Translation result
[Herald Economy = Reporter Jang Yoon-woo] Two CIA officers who were involved in a raid to dismantle an illegal drug cartel manufacturing site in Mexico died in a car crash, U.S. and Mexican authorities said.
On April 21 (local time), the Washington Post and the Associated Press reported that two U.S. embassy staff identified as CIA agents died in a crash on April 19 while returning from an operation that destroyed a cartel production facility in northern Chihuahua.
Chihuahua Attorney General César Jáuregui said the vehicle “slid on a steep mountain road at night, plunged into a ravine and then exploded.” Two Mexican investigators from the Chihuahua state attorney general’s office were also killed.
CNN reported that the CIA officers and the Mexican investigators were traveling on the Chihuahua–Ciudad Juárez highway after completing a drug operation in Morales when their vehicle crashed. Jáuregui called the lab “one of the largest chemical drug-production sites discovered in the country.”
U.S. and Mexican officials have offered conflicting accounts of the incident. Jáuregui initially said U.S. agents directly participated in the operation, but he later walked back that claim, saying U.S. agents were not at the site securing the facility and had joined the operation several hours later at a different location. The CIA declined to comment.
The AP said the discrepancy in statements between U.S. and Mexican authorities has reignited controversy over deeper U.S. involvement in Mexico’s security operations under the Trump administration.
Mexican security analyst David Souse told the AP that covert U.S. operations inside Mexico have increased under the Trump administration. He said the Mexican government officially rejects the presence of armed U.S. agents on Mexican soil, yet has tried to conceal aspects of the cooperation.
President Claudia Sheinbaum said at a press conference that officials are investigating whether the Chihuahua government’s coordination with the U.S. violated the national security law. She said she did not know whether the Americans who died were CIA, but acknowledged the state government had been working “together” with the U.S.
According to CBS News, Sheinbaum noted that “state governments must obtain federal approval under the constitution to cooperate with foreign countries like the United States.”
The AP reported that the CIA has recently stepped up cooperation with Mexican authorities as part of the Trump administration’s efforts to curb illegal drugs. President Trump has repeatedly pressured Mexico to intensify cartel crackdowns. Sheinbaum faces the dual challenge of maintaining a working relationship with the Trump administration while defending Mexican sovereignty.
U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ronald Johnson posted on X that “two embassy staff and the head and an officer of the Chihuahua investigative agency died in the crash.” He did not say whether the embassy staff were CIA.











Most Commented