Trump Admin Sanctions Mexican 'Terrorist' Gangs

Trump Admin Sanctions Mexican 'Terrorist' Gangs

Mateo Guillamont
Mateo Guillamont
May 23, 2025

The US Treasury Department recently announced sanctions against members of terrorist criminal gang organizations in Mexico.

The sanctions target members of cartels President Donald Trump designated as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTO).

Designating the cartels as FTOs was one of President Trumpโ€™s campaign promises, and it was something conservatives had long urged former President Joe Biden to do to no avail.

Cartels designated are Tren de Aragua, Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13), Cรกrtel de Sinaloa, Cรกrtel de Jalisco Nueva Generaciรณn, Cรกrtel del Noreste (CDN), La Nueva Familia Michoacana, Cรกrtel de Golfo (Gulf Cartel), and Cรกrteles Unidos.

The sanctions enacted target high-ranking members of CDN for numerous crimes including drug, human, and arms trafficking.

According to the Treasury, CDN is one of Mexicoโ€™s most violent gangs and its criminal operations exert pernicious influence over the southwest border.

Besides their for-profit criminal schemes, CDN is also responsible for their anti-US terrorist activity.

In March 2022, CDN members attacked the USโ€™s Nuevo Laredo consulate, forcing diplomats to flee and the consulateโ€™s closure for one month.

โ€œCDN and its leaders have carried out a violent campaign of intimidation, kidnapping, and terrorism, threatening communities on both sides of our southern border,โ€ said Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

The sanctions target CDN leaders Miguel Angel de Anda Ledezma and Ricardo Gonzalez Sauceda, accused of significantly contributing to CDNโ€™s criminal and terrorist activities.

โ€œWe will continue to cut off the cartelsโ€™ ability to obtain the drugs, money, and guns that enable their violent activities,โ€ continued Secretary Bessent.

Sanctions against CDN symbolize a new era in the USโ€™s efforts to combat Mexican gangs, which could feature military action against the latter given their novel FTO designation.

The use of military force against cartels operating in Mexico is unlikely, however, as Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum has opposed the idea and criticized it as a violation of Mexicoโ€™s sovereignty.

State Department Secretary Marco Rubio explained that the FTO designation would โ€œprotect our nation, the American people, and our hemisphere.โ€

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Mateo Guillamont

Mateo Guillamont

Mateo is a Miami-based political reporter covering national and local politics

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