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U.S. Military Waited for 40 Cartel Trucks to Enter - Then This Happened...

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According to the report, at 11:47 p.m. in the Arizona desert, a 40-truck convoy linked to the Sinaloa cartel entered a narrow canyon—unaware that U.S. forces had been monitoring it for days. With MQ-9 Reaper surveillance overhead, SEAL Team 6 positioned on the ridges, and an AC-130J gunship on station, the U.S. military launched a coordinated interdiction. In less than 30 minutes, dozens of cartel members were taken out of action, 19 suspects were taken into custody, and large quantities of illegal drugs and cash were seized. This video explains the mission timeline, the technology behind the operation, and why the detention of a senior lieutenant marked a turning point in counter-cartel strategy.


Their mistake was thinking they could scare or defeat the USA soldiers. This country was born of war and has always fought. One thing the USA knows very well is War, and now the cartels. Hoping the US police and military will wipe out the drug cartels anywhere in the world.

 
It’s true that the United States has unmatched military capabilities, and operations like the one you described show just how advanced their surveillance and strike coordination really are. The cartels may be ruthless, but they are not equipped to face the level of technology and training that elite units like SEAL Team 6 and the Air Force bring to the table. That said, I think it’s important to remember that while tactical victories like this can significantly weaken a cartel in the short term, the larger issue is much more complex.
Cartels thrive because of demand, corruption, and deep-rooted economic problems in the regions where they operate. Even if a convoy is destroyed or a lieutenant is captured, the organization often finds someone else to step in. For real long-term impact, operations need to be paired with strategies that target the financial networks, recruitment pipelines, and cross-border flows that keep these groups alive.ence and strategy, not numbers.
 
Summarized the above video over on Google Gemini....

The video, titled "U.S. Military Waited for 40 Cartel Trucks to Enter - Then This Happened...", details a calculated military operation against a major Sinaloa cartel convoy that had crossed into the Arizona desert. The operation, which the video claims occurred on July 14th, 2025, involved a meticulously planned ambush designed to neutralize the cartel's network and capture its leadership:

The Convoy's Entry
--A massive, heavily armed convoy of the Sinaloa cartel, consisting of around 40 trucks, crossed the US border into a secluded canyon in Arizona [00:00].
--The convoy was transporting an enormous haul, including 2.4 tons of methamphetamine, 500 kg of fentanyl, and over $50 million in cash [01:35].

Setting the Trap
--US forces, including Navy SEALs, AC-130J Ghost Rider gunships, and Reaper drones, deliberately allowed the convoy to enter a narrow, pre-selected canyon, which served as a "kill zone" [02:16].
--For seven days prior, SEAL teams had prepared the canyon by burying Claymore mines, camouflaging seismic sensors, and concealing infrared cameras [02:40].
--At 1:14 a.m., the convoy, carrying more than 60 gunmen, was trapped inside the corridor, as US electronic warfare jammed all their communications [04:35].

The Ambush and Capture
--The ambush began at 1:21 a.m. when Claymore mines detonated, destroying the first three vehicles [09:00].
--The AC-130J Ghost Rider immediately engaged, using its 30mm cannon and 105mm howitzer to rain fire and disintegrate the convoy [09:27]. Navy SEALs simultaneously opened fire from the canyon ridges [10:16].
--The primary objective, besides destroying the shipment, was the capture of the Sinaloa lieutenant in charge, known as El Gallo [11:30].
--US forces utilized a Black Hornet UAV to confirm El Gallo's location inside a reinforced Ford Raptor [11:58]. The Ghost Rider then used surgical strikes to disable the vehicle, allowing SEAL Team 6 operators to move in and capture El Gallo alive, along with his encrypted devices [14:46].

Aftermath
--The battle was over in 27 minutes [16:06]. The results were 47 cartel gunmen dead, 19 captured (including El Gallo), and all 40 vehicles destroyed [16:21].
--The capture of El Gallo was considered a crucial intelligence win against the Sinaloa cartel's US operations, piercing the "myth of Sinaloa invincibility" [15:59].

As much as I love seeing cartel members sent to their next lives, I have one major problem with this: this didn't happen as the Youtube channel "Military Power" alleges, per Gemini...
The operation described in the video—a full-scale kinetic ambush on US soil (Arizona) involving active-duty military units like Navy SEAL Team 6, AC-130J gunships, and Claymore mines—is not a confirmed, factual military operation and appears to be a highly sensationalized or fictional narrative created by the YouTube channel "Military Power."

Here is the breakdown based on US law and official context, which supports your observation:

1. The Posse Comitatus Act
You are correct. The Posse Comitatus Act (18 U.S.C. § 1385) is a federal law that generally prohibits the use of the Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, and Space Force for domestic civilian law enforcement purposes, such as making arrests, searches, or seizures.

The operation described in the video—which involved SEALs and gunships engaging in a firefight and capturing a suspect (El Gallo)—falls squarely within the definition of prohibited core law enforcement activities. An action of that scale and violence, deep inside US territory, would be an unprecedented violation of the Act.

2. The "Terrorist" Designation
The context you provided about a terrorist designation is relevant but does not override the Posse Comitatus Act for this type of domestic operation:

--Designation Purpose: While reports indicate the administration has signed orders directing the military to prepare options against cartels, potentially by designating them as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) or similar groups, the primary effect is to grant greater authority for foreign intelligence collection, targeted sanctions, and possibly military action overseas.
--Domestic Law: Such a designation does not automatically give the military license to conduct large-scale kinetic operations on US soil. For the military to take over domestic law enforcement, the President would typically have to invoke the Insurrection Act—a politically extreme measure usually reserved for suppressing rebellion or large-scale civil disorder.
--Actual Military Role: The military's authorized role along the border, even with the escalation of cartel activity, is limited to support functions for civilian agencies like Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and the DEA. This includes intelligence, logistics, and surveillance, not direct engagement or law enforcement.

In summary, the detailed account of an AC-130 gunship and SEAL Team 6 operation in an Arizona canyon is inconsistent with both the Posse Comitatus Act and the established rules governing military engagement on domestic ground, indicating the content is purely speculative entertainment.
In other words, its' ginned up BS y'all. America has enough civilian law enforcement to deal with the cartels on U.S. soil, thank you very much.
 
Because of President Trump, many drug cartels were traced from state to state in the USA. It is crucial if it is the next president is a democrat, Hoping it will be Vance, the next US president, not a Democrat who cannnot solve crimes and drugs.
 
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