Latin America Hears Washington’s Old Drug War Drums Beating Again
Washington is again asking Latin America to fight drugs with soldiers. The language sounds familiar, but the region beneath it is not. After Venezuela and fresh threats of unilateral action, the old script returns with sharper edges and fewer illusions.
An Old Language With New Boots
At US Southern Command in Miami, the message landed with the blunt force of something meant to be remembered. Pete Hegseth, the US defence secretary, told defence leaders from countries aligned with Donald Trump that America was prepared to go on offence alone if necessary. The preference, he said, was to do it together. But the warning sat inside the invitation. Cooperate, or Washington may move anyway.
That matters in any region. In Latin America, it lands differently.
Hegseth’s remarks did not arrive in a vacuum. They came after months in which the Trump administration used the language of the “war on drugs” to justify strikes on small boats that killed 152 people and a long military build-up along Venezuela’s borders. They came after the capture of Nicolás Maduro, described here as the first US ground military attack on a South American country. They also came after Trump later admitted that his main objective was Venezuela’s vast oil reserves. That admission strips away a layer of official language and leaves something colder underneath.
The rhetoric at the conference was just as revealing. Stephen Miller, the White House homeland security adviser and a figure many see as one of the main advocates of the attack on Venezuela, argued that drug cartels can only be defeated with military power. He dismissed a criminal justice solution and said these organisations should be treated as brutally and ruthlessly as Isis and Al-Qaida. It is hard language. Deliberately hard. The kind of language that turns a social, financial and political problem into a battlefield where almost every answer begins to look like force.
Latin America has heard this before. That is part of the problem. The trouble is not only that the script is old. It is that the old script has already been tested, funded and repeated across decades, with billions of dollars in military aid to allies, while cocaine production reached a record high and global drug prices fell to historic lows. The numbers in the notes do not suggest success. They suggest endurance. An expensive endurance, measured not in solutions but in bodies, headlines and the next operation.
The Empty Seats Said Plenty
The room in Miami had 16 Latin American and Caribbean countries represented. Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Chile, Paraguay, El Salvador, Honduras and the Dominican Republic were among them. But Colombia, Mexico and Brazil did not attend. That absence is not a side note. It may have been the clearest fact in the whole gathering.
Those three countries hold a significant share of drug production or trafficking, according to the notes. So while the conference was named the 2026 Americas Counter Cartel Conference, some of the biggest countries tied to the problem were not in the room. That leaves an awkward picture. A military strategy was being pitched in the region’s name without three of the countries most central to the region’s narcotics reality.
What this does is expose the political shape of the conference. It was not simply about cartels. It was about alignment. Hegseth was speaking to countries aligned with Trump. The message was regional, but the room was selective. That distinction matters because military cooperation is never just technical. It draws new lines of loyalty. It creates insiders and outsiders. It asks governments to define not only who their enemies are, but whose language they are willing to borrow.
David Marques, programme manager at the Brazilian Forum on Public Safety, pushed back on exactly this point. He called the exclusively military approach “a very absurd simplification” and argued that military power alone is not sufficient because narco-trafficking runs through complex transnational supply chains. His warning feels less ideological than practical. If the fight is not multidimensional, he said, it will be fruitless and produce only death and spectacular, politically sellable actions, with very little efficiency against the business supposedly being targeted.
That line deserves to linger. Spectacular, politically sellable actions. Latin America knows that formula too. Troops move. Speeches harden. Images circulate. The business adapts.

What the Monroe Doctrine Still Means
Earlier in the week, the US and Ecuador announced joint operations against drug trafficking groups, though few details were disclosed. Analysts noted that US military advisers have long been active across the region. Again, there is that familiar rhythm. New packaging, old footprint.
Then Hegseth invoked the Monroe doctrine, praising what he called its simple wisdom. In the United States, that may sound like strategic clarity. In Latin America, the phrase carries another history. The doctrine’s “America for Americans” framing, set out in 1823, was later invoked to justify US-backed military coups in the region. Words like that do not travel lightly southward. They arrive with memory attached.
So does the rest of Hegseth’s appeal, with its call for countries to remain “Christian nations, under God,” with strong borders and resistance to “radical narco-communism, anarcho-tyranny … and uncontrolled mass migration”. This is more than security language. It blends culture, religion, migration and ideology into a single threat picture. That can be politically effective. It can also flatten whole societies into a front line.
For Latin America, the wager here is not only about how to fight cartels. It is about whether the region is being asked, once again, to accept an outside militarized framework for problems that are rooted in inequality, transnational money, state weakness, political convenience and demand far beyond its borders. Mexico’s experience, Marques noted, already points to the limits of using armed force against cartels for decades without positive results.
That is why this moment feels bigger than one conference in Miami. It touches sovereignty. It touches memory. It touches the old suspicion that when Washington says security, Latin America may soon be asked to pay in territory, autonomy and grief. The language is back. The flags are different, the staging is updated, but the underlying offer feels painfully familiar.
For Latin America, that is the warning inside the warning: when Washington speaks of drugs, the region hears soldiers, oil, borders and the old right to intervene speaking all over again.
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