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Mexico expels 26 alleged Cartel members in the latest deal with us Donald Trump News star-news.press/wp

The delivery agreement comes at a time when Mexico continues to cooperate with the Trump administration despite its identification threats.

Mexico expelled 26 members of a high -level cartoon to the United States, in another deal with the administration of President Donald Trump.

The transfer was confirmed through a joint statement from the Office of the Mexican Prosecutor and its Ministry of Security on Tuesday.

The statement said that the US Department of Justice had sought to surrender and that it had given guarantees that the death penalty was not imposed on any of the two courts.

This transport comes at a time when the Trump administration continues to exert pressure on Mexico to take more measures against criminal gangs involved in drug trafficking and human trafficking.

Part of this pressure campaign came in the form of a tariff, with some Mexican exports of the United States that are now tax at a higher rate.

Trump has Described Import tax as a necessity for Mexico accountable for “responsibility” for “the extraordinary threat posed by foreigners and illegal drugs.”

In response, Mexican President Claudia Xinbum has a precise balance when dealing with Trump, and cooperation in some security issues, with clear lines when it comes to the sovereignty of her country. This strongly included any American military intervention on the Mexican soil.

However, the American media reported last week that Trump has secretly signed an order directing the army to take action against drugs that suffer from drugs and other criminal groups from Latin America, which can deploy the deployment of American forces at the local and abroad.

The move on Tuesday was the second time in the last months that Mexico has expelled the alleged members of the criminal gangs by the United States.

In February, Mexico handed over 29 alleged cartals, including Raphael Caro Quintro, accused of killing a drug control management worker (DeA) in 1985.

This deal came at a time when Trump threatened to impose a 25 percent tariff on Mexican imports, but the scope of the tariff threatening later was reduced.

Currently, the United States imposes a 25 percent tariff on Mexican cars and products that are not covered by the previously existing free trade agreement, the USMCA Agreement (USMCA). Mexico also faces a 50 percent tax on its steel, aluminum and copper products.

But at the end of July, Trump agreed to extend the tariff exemption for goods that fall under the United States and Mexico-Canada agreement for a period of 90 days.

The Associated Press News Agency reported that Abiegel Gonzalez Valencia, the leader of “Los Quinnes”, a drug tracking group that is closely consistent with the new CJng Gallisco generation (CJng), among those who were expelled to the United States in the last deal.

The Trump administration has taken the unconventional step to appoint CJng and seven other Latin American crime groups as “foreign terrorist organizations” when it takes office.

Valencia is the son -in -law of CJng Nemesio Ruben “El Mencho” OseGuera Cervantes, who is considered one of the most wanted people in Mexico and the United States.

Valencia has been arrested in February 2015 in Mexico and since then has been fighting its delivery to the United States.

A source said to the news agency that another individual, Roberto Salazar, is accused of participating in the killing of the Vice May of Los Angeles Province in 2008.

https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/2025-08-08T163849Z_779726577_RC2M3FA4M4XS_RTRMADP_3_USA-MILITARY-CARTELS-1755036896.jpg?resize=1920%2C1440

2025-08-12 23:37:00

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