The Trump administration officially informed Congress that the United States is currently engaged in a “non-international armed conflict” with drug cartels, which have been reclassified as “terrorist organizations.”
In the memo, the administration asserts that acts of trafficking and violence by those cartels amount to armed attacks on U.S. sovereignty. The designation provides legal cover for recent U.S. military strikes on vessels in the Caribbean, where at least seventeen people have died, according to official tallies.
Under the new framework, cartel operatives intercepted in these operations are being labeled “unlawful combatants,” and the Pentagon is authorized to conduct future strikes under the law of armed conflict. Critics, however, raise concerns over constitutional and international legal limits on presidential authority to wage such operations without explicit Congressional approval.
This decision marks a dramatic escalation in U.S. counterdrug efforts—blurring lines between law enforcement and military action, and opening fierce debate over the balance of power between the executive branch and lawmakers.
