Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum’s forceful condemnation of the Trump administration’s decision to designate eight major Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations marked a decisive and emotionally charged moment in the long, complicated history between Mexico and the United States. Her response was not limited to a technical objection or diplomatic protest; instead, it reflected deep-seated concerns shaped by centuries of political memory, unequal power dynamics, and repeated instances in which Mexico’s sovereignty has been questioned or undermined by foreign actors.
By including groups such as the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and the Sinaloa Cartel on a terrorism list, Washington dramatically altered the language used to describe organized crime in Mexico, elevating it from a criminal justice issue to a matter of global security and warfare. Sheinbaum argued that this shift is not neutral or harmless, but one loaded with historical consequences. In her view, the label of “terrorism” has too often been used as justification for intervention, surveillance, and military action beyond borders. She emphasized that Mexico does not deny the gravity of cartel violence or the pain inflicted on both Mexican and American communities by drug trafficking, but she firmly rejected any framework that casts Mexico as incapable of governing itself or as a territory open to foreign enforcement actions.