
"Gen Z" protest in Mexico City, November 15, 2025. Photo: CNN.

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"Gen Z" protest in Mexico City, November 15, 2025. Photo: CNN.
By Kit Klarenberg – Nov 24, 2025
On November 15th, incendiary protests engulfed over 50 cities across Mexico. The Western media has universally adopted the narrative disaffected local âGen Zâ sought to vent their righteous rage against the government, over corruption, and the administrationâs purported ties to drug cartels. Footage of law enforcement clashing with demonstrators spread like wildfire, and many outlets widely emphasised how the upheaval injured at least 120 people. Few acknowledged the overwhelming majority of those hurtâ100âwere police officers.
A New York Times report made theinsurrectionary designs of those causing mayhem on Mexicoâs streets clear. âThe goal of this march is precisely to remove the President, and to show we are angry, that the people are not with her,â one protester was quoted as saying. Oddly absent from mainstream coverage of the hullabaloo was any recognition President Claudia Sheinbaum enjoys popularity of which Western leaders can only fantasise. Polls throughout her first year in office indicate 70 – 80% of the public support her.
Sheinbaum has charged the fiery demonstrations were âinorganicâ, âpaid forâ, and âa movement promoted from abroad against the government.â There are strong grounds to believe this was absolutely the case. For one, a key local amplifier of the protests, and supposed police brutality, was media outlet Animal Politico. The National Democratic Institute, a wing of avowed CIA front the National Endowment for Democracy, lists the organisation among its âpartnersâ. Mexican newspaper Milenio has documented in detail the news siteâs voluminous US funding.
Furthermore, former Mexican President Vicente Fox attended the protests, and posted extensively on social media in support of the demonstrators. In 2001, he was bestowed NEDâs Annual Democracy Award. Another prominent supporter was oligarch Ricardo Salinas Pliego, Mexicoâs third-richest man. In March 2023, in conjunction with the shadowy Atlas Network, he launched Universidad de la Libertad, to âadvance free-market principles, business development, and innovationâ in the country.
Atlas Network comprises a web of libertarian think tanks, bankrolled by major US corporations, with deep and cohering ties to Western foundations and intelligence cutouts, including NED. The Network itself doles out millions annually âsupporting pro-freedom organizationsâ worldwide. A longtime beneficiary of its largesse is the Venezuela-based Center for the Dissemination of Economic Information (CEDICE), which operated at the forefront of the April 2002 US-orchestrated coup that temporarily ousted elected President Hugo ChĂĄvez.
Fast forward to today, and Washington again appears to be plotting the Venezuelan governmentâs downfall. A huge military buildup around the country, and belligerent actions in the Caribbean supposedly intended to thwart drug trafficking operations directed by Caracas, could be harbingers of all-out invasion. The widely-admired Sheinbaum, who stands steadfastly opposed to US machinations in Latin America, represents a significant barrier to realising that goal. It stands to reason the Empire must neutralise her first, before training its crosshairs elsewhere in the region.
“Legal justification”
It may be no coincidence the foreign-sponsored upsurge of anti-government agitation that unfolded in Mexico followed not long after murmurings the Trump administration is considering inserting US forces and intelligence operatives into the country, to conduct aggressive covert operations supposedly targeting cartels. On November 3 NBCÂ reported this ânew missionâ would represent âa breakâ with the approach of past US governments, which have hitherto âquietly deployed CIA, military and law enforcement teamsâ to âsupport local police and army unitsâ battling drug syndicates:
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 boatsâŚUnder the new missionâŚUS troops in Mexico would mainly use drone strikes to hit drug labs and cartel members and leadersâŚSome of the drones that special forces would use require operators to be on the ground to use them effectively and safely.
Similar action was previously mooted in April, prompting a firm rebuke from Sheinbaum. The President declared: âThe US is not going to come to Mexico with the military. We cooperate, we collaborate, but there is not going to be an invasion. That is ruled out, absolutely ruled out.â However, NBC notes while Washington âwould prefer to coordinate with the Mexican government on any new mission against drug cartelsâŚofficials have not ruled out operating without that coordination.â
US military action being waged inside Mexico without state approval would represent an absolutely egregious and unprecedented breach of the countryâs sovereignty. Moreover, at Washingtonâs demand, Sheinbaum has already deployed 10,000 troops to the US border, significantly increased fentanyl seizures, and extradited 55 senior cartel figures Stateside. These escalations are nonetheless seemingly insufficient, raising obvious questions as to whether an ulterior motive lies behind the Trump administrationâs new mission – for which elite military and CIA personnel have apparently already begun training.
Mexicoâs âGen Z Rebellionâ Exposed as Viral Right-Wing Plot
One explanation could be Sheinbaum representing a potent barrier to regime change in Caracasâa monstrous objective for which Trump strived over much of his first term in office, that has become turbocharged over recent months. Sheinbaum haspublicly rubbished the US Presidentâs claims there is evidence linking Venezuelan leader NicolĂĄs Maduro to drug dealing, called for constructive dialogue between the pair, and repeatedly condemned extrajudicial US airstrikes on boats purportedly ferrying drugs, which have killed scores of potentially innocent people.
Those attacks, which began in September, are widely perceived to be a prelude to all-out US invasion of Venezuela, and have frequently been conducted in Mexicoâs territorial waters. In addition to openly admitting they arenât certain targeted boats are in fact ferrying narcotics, and the identities of victims are unknown, Trump administration officials have struggled to provide any legal justification whatsoever for the deadly strikes. On October 30, a classified bipartisan Congressional briefing was convened, at which government representatives attempted to explain their rationale.
Attendees from both primary US political parties âwere not happy with the level [of] information that was provided, and certainly the level of legal justification that was provided,â Republican Mike Turner complained. Meanwhile, Democrat Sara Jacobs declared, âIâm not convinced that what they said was accurate,â concluding the administrationâs strategy âis actually not about addressingâ the flow of narcotics into the US, or crushing Latin American drug smuggling networks. Her comments may be more illuminating than she intended.
“Big problems”
On top of clearing a beachhead for invading Venezuela, Sheinbaum could be earmarked for removal by Washington because, from the CIAâs perspective, the Mexican Presidentâs hardline crackdown on local cartels may be proving too successful for her own good. Within six months of taking office, police and security forces dismantled 750 drug labs across the country, arrested close to 20,000 cartel operatives, and seized over 140 tons of narcotics. Drug barons who evaded capture have been forced into hiding, while suffering multimillion dollar losses.
Markedly, these efforts largely havenât been conducted in coordination with Washington. This raises the prospect that individuals and groups ensnared by Sheinbaumâs anti-cartel crusadeâwhich has been praised in many quartersâmight one way or another have been working for and/or with the CIA. Investigations by veteran deep state researcher Peter Dale Scott reveal how since World War II, the core component of any international drug cartelâs success has consistently been maintaining a clandestine relationship with US intelligence.
Indeed, per Scott, it is difficult if not impossible to prosper in the narcotics trade without the CIAâs protection. A palpable illustration of this phenomenon is provided by the Guadalajara Cartelâs extraordinary rise. After its founding in the late 1970s, the group rapidly became one of North Americaâs largest drug suppliers. Key to its success was its covert bond with Mexicoâs Federal Security Directorate (DFS), which was created by and enjoyed a deeply intimate relationship with the CIA.
In return for a 25% cut of the Guadalajara Cartelâs profits, the ultra-violent drug syndicate was not only insulated from legal repercussions, but actively assisted by DFS. Joint US-Mexican anti-drug efforts in the early 1980s deliberately targeted solely minor traffickers, eliminating the Cartelâs competition. Resultantly, by 1982 Mexico had replaced Colombia as the Statesâ leading supplier of marijuana, and was providing up to 30% of the countryâs cocaine. All along, the CIA and DEA did and said nothing, despite full cognisance of the Cartelâs activities.
Guadalajara might still be in business today, were it not for its February 1985 kidnap, brutal torture and murder of DEA agent Enrique Salazar. Allegations the CIA and DFS colluded in his killing, to conceal their complicity in the Latin American drug trade, have long-abounded. Nonetheless, Salazarâs slaying was so sickeningly savage it led to sizeable US public andpolitical pressure for Mexican authorities to bring those responsible to justice. Within four years, several of the Cartelâs leaders were jailed, and the enterprise folded.
There is no knowing whether Sheinbaum has inadvertently trodden on the “wrong” personâs toes in her battles against organised crime in her country. Yet, the violent protests have evidently provided Washington enormously useful ammunition. Commenting on the unrest, Trump remarked, âI looked at Mexico City over the weekend. Thereâs some big problems thereâŚI am not happy with Mexico.â He added military action âto stop drugsâ there was âOK with me.â The opening salvo in a new US war may have just been fired.

Kit Klarenberg is an investigative journalist exploring the role of intelligence services in shaping politics and perceptions.
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