We Started A Knife Fight in Mexico: Now We Have To Finish It
A war you start but won’t finish is a war you lose — and the cartels know it. There's no going back.
This analysis is free, but with Premium Membership you get MORE. Join today.
NOTE: Puerto Vallarta is a turning point. There’s no going back.
It has long been clear that much of Mexico is either on the cartels’ payrolls or under their threats of blackmail and death. We all understand that Mexico, an otherwise incredible country and rising economy, is nevertheless exceedingly corrupt.
It has also long been clear that the United States is the cartels’ largest market. If Americans stopped buying their product, their wealth would dry up overnight. They must do whatever is necessary to maintain the flow.
So why do we think they haven’t bought American leaders too: judges, police, even senior officials? Wouldn’t they be incompetents and fools if they haven’t? And wouldn’t it be a lot easier to explain the blind eye some turn to border security and human trafficking — not to mention a never-ending drug war that America somehow never wins — if they have? Anyone who’s ever watched Breaking Bad or Landman knows exactly what I mean.
As I have been doing for some time, my friend and former CIA clandestine officer Sam Faddis argues that we’ve now changed the rules. Donald Trump has made the drug war kinetic: in the Caribbean, in Venezuela, and now in Mexico.
It’s long past time to finish these transnational organized crime syndicates that have operated with impunity my whole life. Trump may prove to be our Eliot Ness. To do it, he might have to become our Blackjack Pershing. — RDM
by Sam Faddis
February 25, 2026
Many years ago, I was in charge of a small CIA team working with an intelligence service in an Allied country in the Middle East. We were hunting for a terrorist group that was planning on staging a series of bombings in tourist areas throughout the Mediterranean. Our job was to make sure those bombings never happened.
Ultimately, we successfully located the terrorist group in a remote area high in the mountains. The assault team went in. The key members of the terrorist group escaped and fled into the mountains. We had missed the shot. The group leader and his key personnel were still at large, and the threat still existed.
Over the course of the many weeks that followed, we hunted the group. We tracked them. We located them. We set up to take them out. Again and again, they escaped. We persisted. We followed.
Ultimately, every member of that group was tracked down and eliminated. No bombings ever occurred. No tourist ever died. We finished the job.
I don’t tell that story because I did anything particularly remarkable personally. There are any number of men and women who have served in defense of the United States of America who have done things infinitely more dangerous and infinitely more important. I cite it because it’s an example of how you have to approach things when it comes to national security in general, and in particular when you are dealing with very, very dangerous people.
We just started a fight with the cartels in Mexico. We worked with the Mexicans to take out El Mencho. The cartels responded by setting Puerto Vallarta on fire. They then moved on to demonstrating they could set much of the rest of the country on fire, too.
There is no going back now. We are in it. We have to finish the fight.
That means one hell of a lot more than just every once in a while helping the Mexicans take out any one specific leader. It means ending the era of cartel dominance in Mexico. It means winning.
We changed the rules. This is no longer a game of cat and mouse that ends in prosecutions and convictions. This is a war, and the ferocious response of the cartels, which are busy setting Mexico on fire right now, demonstrates they fully understand it.
We are going to put their people down. They are going to do the same to us. They are going to do a lot more than burn some cars in the streets and terrorize some tourists. They are going to come for us.
Let’s hope we thought that through. Let’s hope the men and women at the new Joint Interagency Task Force-Counter Cartel, which is working with the Mexicans on this problem, understand what they are in for.
The intel will get sloppy. The locations of key targets will get harder to acquire. Assault teams will inevitably hit the wrong targets. Assault teams will hit targets and find that they have been set up, and they have walked into an ambush. People will get caught in the crossfire. The cartels will live to fight another day.
The cartels are not just big gangs. They run large portions of Mexico. They own politicians, police officers, and military personnel at senior levels. We will find that a great many of the people in Mexico we are relying on are actually working for the other side.
This whole thing will get ugly and messy, and all the enemies of this administration will take every opportunity to score political points off of every setback. The American people will rapidly lose patience with missteps and casualties. They will demand a clear victory and a quick end to hostilities.
There is nothing to say that all the violence will take place on Mexican soil. As the cartels feel more threatened, they may well opt to bring the fight to us. We may see killings and bombings in the heart of our major cities.
Cornered animals are the most dangerous. They have nothing to lose. You have no choice but to kill them.
That’s where we are now. We are in a knife fight. To the death. We ended the status quo. We started a real fight. Now we have to finish it.
See Sam Faddis’s related interview with Steve Bannon on War Room:
— Sam Faddis is Senior Editor of AND Magazine, where this essay originally appeared. A retired CIA operations officer, he is a Senior Fellow of the Institute for the American Future, and a member of the Committee on the Present Danger.












Thanks for this. I’ve been watching Sam Faddis for a while. He’s always a realist and source of knowledge.
I’m not one of those risking their lives, but I have to think this is a fight worth having and worth winning. And long overdue.
Imagine if we had a peaceful, prosperous nation ally on our southern border. The Democrats worst nightmare.
Puerto Vallarta is indeed a turning point. El Mencho’s death has triggered a narco war that the United States didn’t start but must, can and will finish. Sam Faddis did a great job on this most urgent piece. They crossed a line when they went into the resorts and started spraying them with bullets. Americans and other foreign nationals including women, children, babies, and old people were put in harm’s way. The cartels used to avoid the resorts at all costs because they didn’t want to kill or injure potential costumers for their “product” that being Fentanyl. But when El Mencho was killed the gloves came off and the cartels decided to put America on notice. They just made the biggest mistake of their lives! It’s bad enough they wantonly murder Mexicans. But now they are going after our people and folks from around the world? This is unacceptable and can’t be tolerated! I have no sympathy for El Mencho. He was a monster and a mass murderer and I feel no sorrow about his death. But his death has opened a Pandora’s Box that can’t be closed except with a robust American-Mexican join response!