Trump administration labels 8 Latin American cartels as 'foreign 
		terrorist organizations'
		
		 
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		 [February 20, 2025]  
		By ELLEN KNICKMEYER and MARIA VERZA 
		
		WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is formally designating eight 
		Latin American crime organizations as “foreign terrorist organizations,” 
		upping its pressure on cartels operating in the U.S. and on anyone 
		aiding them. 
		 
		The move, carrying out a Jan. 20 executive order by President Donald 
		Trump, names Tren de Aragua in Venezuela, MS-13 in El Salvador and six 
		groups based in Mexico. The designation will be published in Thursday’s 
		edition of the Federal Register, according to a notice Wednesday. 
		 
		Trump, a Republican, has made securing the U.S.-Mexico border among his 
		top priorities, vowing to carry out mass deportations, sending active 
		duty troops to the border and reaching deals with some countries to take 
		in more migrants. 
		 
		The “foreign terrorist organization” label is unusual because it deploys 
		a terrorist designation normally reserved for groups like al-Qaida or 
		the Islamic State group that use violence for political ends — not for 
		money-focused crime rings such as the Latin American cartels. 
		 
		The Trump administration argues that the international connections and 
		operations of the groups — including drug trafficking, migrant smuggling 
		and violent pushes to extend their territory — warrant the designation. 
		 
		Critics of the move call it an unnecessarily broad and harsh one that 
		could damage relations and paralyze trade with Latin America. 
		Businesses, banks and buyers could fear possible U.S. prosecution if 
		they knowingly or unknowingly have any transactions that touch the world 
		of the cartels. 
		
		
		  
		
		Such cartels permeate Mexico's economy, dealing not only in drug 
		trafficking and migrant smuggling but in fighting for control of the 
		multibillion-dollar avocado business. 
		 
		Aid groups say some past U.S. designations of groups as foreign 
		terrorist organizations have threatened overall food imports into 
		countries, for example, by making shipping companies fearful that U.S. 
		prosecutors may accuse them of directly or indirectly supporting the 
		targeted groups. 
		 
		Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Wednesday before the 
		designations were published that “if that decree has to do with 
		extraterritorial actions (in Mexico), those we do not accept.” 
		 
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            President Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., 
			Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (Pool via AP) 
            
			  
            But she said Mexico was in agreement on the need to advance joint 
			investigations. 
			 
			“If they make this decree to investigate even more in the United 
			States the money laundering and the criminal groups that operate in 
			the United States, that carry out those drug sales, it’s very good,” 
			Sheinbaum said. “What we do not accept is the violation of our 
			sovereignty.” 
			 
			Trump over the years has singled out two of the groups — MS-13 and 
			Tren de Aragua — in political speeches and other appearances. 
			 
			U.S. authorities say Tren de Aragua poses a threat in various U.S. 
			cities. Trump and his allies have seized on the gang’s presence and 
			made it the face of the alleged threat posed by migrants. 
			 
			In his first term, Trump similarly pointed to the violent street 
			gang MS-13 as a risk of immigration. But it originated in Los 
			Angeles in the 1980s in communities made up largely of refugees from 
			El Salvador’s civil war and other immigrants, growing to include 
			many U.S. citizens. The gang is known for brutal violence and 
			street-level drug sales. 
			 
			The six Mexico-based groups designated as terrorist groups include 
			the Sinaloa cartel, Mexico’s oldest criminal group, which traffics 
			drugs, weapons and people. 
			 
			One of Sinaloa's most lucrative businesses in recent years has been 
			the production of fentanyl, blamed for tens of thousands of overdose 
			deaths each year in the U.S. Sinaloa imports the precursor chemicals 
			from China, produces the drug and smuggles it across the border. 
			 
			The other cartels targeted by the U.S. are Jalisco New Generation, 
			Gulf, Northeast, La Nueva Familia Michoacana and United. 
			 
			___ 
			 
			Verza reported from Mexico City. 
			
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