Washington, Nov 29. - The plan of the president-elect of the United States, Donald Trump, to carry out mass deportations pushes today migrants to seek protection measures and advice.
According to reports in local media, the result of the elections of last November 5, in which Trump defeated the Democrat Kamala Harris, put many in a state of panic, because the former ruler and future president promised the largest deportations in the history of the country.
Without reaching the White House, Trump continues to generate controversy for some controversial campaign promises.
On Wednesday, Trump said on his Truth Social network that he had a “productive conversation” with the president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum, in which she agreed to stop migration through the neighboring country and to the United States, “effectively closing our southern border.”
However, Sheinbaum denied it. “It has never been our approach, and of course, we do not agree with that,” she warned.
Regarding Mexico, Trump has another controversy. He intends - in accordance with his campaign promise - to attack or invade that nation in his "war" on drugs.
An article published in Rolling Stone magazine highlighted that the Trump team is asking itself "to what extent should we invade Mexico?", a question that would have previously seemed crazy for the Republican elite to consider.
But in the four years since then, many within the main power centers of the party have come to support Trump's idea of ??bombing or attacking Mexico, the magazine's material commented.
The Republican routinely (and falsely) promoted himself as the candidate who would end the "endless wars" and, paradoxically, wants to lead a new conflict south of our country's border, the article emphasized.
The proposals—of varying degrees of violent severity—include drone or aerial attacks against cartel infrastructure or drug laboratories, the sending of military trainers and “advisers” to Mexico, and the deployment of extermination teams on Mexican soil.
In addition, conducting cyber warfare against drug lords and their networks, and the sending of U.S. special forces to carry out a series of raids and kidnappings of notorious cartel figures. (Text and photo: PL)