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Nov. 3, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Courtney Kube, Dan De Luce and Gordon LuboldWASHINGTON — The Trump administration has begun detailed planning for a new mission to send U.S. troops and intelligence officers into Mexico to target drug cartels, according to two U.S. officials and two former senior U.S. officials familiar with the effort.The early stages of training for the potential mission, which would include ground operations inside Mexico, has already begun, the two current U.S. officials said. But a deployment to Mexico is not imminent, the two U.S. officials and one of the former U.S. officials said. Discussions about the scope of the mission are ongoing, and a final decision has not been made, the two current U.S. officials said.The U.S. troops, many of whom would be from Joint Special Operations Command, would operate under the authority of the U.S. intelligence community, known as Title 50 status, the two current officials said. They said officers from the Central Intelligence Agency also would participate.A U.S. mission using American forces to hit drug cartel targets inside Mexico would open a new front in President Donald Trump’s military campaign against drug cartels in the Western Hemisphere. So far, the administration has focused on Venezuela and conducting strikes on alleged drug-carrying boats. The mission currently being planned for would be a break with past U.S. administrations, which have quietly deployed CIA, military and law enforcement teams to Mexico to support local police and army units fighting cartels but not to take direct action against them.If the mission is given the final green light, the administration plans to maintain secrecy around it and not publicize actions associated with it, as it has with recent bombings of suspected drug-smuggling boats, the two current and two former U.S. officials said.“The Trump administration is committed to utilizing an all-of-government approach to address the threats cartels pose to American citizens,” a senior administration official said in response to this story.The CIA declined to comment. The Pentagon referred questions to the White House.Under the new mission being planned, U.S. troops in Mexico would mainly use drone strikes to hit drug labs and cartel members and leaders, the two current U.S. officials and two former U.S. officials said. Some of the drones that special forces would use require operators to be on the ground to use them effectively and safely, the officials said.In February, the State Department designated six Mexican drug cartels, as well as MS-13 and the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, as foreign terrorist organizations, giving U.S. spy agencies and military units sweeping legal authorities to conduct espionage and covert operations targeting the criminal networks. Trump publicly acknowledged earlier this month that he authorized covert CIA action inside Venezuela and has said his administration could strike drug cartel targets on land there.NBC News reported in April that the Trump administration was considering launching drone strikes on drug cartels in Mexico. Trump administration officials are still debating precisely how aggressive to be in Mexico as part of its fight against drug cartels, according to the two former U.S. officials and another former administration official with knowledge of the effort. Unlike in Venezuela, the mission being planned for Mexico is not designed to undermine the country’s government, the two current and two former U.S. officials said.After NBC’s story in April, Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, addressed it at a news conference. “We reject any form of intervention or interference. That’s been very clear, Mexico coordinates and collaborates, but does not subordinate itself,” she said, according to a translation provided by the Mexican Embassy to the U.S.The administration would prefer to coordinate with the Mexican government on any new mission against drug cartels, but officials have not ruled out operating without that coordination, the two current and two former U.S. officials said. Since early September, Trump has overseen a military campaign against boats in waters near Venezuela that his administration says were destined to smuggle narcotics into the U.S. The Pentagon has said 64 people, including members of Tren de Aragua from Venezuela, have been killed in 15 strikes on 16 boats in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean. Officials have not released the names or other details of those killed.The administration has produced no evidence supporting its allegations about the boats, their passengers, the cargo or the number of people killed, injured or surviving.Trump has said the strikes are sending a strong message to the cartels that they will face lethal punishment if they try to smuggle narcotics into the U.S.He’s called drug trafficking by Mexican, Venezuelan and other gangs a threat to national security, arguing that law enforcement methods — such as seizing narcotics at the U.S. border, at airports and at sea, and investigating cartel bosses and financing — have failed to solve the problem that claims the lives of tens of thousands of Americans every year.There has been both support for and bipartisan criticism of Trump’s military campaign against alleged drug-smuggling boats.Trump’s focus on Venezuela includes not only military strikes on alleged drug boats, but also a pressure campaign against the country’s president, Nicolas Maduro. The administration has accused Maduro of being a member of a drug cartel and is offering a $50 million reward for information that leads to his arrest.In Mexico, Sheinbaum already has allowed the CIA to expand surveillance flights, which began during the Biden administration, NBC News has reported. Under her leadership, Mexico has deployed 10,000 troops to the U.S. border, increased fentanyl seizures and extradited 55 senior cartel figures to the U.S.Trump’s public comments have suggested the Mexican government is unable to control the cartels.“I have great respect for the president, a woman that I think is a tremendous woman,” Trump said last month. “She’s a very brave woman, but Mexico is run by the cartels.” Courtney KubeCourtney Kube is a correspondent covering national security and the military for the NBC News Investigative Unit.Dan De LuceDan De Luce is a reporter for the NBC News Investigative Unit. Gordon LuboldGordon Lubold is a national security reporter for NBC News.

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WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has begun detailed planning for a new mission to send U.S. troops and intelligence officers into Mexico to target drug cartels, according to two U.S. officials and two former senior U.S. officials familiar with the effort



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Nov. 3, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Sahil Kapur and Brennan LeachPORTLAND, Maine — In the last three weeks, Graham Platner has faced enough damaging revelations to potentially sink just about any candidate. The Democratic Senate hopeful has apologized for past online posts making offensive comments, covered up a tattoo on his chest that has a Nazi association and lost top staff.Yet Platner is still standing.The 41-year-old oyster farmer and combat veteran spoke to a packed crowd at the State Theatre here on Sunday, counted at 745 attendees by his campaign, about his vision for “building power.”“It is amusing for me to watch the campaign described in the media as collapsing or falling apart — when internally, we frankly have not felt this strong since the beginning,” Platner told NBC News after the event. “It hasn’t sunk my campaign. In fact it seems, in many ways, it’s strengthened us.”He said that’s because he has addressed his past head-on and not run from it. “I want to talk about my evolution as a human being,” he said. “A lot of Americans also want to have hope that you can change and that you can evolve, and that we can have a society that gives grace and forgiveness to people. Because if we can’t, if we think that people are just ossified into who they are right now, and can never be something different, then what’s the point?”The Maine Senate race is shaping up to be one of the key fights of the 2026 midterms, with Platner trying to take advantage of the restlessness in the Democratic Party. A progressive populist who has the support of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., Platner is running on a platform of universal health care, housing affordability and ending U.S. involvement in foreign wars.In a wide-ranging interview, Platner addressed the scandals that have engulfed his campaign and said he’s “very proud of who I am today” after the “arcs and valleys” of his life. He inveighed against “establishment politics,” dished on his tense relationship with national Democratic leaders, made the case that he’s more “electable” than Democratic Gov. Janet Mills and explained why he went from voting for Republican Sen. Susan Collins years ago to viewing her as an empty vessel today.Platner also said he isn’t lamenting his staff departures, which include his political director and finance director.“We find ourselves now in a significantly stronger position, team-wise,” he said. “While we lost some people, we’ve kept almost everybody, and people that have stayed are galvanized and committed.”“It is amusing for me to watch the campaign described in the media as collapsing or falling apart — when internally, we frankly have not felt this strong since the beginning,” Platner told NBC News after the event.Brennan Leach / NBC NewsA dozen rally attendees — including some who supported Collins in the past — said they don’t consider Platner’s past comments disqualifying. Some voters said it gave them pause and they’re undecided; others said they accept his explanations and plan to vote for him in the primary.“It gave me pause, but I read his responses and I’m still intrigued to hear more about him,” said Emily Bukowski-Thall, of Portland, Maine.Her husband, Michael Bukowski, added, “If you look at the controversies surrounding the current president, this is nothing.”Platner responded to the pitch from Mills and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., that the two-term governor is a battle-tested and safe option to unseat Collins.“I think my ‘lack of experience’ is a positive,” he said. “People don’t want establishment politicians. People don’t want to see the same playbook run over and over and over again — a playbook which, by the way, has failed to unseat Susan Collins time after time. I firmly believe that the real risk is running an establishment candidate that is not trying something new.”In response, Mills campaign spokesperson Scott Ogden said in a statement, “Governor Mills is the only Democrat in this race who has stood up to Donald Trump, who has won two statewide elections, and who has delivered real results for working Maine families — including expanding health care to more than 100,000 Maine people, fully funding education, guaranteeing free school meals, delivering free community college, protecting abortion rights, and fighting climate change.”While some attendees at Sunday’s rally said the 77-year-old Mills is too old for their taste, Platner said that isn’t his concern: “This is not about age. It is about how old your ideas are.”Platner said he has received no outreach from Schumer or Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., the chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, or from DSCC staff. “We have made it very clear that I’m very open to those discussions. But no, no one has reached out,” he said, while adding that he would welcome the support of the deep-pocketed DSCC in a general election. “We have been very clear that we are not trying to have a friction-filled relationship, though that has been rebuffed on multiple occasions… The ball is in their court.”NBC News reached out to the DSCC for comment.Platner said he has “voted for Susan Collins at least once, possibly twice” but “it was a long time ago” — as the 72-year-old incumbent closes in on 30 years in the Senate.“I also believed back then that she was a moderate. As time has gone by, I don’t believe that. I think that’s a charade, and it’s worn thin,” he said. “I see Collins as, frankly, just another self-interested, establishment politician who uses this kind of myth of their moderation to stay in power, but doesn’t really do anything with their power. She’s the chair of the Appropriations Committee. I was told for years that when she got the gavel, there was going to be a boon of riches for the state of Maine. That is not materializing.”Graham Platner’s campaign told NBC News that 745 people were in attendance Sunday night.Brennan Leach / NBC NewsCollins spokesperson Blake Kernen noted that she has been ranked multiple times by the Lugar Center and Georgetown’s McCourt School of Public Policy as the most bipartisan U.S. senator. In addition, Collins’ Senate website highlights that she has secured more than $1 billion in congressionally directed spending for projects in Maine over the last three fiscal years.Elizabeth Lardie Thompson, an attendee of the rally from Bath, Maine, said she felt “very betrayed” by Collins after voting for her. She pointed to Collins’ support of conservative Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh and “not listening” to her constituents on health care. “I think she’s beholden to her party much more than she’s beholden to her state,” Thompson said. “I really don’t care; red, blue, whatever, but I do have a problem with how Collins has handled herself recently.”Cathay Getchell from Scarborough, Maine, also previously voted for Collins, but she said that she is concerned about the senator’s age and alignment with the “establishment” of the Republican Party. “She’s been there too long and we need a change,” Getchell said outside of the rally. Collins has picked her moments to break with the GOP, like in opposing President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” to extend tax breaks and cut Medicaid spending. But she also gives the GOP a valuable vote to ensure the Senate remains controlled by Trump’s allies. As she seeks another six-year term in this blue-leaning state, Collins is expected to run another local campaign and tout the money she has brought home to Maine.“Her primary role at this point is to function as cover for the Republicans to maintain a majority of the Senate,” Platner said. “I think that her votes on Brett Kavanaugh and her votes on RFK Jr. show that she is not interested in actually holding up the moderate side of the moderate bargain, and that we deserve better.”A few weeks ago Collins slammed Platner’s since-deleted Reddit posts from 2020 and 2021 after they were reported by CNN, calling them “terrible” and “really offensive.”“I was appalled when I read those comments,” she told Maine reporters. “First of all, as someone who comes from rural Maine, for him to have described white people living in rural Maine as racist and stupid. Just the opposite is the case.”Asked to respond, Platner said he “did not denigrate white, rural older voters.”“I did get in a fight with somebody and say that some rural white voters were stupid and racist,” he said, adding that anybody who reads those posts will see that he defends them more than he criticizes them. “I myself am a rural white voter in eastern Maine. These are my neighbors and my friends. I actually rise to their defense often and continue to do so.”“I don’t want to be flippant about it, but I was getting in arguments on the Internet … at a part in my life when I was looking for interaction and engagement, at a time where I was feeling quite isolated and alone and very disillusioned at that point,” he added. “I do not hold those feelings.”In one of his posts, Platner wrote, “I got older and became a communist.” He said he has never considered himself to be a communist and that the comment was merely “Internet shitposting — and also … if you read it’s very clear that I’m joking.”“I believe in Medicare for all. I believe in expanding the rights of workers to organize. I believe in taxing the ultra-rich. I believe in a fairer economic system,” he said. “I also know that because I believe in those things, people will refer to me as that no matter what… That’s the joke.”Sahil KapurSahil Kapur is a senior national political reporter for NBC News.Brennan LeachBrennan Leach is an associate producer for NBC News covering the Senate.
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Savewith a NBCUniversal ProfileCreate your free profile or log in to save this articleOct. 24, 2025, 9:39 AM EDTBy Arata Yamamoto and Jay GanglaniTOKYO — As Japan tries to placate President Donald Trump amid contentious trade talks, officials may be eyeing an icon of American manufacturing that has virtually no presence there: The Ford F-150 pickup truck.Trump, who is visiting the key U.S. ally next week as part of his first trip to Asia since returning to office, has long criticized the lack of American vehicles sold in Japan, citing what he believes are non-tariff barriers.Japanese auto brands such as Nissan, Honda, Mitsubishi and Subaru are ubiquitous in the United States, where Japan exported over 1.37 million vehicles last year, according to the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association (JAMA). Cars are Japan’s top export to the U.S., though according to JAMA most Japanese cars sold there are actually assembled in North America.By contrast, Japanese brands account for more than 90% of new cars sold in Japan, which imported fewer than 17,000 American vehicles last year, according to the Japan Automobile Importers Association. The Trump administration has been pushing Japan to buy more American cars, including as part of a trade deal announced in July that imposed a 15% tariff on Japanese autos and auto parts. A joint statement on the agreement published last month said Japan would allow vehicles built and certified for safety in the U.S. to be sold in the country without additional testing. In August, Trump suggested that there would soon be a market in Japan for American cars, specifically the Ford F-150.“They’re taking the very beautiful Ford 150, which does very well and I’m sure will do very well there,” he told CNBC. The model has long been the best-selling vehicle in America, according to industry outlets.Reuters reported this week that Ford F-150s were part of a purchase package being finalized to present to Trump during talks in Tokyo next week, citing two sources with knowledge of the preparations. It said the trucks might be used in Japan as snow plows. Local media in Japan have also said the government is considering buying the trucks.Japanese officials have not confirmed the reports, and the new trade minister, Ryosei Akazawa, was not asked about them at his first news conference on Friday.Akazawa, who was previously Japan’s lead trade negotiator with the U.S., said earlier this month that while Trump’s frequent mentions of the Ford F-150 suggested they were a “favorite” of his, he did not have information to share on any potential purchases by the Japanese government.Despite the advocacy by Trump, large, expensive American cars have long been a hard sell in Japan, where roads are typically smaller and narrower than their American counterparts. “Fully-sized pickups simply wouldn’t fit on Japanese roads and into the standard pay parking lots,” Mike Smitka, a member of GERPISA, an international network dedicated to the global automobile industry, told NBC News. Many of the vehicles sold in Japan are mini or “kei” cars that are far smaller and more fuel efficient than the ones produced by American automakers. They are required by law to be no more than about 11.2 feet long and 4.9 feet wide, compared with the F-150 which is typically more than 17 feet long and 6.6 feet wide. Nissan kei cars for sale in Yokohama, Japan in 2022.Stanislav Kogiku / SOPA via Getty Images fileEuropean vehicles are also far more popular in Japan than American ones, accounting for more than 200,000 imports last year. The top-selling European car brand in Japan is Mercedes-Benz. “Unlike European car companies, Ford and General Motors (GM) don’t have dedicated port facilities or dealerships,” Smitka said in emailed comments. “They’d be very expensive to import, expensive to market, and because there’s no network, expensive to service.” Ford did not respond to an emailed request for comment. In 2016, the company said that it would close all operations in Japan, saying it had struggled to gain market share and saw “no reasonable path to profitability.”“They don’t try to sell pickups because they understand the market,” Smitka said. Arata Yamamoto reported from Tokyo, and Jay Ganglani from Hong Kong.Arata YamamotoArata Yamamoto has been an NBC News producer in Tokyo since 1993.Jay GanglaniJay Ganglani is NBC News’s 2025-26 Asia Desk Fellow. Previously he was an NBC News Asia Desk intern and a Hong Kong-based freelance journalist who has contributed to news publications such as CNN, Fortune and the South China Morning Post.
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