Marco Rubio threatened Taliban leaders in Afghanistan for kidnappings of Americans

The Secretary of State, Marco Rubiothreatened on Saturday to offer rewards for Taliban leaders in Afghanistandramatically raising the tone by saying that there may be more Americans detained in the country than previously believed. The threat occurs days after The government of Afghanistan and the United States will exchange prisoners in one of the last acts of former US President Joe Biden. The new US chancellor issued the harsh warning through social media, in a rhetorical style strikingly similar to that of his boss, President Donald Trump. “Just hearing that the Taliban has more American hostages than reported,” Rubio wrote in X. “If this is true, we will have to immediately put a VERY LARGE reward on his top leaders, perhaps even larger than what we had on Bin Laden,” he said, referring to the al Qaeda leader killed by US forces in 2011. Rubio did not describe who the other Americans may be, but there have long been accounts of missing Americans whose cases were not formally considered by the government to be unjust detentions. In the deal with the Biden administration, the Taliban released the most well-known American detained in Afghanistan, Ryan Corbettwho had been living with his family in the country and was captured in August 2022. He was also released William McKentyan American about whom little information has been disclosed. The United States, in turn, freed Khan Mohammed, who was serving a life sentence in a California prison. Mohammed was convicted of trafficking heroin and opium to the United States and accused of seeking rockets to kill American troops in Afghanistan. The United States offered a $25 million reward for information leading to the capture or death of Osama bin Laden shortly after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and Congress later authorized the Secretary of State to offer up to $50 million. of dollars. No one is believed to have collected the reward for bin Laden, who was killed in a US raid in Pakistan. Keep reading:· The State Department imposes an immediate pause on US foreign aid.· Marco Rubio will visit four Central American countries with the mission of ending immigration· Marco Rubio promises González Urrutia support to restore democracy in Venezuela

Republican Giménez threatens a military attack on Mexico similar to Afghanistan after ultimatum to end cartels

Extreme positions among Republicans are advancing by leaps and bounds, even for attacking a strategic ally and main trading partner like Mexico. The representative Carlos Giménez (Florida), of Cuban descent, threatened to support a United States military attack in Mexicosimilar to what happened in Afghanistan, after issuing an ultimatum that they must end the cartels in two weeks. “I would give Mexico two weeks to do the job, and if they can’t do it, then we have to do it,” Giménez said on Fox News. “We have to protect American citizens. Hey, Stuart, they’ve been killing hundreds of thousands of Americans, and they’re doing it knowingly. (…) they are poisoning us. So, yes, we have to go find them and we have to wipe them off the face of the Earth.” The presenter expressed that this was a radical position, but Giménez stated that the United States launched attacks in Afghanistan after the death of 3,000 Americans, in reference to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. “We were at war for 15 years and Al Qaeda killed 3,000 Americans,” he said. “These Mexican cartels (…) are killing hundreds of times more than that. And they are on the other side of the border. So yes, we have to go find them and wipe them off the face of the earth.” Giménez defended that President Donald Trump will order naming cartels as Transnational Terrorist Organizations (FTO, in English). “We are very happy that they are terrorists and have been designated terrorists,” he said. However, the appointment as FTO to cartels and other criminal organizationslike Tren de Aragua and MS-13, is not yet effective, as President Trump called for a framework to support the designation, to determine if it is viable and how it should be done. Mexico has expressed that it will not allow unilateral military attacks by the United States and will defend its territory and sovereignty, which is why it asked to maintain cooperation against organized crime. Even Secretary of State Marco Rubio said at his confirmation hearing that he preferred to increase cooperation with Mexico against cartels rather than appointing them FTO, due to the complications that would entail. Experts have pointed out that the national and international legal framework of FTOs is complex and can have an impact even on legally established companies. Giménez, however, does not talk about the criminal groups that distribute drugs in the United States, money laundering or arms trafficking from this country to Mexico that empower the cartels. Keep reading:· Trump’s first orders on immigration and border: deportations, Remain in Mexico and cartels as terrorist groups· Donald Trump will eliminate birthright citizenship· Trump is officially the 47th President of the United States: I will implement an emergency on the southern border

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