağlayanlar olsa da gelişmeler Barack’ın fiilen ABD’nin karargâhını İstanbul’a kurmuş Bölge Valisinin çoktan yeni dosyasına çalışmaya başladığı anlaşıldı.

İki Güne Sığan Mesaiye Bakın

Barrack 23 Şubat’ta Irak’ta seçimden birinci parti çıksa da koltuğunu kaybetme tehlikesindeki Başbakan Şiya El Sudani ile görüştü.
Aynı gün önce Irak’ın güneyinde, Basra yakınlarındaki Kurna-2 petrol sahasının ABD petrol devi Chevron’a devriyle ilgili törende gözetmen olarak bulundu. Irak’ın toplam petrol üretiminin yüzde 12’sini (yaklaşık günde 500 bin varil) saha 2009’den bu yana Rus Lukoil şirketinin kontrolündeydi.
Tom Barrack yine aynı 23 Şubat günü Erbil’e geçerek Kürdistan Bölgesel Yönetimi Başkanı Neçirvan Barzani ve Erbil yakınlarındaki Selahaddin (Pirmam) kasabasına giderek KDP lideri Mesud Barzani ile görüştü.
24 Şubat’ta Barrack, seçimlerden anahtar parti olarak çıkan “ilerlemeci” Sünni Takaddum Partisi lideri Muhammed el Halbusi ile görüştükten sonra, KYB lideri Bafıl Talabani ile görüşmek üzere İran sınırında Süleymaniye’ye geçti. Bu görüşmedeki sürpriz, Talabani heyetinde SDG lideri Mazlum Abdi’nin de bulunmasıydı.
Talabani, görüşme sonrası Suriye’nin “yapıcı bir ülke” olmasına desteğini açıkladı. Barrack da bu mesajı alıntılayarak, buluşmayı “yeni ve umut dolu” bir başlangıç olarak niteledi.

Barrack’ın Irak Dosyası

Barrack, Talabani ve Mazlum Abdi’nin sadece Suriye konuştuklarını kabul etmek biraz saflık sayılabilir.
ABD, İran’ı vurmak üzereyken, İran’da (PKK’nın İran kolu PJAK dahil) beş silahlı Kürt örgütü Tahran’daki İslamcı rejime karşı ittifak https://www.bbc.com/turkce/articles/c795v1jq057o açıklamışken, Irak’ta seçimden birinci parti çıkmasa da koalisyon hükümetini kurmaya İran yanlısı önceki başbakan Nuri El Maliki yakınken, Barrack’ın kapanmış saydığı Suriye’yi mi konuşmuşlardır sadece?
Barrack’ın Irak’taki muhataplarına şu mesajları ilettiğini söylemekse mümkün:
• ABD’nin desteği Suriye’de Ahmed Şara yönetimin arkasında, bunu bozacak eylemler içinde olmayın,
• Bağdat’ta İran yanlısı bir iktidar ABD’nin desteğini almak bir yana, yaptırımlar getirebilir, bunu aklınızda tutun,
• ABD’nin İran’ı havadan vurması durumunda Kürt grupların karadan silahlı desteğine ihtiyaç duyulabilir, buna hazır olun.
Barrack’ın “yeni ve umut dolu başlangıç” dediği, Irak üzerinden İran hedefi ve bu hedefe ulaşmak için, tıpkı Suriye’de olduğu gibi silahlı Kürt grupların işbirliğinden yararlanmak olabilir. Bu desteğin, sokak gösterileriyle birlikte mollalar rejimini al aşağı etmeye yetip yetmeyeceği ayrı konu.

ABD, İsrail, İran ve Türkiye

Bu görünümdeki gizli özne İsrail’dir. İsrail, ABD’nin bölgemizdeki birinci dış politika önceliği, Vaşington’daki İsrail lobisinin Trump üzerindeki siyasi ve mali baskısının ana gerekçesidir. İsrail’in 1948’de kuruluşundan itibaren Irak’taki Kürt silahlı hareketlerini İran’a karşı kullanma siyaseti de biliniyor.
Suriye krizini yeni atlatmaya başlayan Türkiye, ABD’nin İran’a saldırmasına da saldırı durumunda bu çatışmanın içine sürüklenmeye de karşı. Bugüne dek hava sahasını ve limanlarını ABD askeri yığınağına açmadı. Çatışma halinde İran’a gireceği iddialarını da yalanladı. Ama Ankara artık savaş ihtimalini kabul edip kendisini “ertesi gün” senaryolarına hazırlıyor.
ABD’nin halen biri Basra Körfezi çıkışında, diğeri Akdeniz’de olmak üzere iki uçak gemisi, ayrıca 20 kadar savaş gemisi ve 40 bin asker İran odaklı olarak bölgede. Bu gemilerde toplam 150 kadar, İsrail, Ürdün, Suudi Arabistan, Katar ve BAE’de de 150 kadar, toplam 300 kadar savaş uçağı konuşlandırdı.
İran Dışişleri Bakanı Abbas Arakçi’nin Cenevre görüşmesi öncesi “Nükleer silah üretmeyeceğiz” sözü, artık tek başına yeterli olmayabilir.