Share this @internewscast.com

President Trump pledged to deploy U.S. military strength against drug cartels and foreign terrorist groups operating in the Western Hemisphere by signing the Americans Counter Cartel Coalition agreement with representatives from seventeen other nations.
“The path to defeating these foes lies in harnessing the full might of our military forces,” Trump stated on Saturday.
Addressing delegates from the 17 participating countries, he emphasized, “We must leverage our military capabilities. You must utilize your military forces as well.”
Before finalizing the proclamation at the Shield of Americas summit in Doral, Florida, Trump praised the Coalition as “a commitment to employing decisive military force to dismantle the nefarious cartels and terrorist groups.” He also highlighted the U.S. military’s “incredible arsenal” and urged Latin American countries to pinpoint the locations of cartel members.
“We require your assistance,” Trump urged the Latin American attendees. “Simply inform us of their whereabouts.”
Supporting Trump’s stance, Secretary Pete Hegseth reiterated in Doral that the “Action Coalition is a gathering of nations with shared goals, prepared to combine their strengths under American leadership to tackle the cartel issue, which has long been mistakenly tolerated as a new norm in our countries.”
“President Trump and the American people rejected that [on] our own we don’t have to live with communities flooded with drugs or violence or cartels and gangs. We can seal our border and we have to for our citizens, we share a hemisphere and geography,” he said.
Trump, in a White House statement, proclaimed that criminal cartels and foreign terrorist organizations operating within the Western Hemisphere “should be demolished to the fullest extent possible consistent with applicable law,” and that the U.S. alongside its allies should coordinate to “deprive these organizations of any control of territory and access to financing or resources necessary to conduct their campaigns of violence.”
“I look at our region — if I can call it that — as being very important. It’s been abandoned by the United States for so many years. You know, they went so far away they went to these far away places where they weren’t even wanted,” the President said at the sumit.
The Coalition will “train and mobilize partner nation militaries to achieve the most effective fighting force necessary to dismantle cartels and their ability to export violence and pursue influence through organized intimidation,” and keep external threats at bay, Trump said in the statement.
Though he didn’t name China directly, Trump wrote in the statement that the proclamation is determined to “malign foreign influences from outside the Western Hemisphere,” a pointed reference to Beijing’s ongoing economic and military presence in Latin America.
The newly-established commitment to continuing dismantling cartels in more than a dozen Latin American countries comes after Trump ordered the U.S. military into Ecuador this week, targeting narco-terrorist groups.
The U.S. Southern Command announced that U.S. and Ecuadorian forces launched a joint operation against suspected narco-terrorists in the country on Tuesday, saying it was taking “decisive action” against designated terrorist groups.
“The operations are a powerful example of the commitment of partners in Latin America and the Caribbean to to combat the scourge of narco-terrorism,” SOUTHCOM posted on X.
Just last month, SOUTHCOM announced it had carried out three strikes targeting narco-terrosits, killing 11 people in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific.
To date, the U.S. has conducted at least 43 strikes on suspected drug-smuggling vessels within the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific, killing 150 people.