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May 13, 2026
Mexico and CIA Deny Allegations of U.S. Assassination Campaign Against Cartels
Mexico’s government and the CIA publicly rejected a CNN report that U.S. intelligence agents were i…
The Official Rebuttals from Mexico and the CIA
Mexico’s government and the CIA issued statements on Tuesday denying a CNN report that U.S. intelligence agents participated in targeted killings of alleged cartel members in Mexico.
CIA spokesperson Liz Lyons called the story “false and salacious,” while Mexico’s Secretary of Security Omar Garcia Harfuch said the nation “categorically rejects” any notion of foreign lethal operations on its soil.
Alleged CIA‑Backed Assassinations: What CNN Reported
CNN cited unnamed sources claiming CIA operatives “directly participated” in several attacks since last year, including a March car explosion that killed Francisco Beltran, described as a member of the Sinaloa Cartel.
Operations allegedly ranged from “passive intelligence sharing” to “direct participation in assassination operations.”
The focus was said to be on mid‑level cartel figures.
Numbers Behind the Controversy: Reported Deaths and Designations
190+ people killed in U.S. air strikes targeting drug‑trafficking vessels in the Caribbean and Pacific, according to the Trump administration.
Nine Latin‑American drug gangs, including the Sinaloa Cartel, have been labeled “terrorist organisations” by the United States.
Two alleged CIA operatives died in a car crash after a counter‑narcotics raid, prompting the latest scrutiny.
Diplomatic Fallout and Sovereignty Concerns
The allegations have intensified existing friction between Washington and Mexico, where President Claudia Sheinbaum recently threatened sanctions against Chihuahua officials for allowing CIA involvement in raids on clandestine labs.
Mexico’s 2020 law requires foreign agents to share information with the government and denies them diplomatic immunity, underscoring the sovereignty debate.
What Lies Ahead: Potential Shifts in U.S.–Mexico Security Cooperation
Both sides stress that cooperation “exists, is important, and has yielded relevant results,” yet future joint operations may be conditioned on stricter oversight and transparent information‑sharing protocols.
Analysts warn that continued public denial without independent verification could erode mutual trust, potentially prompting Mexico to seek alternative security partners or renegotiate existing agreements.
#Mexico
#CIA
#Donald Trump
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