Friday, February 27, 2026

Mexico President Sheinbaum Gets It Just Can't Say It

by Scott Creighton

"These high-caliber rifles, rocket launchers used by the cartels - they come from the United States."

The weapons and training and organizing all come from the United States. We run the cartels. We create them. Our banks launder the money and our intelligence services use the profits to run off the book campaigns in other countries on behalf of our 'national interests' 

What is happening in Mexico right now was kicked off by our intel agencies giving their military intel on one of OUR  assets.That action was then used as cover for a massive destabilization campaign taking place right now using our cartel sleeper cells. It is all in response to Mexico offering to help other nations bring aid to the people of Cuba since the Trump administration has decided to collective punishment in an effort to force regime change in the country.

Sheinbaum is talking about operation Fast and Furious which is just one example of the long history of our efforts to create, run and control the drug cartels in Mexico and Colombia. 

 

Some of the cartel’s initial members were elite Mexican troops, trained in the early 1990s by America’s 7th Special Forces Group or “snake eaters” at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, a former US special operations commander has told Al Jazeera.

“They were given map reading courses, communications, standard special forces training, light to heavy weapons, machine guns and automatic weapons,” says Craig Deare, the former special forces commander who is now a professor at the US National Defence University.

“I had some visibility on what was happening, because this [issue] was related to things I was doing in the Pentagon in the 1990s,” Deare, who also served as country director in the office of the US Secretary of Defence, says.' al Jazeera Nov, 2010 

There was no plan to track the Fast and Furious weapons. That was just the cover story. We were arming factions inside Mexico so the CIA could control the flow of drugs into the U.S. and profit from them so they could use that money to fund off the books operations that congress would never have approved.


 

The following incomplete history of CIA/DEA/US military complicity and partnership with various drug smuggling operations comes from A Tangled Web: A History of CIA Complicity in Drug International Trafficking as published by Mother Jones in June of 1998

MAY 1970

A Christian Science Monitor correspondent reports that the CIA ‘is cognizant of, if not party to, the extensive movement of opium out of Laos,’ quoting one charter pilot who claims that ‘opium shipments get special CIA clearance and monitoring on their flights southward out of the country.’ At the time, some 30,000 U.S. service men in Vietnam are addicted to heroin.

 

JUNE 1980

Despite advance knowledge, the CIA fails to halt members of the Bolivian militaries, aide by the Argentine counterparts, from staging the so-called ‘Cocaine Coup,’ according to former DEA agent Michael Levine. In fact, the 25-year DEA veteran maintains the agency actively abetted cocaine trafficking in Bolivia, where government officials who sought to combat traffickers faced torture and death at the hands of CIA-sponsored paramilitary terrorists under the command of fugitive Nazi war criminal (also protected by the CIA) Klaus Barbie.

 

APRIL 1989

The Senate Subcommittee on Terrorism, Narcotics and International Communications, headed by Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, issues its 1,166-page report on drug corruption in Central America and the Caribbean. The subcommittee found that ‘there was substantial evidence of drug smuggling through the war zone on the part of individual Contras, Contra suppliers, Contra pilots, mercenaries who worked with the Contras supporters throughout the region.’ U.S. officials, the subcommittee said, ‘failed to address the drug issue for fear of jeopardizing the war efforts against Nicaragua.’ The investigation also reveals that some ‘senior policy makers’ believed that the use of drug money was ‘a perfect solution to the Contras’ funding problems.’

And then of course we have the seminal work of Gary Webb for San Jose Mercury News.

'In August 1996, Webb penned a three-part series for the Mercury News (8/18–20/96) that documented how profits from the sale of crack cocaine in Los Angeles in the 1980s had been funneled to the Contras, the right-wing, CIA-backed mercenary army responsible for helping to perpetrate, to borrow Noam Chomsky’s words, “large-scale terrorist war” against Nicaragua. At the same time, the crack epidemic had devastated Black communities in South Central LA—which meant that Webb’s series generated understandable uproar among Black Americans across the country. 

But Webb’s revelations should hardly have been a newsflash. As FAIR’s Jim Naureckas (10/21/14) noted in a 2014 dispatch, the CIA was informed

as early as September 1981 that a major branch of the Contra “leadership had made a decision to engage in drug-smuggling to the United States in order to finance its anti-Sandinista operations,” according to the CIA inspector general’s report.

Not that the CIA was any stranger to drug-running—as indicated by, inter alia, a 1993 op-ed appearing in the New York Times (12/3/93) under the headline “The CIA Drug Connection Is as Old as the Agency.” The essay traced CIA ties to narco-trafficking back to the Korean War, while the Vietnam War reportedly saw heroin from a refining lab in Laos “ferried out on the planes of the CIA’s front airline, Air America.” The piece went on to emphasize that “nowhere…was the CIA more closely tied to drug traffic than it was in Pakistan” during the Afghan/Soviet war of 1979 to 1989.' FAIR Dec. 2024

 

Today we are expected to believe the lies we have been fed over the decades suggesting we don't actually run these drugs into our own neighborhoods to fund murderous operations abroad... but we do and the evidence is more than compelling. 

'CIA ties to international drug trafficking date to the Korean War. In 1949, two of Chiang Kai-shek's defeated generals, Li Wen Huan and Tuan Shi Wen, marched their Third and Fifth Route armies, with families and livestock, across the mountains to northern Burma. Once installed, the peasant soldiers began cultivating the crop they knew best, the opium poppy.' NYT 1993

And whatever happened to those poppy fields the Taliban destroyed after they took power in Afghanistan in 2000? Oh that's right... we replanted them.


 

Since 2009 there have only been 8 major cartel leaders captured in Mexico with a grand total of none of them killed in the process. That's almost 20 years.

  • Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada (Sinaloa Cartel): Captured in July 2024.
  • Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán (Sinaloa Cartel): Captured 2014, escaped 2015, recaptured 2016, extradited 2017.
  • Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales ("Z-40", Los Zetas): Captured July 2013.
  • Omar Treviño Morales ("Z-42", Los Zetas): Captured March 2015.
  • Vicente Carrillo Fuentes (Juárez Cartel): Captured October 2014.
  • Servando Gómez Martínez ("La Tuta", Knights Templar): Captured February 2015.
  • Edgar Valdez Villarreal ("La Barbie", Beltrán Leyva/Sinaloa): Captured August 2010.
  • Vicente Zambada Niebla ("El Vicentillo", Sinaloa Cartel): Captured March 2009.
  • We are using our assets in Mexico as a proxy army destabilizing the nation due to our current president being angered by their president offering to help the people of Cuba in their hour of need. 

    This is a diabolical and sickening move but TBH it's simply par for the course. We have killed a lot of people over the decades with these drug smuggling operations. Killed people and ruined lives all for the sake of large sums of untraceable money that could be used to cause even more death and misery across the globe.

    This latest example is just more of the same but we need to see it for what it is. It's the least we can do. 

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