President
Claudia Sheinbaum and her inner circle have been grappling with the right tone to strike in the country’s response to the
Venezuela strike for fear of antagonizing the White House.President
Claudia Sheinbaum of
Mexico has tried to thread a narrow diplomatic needle in the aftermath of the U.S. strike in
Venezuela.Credit...Luis Antonio Rojas for The New York TimesJan. 11, 2026, 5:01 a.m. ETSince President Trump took office and began pressing
Mexico to crack down on drug cartels, President
Claudia Sheinbaum has projected confidence in the two nations’ bilateral relationship while defending Mexican sovereignty.But in the aftermath of the U.S. strike in
Venezuela, Mr. Trump’s threats of military action against
Mexico have grown more direct. He said in a
Fox News interview on Thursday night that the
United States would “start now hitting land, with regard to the cartels,” specifically those in
Mexico.The interview came days after the capture of
Venezuela’s president,
Nicolás Maduro, and left Ms. Sheinbaum and her inner circle agonizing over the right tone to strike in the country’s response and every message going forward, knowing the White House would be closely watching, according to three senior Mexican officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity given the sensitive nature of the situation.Mexican officials for months watched with unease as Mr. Trump floated the idea of “helping” to dismantle drug cartels — including having boots on the ground or targeted strikes — but many aides thought the threats were mostly bluster, two officials said. They believed that the two countries’ deep economic ties and improved security cooperation would shield
Mexico from unilateral action.ImageA demonstrator held an image of Ms. Sheinbaum at a protest on Saturday supporting
Venezuela and opposing U.S. intervention in
Latin America.Credit...Luis Antonio Rojas for The New York TimesBut that assumption has been shattered, the officials said.“When we saw what they did in
Venezuela, it made us think, ‘Oh boy, this is more serious than we thought, and we are on the list of who could be next, and worse, we have been warned,’” said one senior government official, who also requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak freely.In the past few days, Ms. Sheinbaum has tried to thread a narrow diplomatic needle: rejecting U.S. military intervention in
Venezuela — and by extension any suggestion of similar action in
Mexico — while avoiding language that could provoke the U.S. president.But the Trump administration has already shown it was unhappy with some of Ms. Sheinbaum’s words.Hours after the strike in
Venezuela, the Mexican president posted a passage on X from the U.N. charter that says countries should refrain from using force against the sovereignty of another nation. The White House responded with a clip of Mr. Trump saying in a television interview that Ms. Sheinbaum was “a good woman, but the cartels are running
Mexico.”ImageA rally in support of
Nicolás Maduro in Caracas,
Venezuela, this month. Ms. Sheinbaum has been acutely sensitive to her country being linked to the ousted Venezuelan president.Credit...The New York TimesThe response made Mexican officials quickly realize they had to rethink how to communicate their position and, as one aide put it, proceed with absolute caution.The morning after the
Fox News interview, Ms. Sheinbaum said she had directed the Mexican foreign minister to speak with his American counterpart, Secretary of State Marco Rubio.Ms. Sheinbaum has repeatedly tried to play down the threat of U.S. military intervention in
Mexico. But on Tuesday, she admitted that the U.S. designations of fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction and cartel groups as terrorist organizations may give the Trump administration “more elements” to justify it.Now, Ms. Sheinbaum — who must also appease her leftist political party that holds a large majority in
Mexico, and has never outright condemned Mr. Maduro — has little room for error in balancing how far
Mexico can assert its convictions without paying a price, the officials said.Part of the Mexican government’s concern is the indictment charging Mr. Maduro, which mentions
Mexico 25 times.ImageMembers of the Mexican Navy guarding a crime scene on the outskirts of Sinaloa,
Mexico, in June.Credit...Adriana Zehbrauskas for The New York TimesU.S. prosecutors have charged Mr. Maduro with narco-terrorism and conspiracy to import cocaine and accused him of partnering with drug traffickers, including the powerful Mexican Sinaloa Cartel, to ship cocaine to the
United States through
Mexico. They also say Mr. Maduro facilitated the movement of drug money back to
Venezuela from
Mexico.Ms. Sheinbaum is acutely sensitive to her country being linked to Mr. Maduro, and even bristled publicly at a major Mexican newspaper for featuring those accusations on its front page.To gauge the level of risk
Mexico might face, the country’s officials spent much of last week analyzing Mr. Trump’s every word. Ms. Sheinbaum’s team tracked how often
Mexico was mentioned in U.S. media coverage, comparing those references with those of other countries, including Colombia, Greenland and Cuba.A chart compiled by the president’s team and reviewed by The New York Times showed that mentions of
Mexico rose steadily from the day of the
Venezuela attack but then dropped sharply after Monday, as references to Greenland — a territory Mr. Trump has vowed to seize — surged.The official who shared the chart expressed relief that
Mexico was, for now, out of the spotlight.Despite the unified public front
Mexico has sought to project, sharp disagreements have emerged within the cabinet over how carefully its reaction to the U.S. strike in
Venezuela should be calibrated, three officials said.ImagePresident Trump at a meeting with oil and gas executives at the White House on Friday.Credit...Tierney L. Cross/The New York TimesThere is broad agreement that
Mexico should oppose the U.S. attack and Mr. Maduro’s seizure, in keeping with international law and the country’s longstanding doctrine of nonintervention. But officials and analysts said that expressing that position without triggering diplomatic repercussions has become a high-wire political act.Some cabinet members worry that Ms. Sheinbaum’s repeated public condemnations of the attacks in
Venezuela may backfire, according to one Mexican official and one person close to the administration with direct knowledge of the disagreements. Top aides are particularly concerned about its effect on ongoing tariff negotiations, as well as on the planned review of the
United States-
Mexico-Canada free trade agreement this summer, the officials said.Over the past year, Mr. Trump has cited illegal immigration and drugs, specifically fentanyl, as justifications for tariffs on
Mexico.Mexican officials fear that the heightened threat of unilateral military action gives Mr. Trump even greater leverage in negotiations and, in the event of a U.S. strike, could have disastrous economic consequences for
Mexico, the
United States’ largest trading partner.“The president is boxed in on all sides,” said Jesús Silva-Herzog, a political analyst in
Mexico City.ImageA train from
Mexico crossing into the U.S. in Laredo, Texas, in February. Ms. Sheinbaum argued that the economic ties and security relationship between the two countries were too deep to unravel.Credit...Gabriel V. Cárdenas for The New York TimesMr. Trump said that he had repeatedly offered Ms. Sheinbaum to send the U.S. military into her country to help combat the cartels. But she has consistently rejected that to preserve Mexican sovereignty and in favor of cooperation.Ms. Sheinbaum tried to reassure the public that such threats are Mr. Trump’s “way of speaking,” arguing that the economic ties and security relationship between the two countries were too deep to unravel.Her government nevertheless moved aggressively to demonstrate its attention to security, further policing the border, arresting thousands of cartel members, seizing large quantities of drugs including fentanyl and raiding drug labs. They also handed over at least 55 high-level traffickers long sought by U.S. authorities.
Mexico expanded intelligence sharing and formal security coordination with Washington, and last month aligned itself further with the
United States by imposing tariffs on imports from countries including China.Still, the Trump administration has continued to push
Mexico to do more.Two Mexican officials said the country’s main focus now was to emphasize its commitment to the
United States by hitting the cartels even harder. The Sheinbaum administration could and should go after — and even turn over to the
United States — Mexican officials suspected of ties to organized crime, one official said.As another official put it, actions speak louder than words.Jack Nicas contributed reporting.James Wagner covers news and culture in
Latin America for The Times. He is based in
Mexico City.SKIP