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Just saw Mexico's government greenlit deployment of U.S. special forces operating within their borders. Pretty significant move when you think about it. The angle here is training and support for Mexican forces to take on the drug cartels that have basically controlled parts of the country for years.
What's interesting is how this reflects a broader shift in bilateral security strategy. Both nations are essentially saying the cartels have become too entrenched to handle alone. The U.S. special forces bringing in expertise, Mexico getting the capability boost it needs. It's the kind of international cooperation that usually stays quiet but has real implications.
The approval being unanimous is worth noting too. Suggests there's genuine political alignment on this, not just backroom dealing. When you're talking about deploying special forces across borders, that kind of consensus matters.
Looking at the bigger picture, this is about restoring stability in regions where organized crime has basically become the de facto authority. The training component is key because it's not just a temporary deployment, it's building long-term capacity. That's how you actually dismantle these networks rather than just playing whack-a-mole.
The U.S. special forces involvement sends a message too. Shows serious commitment to dismantling cartel operations rather than just managing the problem. Whether this actually shifts the balance on the ground will depend on execution, but as a strategic move, it's a clear escalation in how the two countries are tackling this.