U.S. And Mexico Move To Choke Off The Gun Pipeline Fueling Cartel Violence
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) For years, the most lethal supply line in the Americas has run south: guns bought legally in U.S. stores, trafficked across the border, and used in crimes in Mexico. Now both governments say they're finally attacking the problem at both ends.
They've launched“Mission Firewall,” a plan to expand gun tracing and ballistic matching across all 32 Mexican states, step up U.S. southbound inspections, and run more joint investigations with real-time data sharing. The initiative was unveiled at the first meeting of a new U.S.–Mexico Security Implementation Group.
The mechanics matter. Mexico will scale up eTrace-the U.S. system that follows a recovered firearm back to its first retail sale-and widen use of ballistic-imaging technology that links shell casings across crime scenes.
That turns a single seizure into a map of networks: who bought the guns, which stores and straw buyers are involved, and which routes smugglers use.
On the U.S. side, customs officers will increase outbound checks for rifles, pistols, parts, and high-capacity magazines, converting more“border finds” into cases that prosecutors on both sides can pursue together.
The story behind the story is pressure and timing. Tracing data in recent years has shown a large share of traceable crime guns recovered in Mexico originated in the United States, while headline-grabbing seizures at ports like El Paso underscored how much hardware still slips through.
Previous efforts-task forces and“southbound” operations-produced arrests but struggled to scale. Mission Firewall tries to fix that by standardizing tools nationwide in Mexico and wiring investigators together across the border from day one.
Why this matters, in plain terms: fewer guns crossing south means fewer military -style shootouts, fewer police ambushes, and fewer families caught in crossfire.
Success will look like this-more guns traced to their first buyers, more networks indicted, and a visible rise in southbound seizures-followed by something harder to see but more important: a steady drop in the firepower available to the cartels.
The next few months will show whether the new wiring between labs, prosecutors, and border posts can make that happen.
They've launched“Mission Firewall,” a plan to expand gun tracing and ballistic matching across all 32 Mexican states, step up U.S. southbound inspections, and run more joint investigations with real-time data sharing. The initiative was unveiled at the first meeting of a new U.S.–Mexico Security Implementation Group.
The mechanics matter. Mexico will scale up eTrace-the U.S. system that follows a recovered firearm back to its first retail sale-and widen use of ballistic-imaging technology that links shell casings across crime scenes.
That turns a single seizure into a map of networks: who bought the guns, which stores and straw buyers are involved, and which routes smugglers use.
On the U.S. side, customs officers will increase outbound checks for rifles, pistols, parts, and high-capacity magazines, converting more“border finds” into cases that prosecutors on both sides can pursue together.
The story behind the story is pressure and timing. Tracing data in recent years has shown a large share of traceable crime guns recovered in Mexico originated in the United States, while headline-grabbing seizures at ports like El Paso underscored how much hardware still slips through.
Previous efforts-task forces and“southbound” operations-produced arrests but struggled to scale. Mission Firewall tries to fix that by standardizing tools nationwide in Mexico and wiring investigators together across the border from day one.
Why this matters, in plain terms: fewer guns crossing south means fewer military -style shootouts, fewer police ambushes, and fewer families caught in crossfire.
Success will look like this-more guns traced to their first buyers, more networks indicted, and a visible rise in southbound seizures-followed by something harder to see but more important: a steady drop in the firepower available to the cartels.
The next few months will show whether the new wiring between labs, prosecutors, and border posts can make that happen.

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