DiscoverTask & PurposeThe US designated more terrorist groups in 2025 than in the last 10 years combined
The US designated more terrorist groups in 2025 than in the last 10 years combined

The US designated more terrorist groups in 2025 than in the last 10 years combined

Update: 2025-11-18
Share

Description

This year alone, the U.S. government designated 19 groups as terrorists, a massive spike compared to the last decade. Several are criminal organizations allegedly involved in trafficking drugs.





Of those designated as Foreign Terrorist Organizations by the State Department this year, eight are drug cartels, such as Cártel de Sinaloa, Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación, Cártel del Noreste, La Nueva Familia Michoacana, Cartel del Golfo, Carteles Unidos, Tren de Aragua, and Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13).





Most recently, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that the U.S. plans to designate a twentieth foreign terrorist organization on Nov. 24, yet another drug cartel: Cártel de los Soles.





President Donald Trump’s administration has accused Venezuelan strongman Nicolas Maduro of leading Cártel de los Soles, describing it as a major criminal organization that seeks to “flood” the United States with illegal narcotics





“President Trump is using every possible measure to bolster US national security and protect our homeland against foreign terrorists seeking to harm Americans,” White House spokesperson Anna Kelly told Task & Purpose. “These terror designations enhance the administration’s ability to support law enforcement and rob these groups’ ability to seek financial and other support.” 





In contrast, the State Department designated a total of 18 groups as foreign terrorist groups in the decade prior to the start of Trump’s second term. The next highest number of designations took place in 2018, when six groups were added to the list. No new groups were designated terrorist organizations between December 2021 and Trump’s return to office.





Based on interviews with Latin America and military experts, the sharp rise in designations could indicate that the Trump administration increasingly views narcotics traffickers as a problem that requires a military solution. And that could open the door for wider military action in Venezuela and elsewhere in Latin America.





‘No different than al-Qaida’ 





Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has cited the designations of cartels as terrorists to defend ongoing strikes against suspected drug operations in the Caribbean and Pacific, routinely referring to those manning the fishing boats as “narco-terrorists.” 





“A foreign terrorist organization poisoning your people with drugs coming from a drug cartel is no different than al-Qaida — and they’ll be treated as such, as they were in international waters,” Hegseth said in September while visiting Fort Benning, Georgia.





Officially categorizing groups as foreign terrorist organizations doesn’t “magically” authorize the use of military force, which is the job of Congress, said Brian Finucane, a former State Department lawyer who advised on counterterrorism operations and current senior adviser for the International Crisis Group. However, the Trump administration has unilaterally decided to strike targets without approval from federal lawmakers, he added.





Rather, the designation authorizes visa restrictions for group members and associates and makes it a crime to knowingly provide support to those organizations with money, weapons and training, a senior administration official said.







Top Stories This Week







“But politically, this administration has used these designations to pave the way for military action,” said Finucane, who noted that the State Department designated the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, IRGC, as a foreign terrorist organization in 2020, which preceded the drone strike that killed its commander, Qasem Soleimani.





Finucane said that other colleagues of his at the International Crisis Group have even questioned whether Cártel de los Soles officially exists and if Maduro is at the helm.





“The administration has referred to not just the people on these boats as blowing up in the Pacific and the Caribbean as narco-terrorists, it’s also referred to Maduro himself,” Finucane said. “This is a further potential stepping stone to military action and an attempt by the administration to delegitimize him.” 





Meet the new war. Same as the old war.





Since 2001, the majority of U.S. designations have been related to Global War on Terror operations and included nearly three dozen Islamic extremist groups. Those have ranged from more-established groups in the Middle East like al Qaida and the Islamic State, to offshoots like Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISIS-K) and others operating in parts of Africa like al-Shabaab and Jama’at Nusrat al-

loading
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

The US designated more terrorist groups in 2025 than in the last 10 years combined

The US designated more terrorist groups in 2025 than in the last 10 years combined

Patty Nieberg