Ghost War South of the BorderThe CIA, the Cartels, and the Denied Lethal EdgeBy Luis González | May 13, 2026
The Last WireThere is an uncomfortable reality sitting beneath the official narrative about America’s role in Mexico’s cartel war.
Washington insists the United States only provides “intelligence support.” Mexico conducts the raids. Mexico pulls the triggers. Mexico owns the battlefield.
But history says the line between intelligence support and operational participation rarely stays clean for long.
From ATF gun-walking scandals to compromised DEA operations linked to massacres, the border conflict has already produced years of blurred authorities, covert coordination, and quiet denials. Investigations have documented how American agencies tracked cartel weapons pipelines, ran cross-border intelligence programs, and embedded deeply into counter-cartel operations while publicly insisting the United States was not “at war” in Mexico.
(CBS News)Now reports and rumors surrounding expanded covert cooperation, intelligence fusion, and possible special operations support are colliding with a larger geopolitical reality:
The cartels are no longer treated as simple criminal organizations. Increasingly, they are being discussed as insurgent networks controlling territory, logistics, and population movement.
That changes everything.
This Last Wire Special Report examines the growing shadow war south of the border, the strategic logic driving deeper U.S. involvement, and the dangerous gray zone where “advising” can quietly become participation.
Read the full article at The Last Wire.