
by Karen Faulkner, Worthy News Correspondent
(Worthy News) – In a significantly more aggressive approach to dealing with Mexican drug cartels, Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum recently sent thousands of troops and heavy weaponry to quell an eruption of intra-cartel violence in Sinaloa state, Reuters reports.
While Sheinbaum had said she intended to follow in the footsteps of her predecessor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in adopting the “hugs not bullets” approach of dealing with social root causes rather than targeting cartels, the newly elected first female and Jewish president to lead Mexico appears to be taking a tough stance toward the drug lords instead.
Some experts have suggested the new approach follows US President-elect Donald Trump’s threat of imposing tariffs on Mexican products if illegal immigration and drug trafficking from Mexico to the US are not brought under control, Reuters reports.
Other experts have said the “hugs not bullets” strategy has failed and a new approach was required. The US ambassador to Mexico, Ken Salazar, has publicly asserted the soft approach did not work and that “Mexico is not safe.”
“There is a change without a doubt … we are seeing signs that the strategy of hugs and not bullets is on the way out,” Vicente Sanchez, a security expert and member of Mexico’s National System of Investigators, told Reuters.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
A leading Dutch Jewish voice and longtime politician has filed a police complaint against the British punk-rap duo Bob Vylan, after the band’s frontman appeared to urge violence against Jews and to celebrate the recent assassination of born-again Christian influencer Charlie Kirk during a controversial concert in Amsterdam.
President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that the Republican Party will host the first-ever Midterm National Convention in 2026, an unprecedented move in U.S. political history.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee on Monday formally opened the restored Pilgrimage Road in Jerusalem’s City of David, the ancient thoroughfare once used by Jewish worshipers ascending to the Temple Mount during the Second Temple era.
A pastor in Southern California was shot and killed inside his home, authorities and church members said, shocking a close-knit evangelical community in the rural town of Ramona east of the city of San Diego near the U.S.–Mexico border.
Ukraine says Russia’s military has bombarded the southern city of Zaporizhzhia with rockets overnight, killing one person and wounding 13 people, including two children, while another person died and several were injured elsewhere in the country.
The United States and the United Kingdom are set to unveil a wave of major nuclear energy agreements during President Donald Trump’s state visit to Britain this week, in what both governments are calling the start of a “golden age” of nuclear power.
Archaeologists in Turkey have uncovered a 2,050-year-old Roman council hall etched with early Christian carvings, offering fresh historical insight into the biblical church of Laodicea–one of the seven congregations addressed in the Book of Revelation.