One thing Trump tried to do after getting inaugurated was considering Mexican cartels terrorist organizations, and for that he was attacked by Sheinbaum for violating Mexico’s sovereignty. But, at least as far as I’ve read on the topic (whcih is not a lot to be fair), nobody actually explains why that’s the case. I mean at a glance you’d think the Mexican government would benefit from such an action, or at least I did. It’s pretty obvious to me I’m missing a piece of the puzzle, so does anyone here have it?

Edit: Thanks for the answers. Now it makes sense.

  • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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    6 hours ago

    It’s a pretext for invasion. Just like invading Afganistan was to intervene in order to get Al-Queda. Or invading Iraq was about getting the Taliban… etc… etc… etc…

    If America wants a war with someone for oil/economic pressure/etc… (really whatever reason they choose to make up) they simply say that there are terrorists there.

    I’m calling it now and saying that in two weeks he declares the Quebec Sovereignty movement a terrorist organization for reasons…

    • Juice@midwest.social
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      6 hours ago

      Quebec

      Yeah if our reality could stop resembling Infinite Jest, that would be great. I can’t stand that stupid fucking book and how accurately it predicts our increasingly insane circumstances

      • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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        I’ve honestly never made it through the whole thing.

        Tried to, back in the day. It’s one of those things that’s expected of you if you want to be a proper turtleneck wearing, pretentious literati as a university student. (I was a douche, okay…I admit it…it’s the same reason I fought my way through War and Peace and Foucault’s Pendulum) But I’m much better now.

        (and yes…I had the soul patch and everything)

        • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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          Foucault’s Pendulum is fucking awesome though? It might be his best book since Name of the Rose.

          I read War and Peace on an iphone. It gave a strange sense of achievement to read 57 “pages” in 15 minutes. Each page was most of a paragraph.

          I haven’t bothered with David Foster Wallace yet.

          • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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            59 minutes ago

            It might be his best book since Name of the Rose

            My personal favourite is The Island of the Day Before. Though I haven’t read either in years and it might be nostalgia because that was my first introduction to Eco.

        • Juice@midwest.social
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          5 hours ago

          Same, except i wasnt a lit major, just a guy who was going through the phase of “this is what intelligent people look like” while trying to educate myself. I was convinced DFW was the voice of our generation, heralding in a new era of consciousness.

          The book is conceptually pretty cool, like it is really well written and he draws together so many disparate elements to make kind of a coherent narrative.

          But the idea of making a book impossible to read on purpose is a funny joke, especially one that so many aspiring intelligentsia gush over. I can appreciate a good shaggy dog as much as the next guy, but IJ is just so far beyond the pale.

          A book should be challenging because the concepts are unique and well considered, and it draws from lots of historic and philosophical research; not because the author decided to intentionally break the flow of the narrative to make you flip to the not-optional appendix to read 32 pages of made up synopsis about a character’s avant-garde filmography.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    6 hours ago

    Cheeto doesn’t want to start eats but it’s not his fault, as these terrorist organizations wanted to overthrow the US government or something like that so you see, they have no option but to invade Mexico. Since these cartels also operate in Canada, yeah, no option, they just gave to go in and take over. They’re doing the right thing, really!

  • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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    After the War on Terror was declared, it essentially meant that the executive branch could essentially go to war with any country if they call them terrorists without former approval from Congress.

    • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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      Even without the war on terror, Congress gave the president the power to wage war for two weeks however they are fit. Congress is supposed to be notified and they can approve more time, but it’s been violated multiple times with no consequences.

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        8 hours ago

        A problem with the constitution is that the framers didn’t expect items to be defined differently than today. No one really expected a mass deployment of troops that wouldn’t be called a war.

        Also, the framers didn’t expect Congress to roll over as much as it has to the President.

  • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    If US declares a group in a country to be terrorists US entitles itself to bomb them, and do whatever else seems entitleable.

  • kandoh@reddthat.com
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    Civilian Casualties

    • Afghanistan: Civilian deaths from U.S. military operations have been significant, with incidents such as the deaths of two detainees at Bagram in 2002 due to torture[2][4].
    • Iraq: Civilian casualties peaked in 2006 with over 29,000 deaths. Between 2003 and 2024, civilian deaths fluctuated, with many unaccounted for due to the chaotic nature of war[7].
    • Drone Strikes: U.S. drone strikes in countries like Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia have caused numerous civilian deaths, though exact numbers are debated[3][4].

    Alleged War Crimes

    • Torture: The use of “enhanced interrogation techniques” (e.g., waterboarding) at facilities like Guantanamo Bay and CIA black sites has been widely condemned as violations of the Geneva Conventions[2].
    • Bagram Facility: Inhumane treatment and torture led to the deaths of two Afghan detainees in 2002. Military coroners ruled these homicides[2].
    • Maiwand District Killings: A “Kill Team” of U.S. soldiers murdered Afghan civilians between 2009–2010 and collected body parts as trophies[2].
    • Extraordinary Renditions: Suspected terrorists were transferred to third countries for interrogation under questionable conditions[2].

    Citations: [1] [PDF] CASUALTY STATUS https://www.defense.gov/casualty.pdf [2] United States war crimes - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_war_crimes [3] Civilians Killed & Wounded | Costs of War https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/costs/human/civilians [4] [PDF] Annual Report on Civilian Casualties in Connection with United … https://media.defense.gov/2022/Sep/27/2003086234/-1/-1/1/ANNUAL-REPORT-ON-CIVILIAN-CASUALTIES-IN-CONNECTION-WITH-UNITED-STATES-MILITARY-OPERATIONS-IN-2021.PDF [5] - THE AUTHORITY TO PROSECUTE TERRORISTS UNDER THE … https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CHRG-109shrg36934/html/CHRG-109shrg36934.htm [6] Currently listed entities https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/ntnl-scrt/cntr-trrrsm/lstd-ntts/crrnt-lstd-ntts-en.aspx [7] Civilian deaths in Iraq war 2003-2024 - Statista https://www.statista.com/statistics/269729/documented-civilian-deaths-in-iraq-war-since-2003/ [8] Global War on Terror | George W. Bush Library https://www.georgewbushlibrary.gov/research/topic-guides/global-war-terror

  • ComradeSharkfucker@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    It gives the US a reason to militarily intervene in Mexico that they can use whenever they want. It acts as preemptive justification for invasion.

    • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      Exactly, Mexico knows how we did Afghanistan.

      The US invaded on the argument that they were harboring terrorists intent to harm America.

      It’s pretty clear Trump knows that wartime Presidents have better approval, and like Putin, he’s an expansionist and wants excuses to take other countries’ land.

  • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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    See: Afghanistan, Iraq.

    America are the toddlers who have found father’s gun and decide to blast at anyone withholding sugar.

    The idea that the American military are competent enough to go after just the cartels is laughable. Not to mention the violation of Mexican sovereignty.

    Then you see what they did in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Any boy over the age of 12 was considered a potential terrorist therefore a “military age male” and was thus fair game for special forces murder squads, air strikes, drone strikes, and was not needed to be included in the official statistics for civilian kills.

    In short the American military apparatus uses Terrorism as a green light to go for maximum overkill, regardless of the level of civilian kills and socio-economic impact. This in turn sustains the vast economic forces in defence contracting and makes a lot of political donors a lot of money.

    It also rids the US of thousands of low-income patriotic-but-stupid people who sign up to the military because they have few other career options. These would later cost the state money in Medicare but not if they get killed in action.

    War is primarily big business. Moral and legal factors take a back seat.

  • juli@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    They want to do what Russia did to Ukraine. Invade with a false pretense.

  • merc@sh.itjust.works
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    Terrorist / Terrorism seems to be a magic word in US law and policy.

    If a country has organized crime in their country it’s no big deal. If there are close ties between the rulers and the criminals, that’s unfortunate.

    But, if the criminals are now labelled as terrorists, then you get to go on the state sponsors of terrorism list, which comes with all kinds of sanctions and restrictions.

    If you look at so-called “terrorist” organizations, there’s almost always elements of “terrorist” activities, but also evidence of other random criminal activities, and often legitimate political activities too. Take Sinn Fein, the political arm of the IRA. Some of their funding came from fuel and drug smuggling. So, where you draw the line between a “terrorist” group and a criminal group is pretty arbitrary. I think most people would say that the Mexican cartels are primarily criminals though. While they do kill people in ways that are intended to send a message, the message is generally “don’t mess with our profits” rather than some political ideal.

    Every country has some corruption, definitely including the US. So, what happens if a Mexican politician was accepting bribes from Narcos and passing legislation favourable to them? When does that become the state sponsoring terrorism?

    Putting the “terrorist” label on Mexican cartels seems like a prelude to doing things that violate Mexico’s sovereignty. If the cartels are merely violent criminal organizations, it’s a problem for Mexico’s government. If they’re “terrorists” then the US can lob missiles into Mexico, because it has a long-standing policy of violating the sovereignty of countries that “harbor” (i.e. contain) terrorists.

    • Ofiuco@lemmy.cafe
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      Mexican here, I just want to add something:

      I think most people would say that the Mexican cartels are primarily criminals though. While they do kill people in ways that are intended to send a message, the message is generally “don’t mess with our profits” rather than some political ideal.

      This is rather naive, as they aren’t just killing for profit or to protect their turf (the government usually goes with that narrative to not get involved, “just say the person had something illegal going and forget about it”), they actually control complete towns and obviously have people as slaves, they kill governors/politicians who might win elections or movements that go against their group and help gerrymandering during elections, among many other things.
      They have a huge stake in politics to prevent things from getting better (specially during the past and current administration).

      So… I’d say that from the moment they started to force the goverment at different levels, we could label them as terrorists.
      In another time I might have hope of something finally being done after labeling them as such, but with president musk and the first lady trump… I can only expect the worse outcome.

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        Yes, my point is that they don’t have a political ideology.

        Like, the IRA was bombing things because the goal was Irish independence. They wanted the UK out of Northern Ireland.

        Al Qaeda was bombing things to get the US out of the middle east. They wanted no US troops on Arab soil.

        Boko Haram wanted an area to be fully under Muslim law, with no western books or education.

        That’s the normal definition of terrorism, a group that’s terrorizing the population in pursuit of a political aim of some kind. It isn’t normally considered terrorism if there’s no ideology involved, and it’s just in defence of a criminal enterprise.

        In the case of the narcos, I don’t know of any political aim. I don’t think they have any particular ideology, other than “we want to keep making money selling drugs to Americans”. To a certain extent, I can see how they could be considered terrorists because they’re terrorizing the population, the courts and the government to get their way. But, in the past there has normally been a line drawn between a terrorist organization and a criminal organization.

        • Ofiuco@lemmy.cafe
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          7 hours ago

          I can’t really assure there isn’t a political aim as you are trying to stick to, there are a multiple cartels, each one follows a different ideology, some are even more similar to a cult than others… and the current party in power is guided by/as a cult with the help of the narcos, so maybe in the past we couldn’t call them terrorists by sticking to the no political ideology part, but as they are right now… yeah… I wouldn’t doubt they are trying to help the current administration to advance a centralist goverment so they can get full control of the country or something like that.

          Like… I don’t know why are you so adamant, but just taking a quick look on Wikipedia and re-reading the first parts, they tick the boxes, even if you say they don’t have an ideology as is, they still commit violence with the intention of shaping the enviroment to their liking and to impose their not ideology into the civilians or force the hand of the goverment… which already falls under the definition of terrorism.
          Then again, the article says there’s no consensus on the definition, which seems to be the case here:

          • I live here, I’ve seen these acts, I’ve personally seen (if only a minimal part) how it controls the life of the people, how it controls the political enviroment and how it forces things to go their way in every aspect; I wouldn’t doubt labeling them as terrorists.
          • You don’t want to label them as such only because you believe they don’t have a political ideology (even when I tell you they are already involved in shaping the country to their liking and beliefs).

          And just to reiterate, I don’t feel safe knowing it’s president musk and first lady trump who will be managing that, because they are just going to abuse it and make us miserables… more than usual. Under a different administration, I could see the benefit in doing so as our goverment doesn’t care about changing things for the better unless they are forced by a stronger entity, but right now I should be kissing my ass goodbye if they decide to mimic their boss putin.

    • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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      . So, what happens if a Mexican politician was accepting bribes from Narcos and passing legislation favourable to them? When does that become the state sponsoring terrorism?

      US has a shaddy history, and near past. Nicaragua contras (freedom fighters???) funded through Columbia/Panama cocaine. Venezuela last election meddling funding Narco gangs to burn things, and previous election, declaring legitimate president to be the main drug lord of the country.

  • Burninator05@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Mexico likely feels like the US declaring the cartels terrorist orgs will be a pretext to cross border military attacks/interventions/escapades (I’m not sure what the right word should be here).

  • minnow@lemmy.world
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    There are a lot of good answers already but I want to add that this changes the situation for any Hispanic people swept up by ICE. If officials feel like they can connect a person to the cartels in any way whatsoever, that individual can now be accused of being a terrorist. This changes the legal process they face, and that’s not good news for them. It’ll be easier to send the person to Gitmo. It’ll be harder to fight for that person’s freedom. They’ll likely be tortured, and anything they say can be used as pretense for further aggression by the Trump administration, both domestically and foreign.

  • CaptnKarisma@lemmy.ml
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    It could be a problem as when we declared war on terror decades ago it is fairly vague and unclear on who or where could be invaded. Label them a terrorist org and boom justification to send US troops to Mexico. Given how the US government is now I am deeply concerned. I was against the war on terror then too, yes we got some bad guys but it still does not seem worth all the civilian deaths it takes. We would have needed permanent occupation in Afghanistan too to keep a democratic rule there. Once it ended to me it seems like it was kinda all for nothing.

  • thezeesystem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    Correcte if I’m wrong, but didn’t the CIA actually make the drug cartels that are in Mexico with the whole war on drugs thing a while back?

    • theneverfox@pawb.social
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      3 hours ago

      I think the CIA has used them pretty extensively, but I don’t think they set them up directly

      What the US did is force Mexico to join in on the drug war. We threatened to block all pharmaceuticals to Mexico if they didn’t ban marijuana, which they really didn’t want to do

    • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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      Drug prohibition is awesome for governments because it means permission to bypass the laws. CIA has definitely funded operations through drugs, and have significant responsibility in crack epidemic. I’m unaware of direct links to Mexican cartels though.

  • Flagstaff@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    It may allow American forces to (more easily?) go down there and run their own operations, potentially refusing to cooperate with Mexican authorities and potentially messing up their own plans and just overall making things muddier and trickier, especially if they rely on sting operations that work better with fewer things going on to provide suspicion or otherwise serve as confounding factors.

    With that said, I would imagine that cartels are international terrorist orgs, so I’m not necessarily arguing for or against one side; I’m just trying to imagine why the Mexican gov might dislike it. I could be wrong.