McCormick calls on the military to crack down on fentanyl trafficking

By MARC LEVY

STEELTON, Pa. (AP) — The Republican challenger trying to flip the U.S. Senate seat in swing state Pennsylvania has said he will push for U.S. military action in Mexico to target fentanyl trafficking networks, a controversial and complicated idea that seems to have emerged from former President Donald Trump.

David McCormick, who is challenging Democratic Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania, is making the idea part of his plan to combat the fentanyl scourge, which is playing a major role in the campaign and has been at the center of the dueling TV ads in the United States. States. race.

The idea of ​​using the military attracted attention during last year’s Republican Party primaries, before Trump emerged as his party’s presidential candidate for the third time in a row.

But now McCormick — a decorated military veteran and ex-hedge fund CEO who served on Trump’s Defense Advisory Council — is testing the message of unilateral U.S. military action in Mexico in a state that could be decisive in determining which party takes over the White House. wins. and a majority in the Senate in the November elections.

McCormick is considering using the U.S. military’s drones and special operations teams in Mexico to destroy cartels in the fentanyl trade, though he insists the military must be deployed “selectively and thoughtfully.”

“I’m not saying we’re going to send the 82nd Airborne Division to make a jump into Mexico,” McCormick said. “What I’m saying is that the combination of special operations and drones, I think, could wipe out the manufacturing facilities, destroy the distribution networks and put a real dent in what is a terrorist activity.”

Andrés García, left, and Christina Smallwood, Border Patrol and public affairs officers, search for migrants under the McAllen-Hidalgo International Bridge for vehicles in Hidalgo, Texas, early Friday, August 9, 2024. (Verónica Gabriela Cárdenas/The Texas Tribune via access point)
Andrés García, left, and Christina Smallwood, Border Patrol and public affairs officers, search for migrants under the McAllen-Hidalgo International Bridge for vehicles in Hidalgo, Texas, early Friday, August 9, 2024. (Verónica Gabriela Cárdenas/The Texas Tribune via access point)

Military action is justified, McCormick says, by what he calls “the biggest killer in our country.” The U.S. should not wait for a blessing from a Mexican government that has failed to address the problem of fentanyl production and trafficking, he said.

“So the time for negotiating with the Mexican government to get their DEA on this is over,” McCormick told an audience in September. “We have to take tough action against it. And that’s what I would do.”

The idea gained widespread attention when Trump’s former Defense Secretary Mark Esper said in 2022 that Trump had asked him about firing missiles into Mexico, a precedent-setting idea that Esper and other defense officials quickly dismissed.

The idea gained cachet among some Republican lawmakers last year and Trump embraced it, saying, “Now is the time for America to go to war against the cartels.”

Trump’s then-competitors on the Republican presidential campaign trail also embraced the idea, but that talk has died down. Legislation to authorize military authorization has not yet received a committee vote in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives, and while McCormick’s proposal lacks specifics and reflects an idea Trump put forward, it goes beyond what most – if not all – other Senate candidates around the world say. US

Critics of the US military’s deployment to Mexico say such operations would do little to harm the cartels or stem the flow of fentanyl, while raising delicate questions about sovereignty.

For example, they could destroy relations with the U.S.’s largest trading partner, whose just-departed President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has repeatedly denied that Mexico produces the synthetic opioid, despite significant evidence to the contrary.

Casey has neither criticized nor supported the idea of ​​deploying the U.S. military in Mexico. Instead of. he has noted his support for measures in Congress to strengthen screening at border checkpoints.

Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., speaks during a campaign event with union members in Philadelphia, Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., speaks during a campaign event with union members in Philadelphia, Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

According to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the vast majority of fentanyl seized is brought into the United States by U.S. citizens at the southern border.

McCormick and other Republicans compare fentanyl deaths to combat losses in the Vietnam War: about 110,000 drug overdose deaths each of the past two years, in which fentanyl was the primary culprit two-thirds of the time, compared to 58,000 reported U.S. victims in the war.

“What we are experiencing now is unprecedented,” he said. “The numbers are beyond imagination in terms of what we are experiencing now.”

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