Mexico Warns Biden About Crossing Red Line Over Americans Killed

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is cautioning U.S. President Joe Biden from intervening in matters of domestic affairs amid the latest developments in last week’s kidnapping of four Americans.
On Tuesday, Mexican officials announced that two of the U.S. citizens who were kidnapped in a Mexican border city just south of Brownsville, Texas, had been found dead. The other two were rescued and returned to the U.S. A suspect is in custody.
During his daily press conference, López Obrador addressed the news, saying that Mexican authorities were “working and cooperating” with their American counterparts, but that his government wouldn’t allow “foreign countries” to intervene.
“We don’t meddle to try to see what U.S. criminal gangs distribute fentanyl in the United States,” López Obrador said.
In light of last week’s kidnapping, some Republican lawmakers have called for the U.S. to take a more aggressive approach to the cartels on the other side of the southern border.
On Monday, Senator Lindsey Graham said he was prepared to introduce legislation that would “set the stage” for U.S. military force in Mexico and designate certain drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.
“I would tell the Mexican government if you don’t clean up your act, we’re going to clean it up for you,” Graham told Fox News.
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene has echoed these remarks, tweeting that the U.S. military should be stationed at the border and “strategically strike” to take out the cartels, which she said “control” the Mexican government and people.
“Our military is competent and should take [the cartels] out swiftly,” the Georgia Republican said. “Make an example out of these monsters.”
Matamoros, the city in the Tamaulipas state where the Americans had traveled to for last week, has been a stronghold for the drug-trafficking Gulf Cartel, which has used the city as a key pipeline for moving illegal drugs across the border.
The latest incident has drawn national attention to the violent realities that many Mexicans have lived in for years. In Tamaulipas alone, thousands have disappeared since the government declared war on the cartels in 2006 and the terror in the area has only been escalated by wars between the factions.

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