The Trump administration is weighing the use of drone strikes against Mexican drug cartels, a significant escalation in the fight against narcotics trafficking at the southern border. The proposal, still under discussion, could involve targeting cartel leaders and supply networks inside Mexico with unmanned aerial vehicles, possibly with the Mexican government’s cooperation.
Mexican drug cartels have reportedly authorized the use of explosive-laden "kamikaze drones" to attack U.S. Border Patrol agents and military personnel stationed along the southern border.
A large group of approximately 300 illegal immigrants successfully crossed the southern border from Piedras Negras, Coahuila, in Mexico, into Texas near Eagle Pass...
A high-ranking member of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), Cristian Fernando Gutierrez-Ochoa, has been arrested in Riverside, California, after allegedly faking his death...
Border Patrol agents arrested a man and his 17-year-old brother in Blythe, California after a service K-9 detected a number of semi-automatic rifles in their vehicle.
The Department of Homeland Security is monitoring more than 600,000 illegal immigrants with a criminal record, according to House National Security, Border, and Foreign Affairs Subcommittee Chairman Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI).
The aid includes weapons designed to target Russia's unnamed systems, as well as electronic warfare detection equipment, mine-clearing devices, drones, and technology to secure lines of communication.