
Is Mexico safe to visit? What travelers should know
Under the update, the U.S. is advising travelers to cooperate if stopped at a road checkpoint, and risk being hurt or killed if they try to flee, push back on, or ignore instructions. They should also avoid traveling after dark or alone, especially in remote areas.
It warns that if travelers get in trouble, U.S. government assistance and emergency services are limited in many parts of Mexico, especially those that are remote, rural or high-risk.
Although Mexico has long been a popular vacation spot for Americans, it's seen a string of warnings by the U.S. government this year. In March, the U.S. Embassy in Mexico posted a warning for those visiting spring break hotspots, including Cancun and Puerto Penasco. Most recently, in June, it cautioned travelers of kidnappings tied to dating apps.
Is it safe to travel to Mexico?
It varies based on where travelers are going in Mexico, with some states identified by the State Department to have a higher safety risk than others. The State Department breaks down advisories into four levels, from Level 1 warning people "exercise normal precautions" down to Level 4, meaning "do not travel" there.
The two states with a Level 1 advisory, indicating the lowest safety risk, are Campeche and Yucatan, home to the famous Chichen Itza archaeological site. Some of the most popular Mexican destinations have a Level 2 advisory - telling travelers to "exercise increased caution" - such as Mexico City and Quintana Roo, where Cancun, Playa del Carmen and Tulum are located.
Several states are under a Level 4 advisory due to "a risk of violence in the state from terrorist groups, cartels, gangs and criminal organizations." Homicides and shooting incidents in which U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents have been victims have taken place. These states are Colima, Guerrero, Michoacan, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas and Zacatecas.

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14 hours ago
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Spectator
21 hours ago
- Spectator
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Imagine if the cartels started doing that with the thousands of US nationals – expats, retirees, corporate executives or embassy officials – that are in Mexico. Jimmy Carter lost his election in 1980 because of the 50 plus American hostages in Tehran. Imagine if they took hostages in Mexico and started sending back a finger or a limb each week.' This won't be the first time Trump has let loose the dogs of war on drug peddlers, blowing apart the Taliban's heroin labs with warplanes in his first term. And yet, two decades of occupation failed to dislodge Afghanistan as the number one smack producer in the world. 'They're using a military solution to an economic problem,' said Tree. 'If you're fighting terrorists, they have a political objective and a command structure so they can order their footsoldiers to stand down and lay down their weapons. If you apply this strategy to drug cartels, you're actually making the drugs more valuable. You're amplifying the motivational feedback loop of the people you're trying to stop. So the question becomes then not if you're going to continue making money smuggling drugs, but how much money are you going to make? There's no command structure of the international drug economy that says OK everyone, surrender now, we've had enough.' The potential for collateral damage is high. Tree pointed to US-sponsored counternarcotics efforts in Peru, where the army shot down suspected narco planes in the jungle. That practice ended after the Peruvians accidentally downed an aircraft carrying an American missionary and her daughter. Then there's Mexico's fierce patriotism to consider. One origin story for the word 'gringo', as Mexicans call Yanks, dates back to the 1846-48 Mexican-American war, when American soldiers marched past crowds of Mexicans on the street chanting 'green, go home!' 'Mexican nationalism is largely defined in opposition to its powerful northern neighbour,' explained Gunson. 'The Mexican government has made it clear that it would never give permission for any form of military action by the US on Mexican soil. If Trump were to go ahead despite Mexico's refusal it would bring about the most severe crisis in US-Mexican relations in living memory, with repercussions throughout the region and beyond.' Another possibility is striking Mexican cartels' affiliates in third countries such as Ecuador, where Blackwater chief Erik Prince has been spotted tagging along on drug busts. The situation with Venezuela is somewhat different. The US has directly accused Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro of running drugs through the Cartel of the Suns, and the Tren de Aragua gang of carrying out hits on his behalf, such as the murder of dissident Ronald Ojeda in Chile. 'There are two competing foreign policy factions wrangling over Venezuela within the Trump administration,' Gunson explained. 'The faction led by Marco Rubio favours 'maximum pressure' to force Maduro from power, while that led by special envoy Ric Grenell is focused on extracting advantages for the US regardless of who is in power in Caracas. Trump is much closer to the Grenell line, and much of the rhetoric about Maduro's alleged links to drug trafficking and terrorism is designed to enable the hardliners to keep their constituents happy, rather than indicating any genuine intention to move against the Venezuelan government. While the Maduro government is indeed corrupt and there are high-ranking Venezuelan officials linked to organised crime, the allegations themselves are overblown.' For now, however, the criminals are not too concerned. 'I don't think so about Trump invading Mexico,' said a high-ranking member of the Sinaloa Cartel. 'Is not so easy as he says.'