INTERNACIONAL
NATO places nearly $700M order for Stinger anti-aircraft missiles, official says
- NATO has placed an order for Stinger anti-aircraft missiles totaling nearly $700 million.
- The contract was signed during the NATO summit in Washington, according to Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.
- This follows a previous U.S. Army contract in May 2022 worth $625 million for Stinger missiles, aimed at replenishing stocks sent to Ukraine.
NATO has placed an order for Stinger anti-aircraft missiles worth almost $700 million in the name of several member states, the alliance’s Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Tuesday.
«Just today, the (NATO procurement agency) NSPA signed a new multinational contract for Stinger missiles worth almost $700 million,» he told a gathering of defence industry leaders on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Washington.
The last contract for Stinger missiles, made by RTX’s RTX.N Raytheon division, was awarded in May 2022.
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This was when the U.S. Army contracted $625 million worth of the anti-aircraft missiles to replenish stocks sent to Ukraine.
The shoulder-fired Stinger missiles have been in hot demand in Ukraine, where they have successfully stopped Russian assaults from the air, and in neighboring European countries which fear they may also need to beat back Russian forces.
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The NATO order for Stingers will keep the production line running through 2029, an RTX spokesman told Reuters.
INTERNACIONAL
Mexican cartels targeting Border Patrol agents with kamikaze drones, explosives amid Trump crackdown: report
Mexican drug cartels are ordering their members to target U.S. Border Patrol agents with kamikaze drones and other explosives amid a crackdown at the southern border by the Trump administration.
An internal memo titled «Officer Safety Alert» cited social media posts and other sources for the warning to federal agents, the New York Post reported. Agents were reminded to be «cognizant of their surroundings» and should be wearing their ballistic armor and utilizing their long firearms.
MEXICO AGREES TO DEPLOY 10,000 TROOPS TO US BORDER IN EXCHANGE FOR TARIFF PAUSE
«On February 1, 2025, the El Paso Sector Intelligence and Operations Center (EPT-IOC) received information advising that Mexican cartel leaders have authorized the deployment of drones equipped with explosives to be used against US Border Patrol agents and US military personnel currently working along the border with Mexico,» the memo, obtained by the newspaper, states.
«It is recommended that all US Border Patrol agents and DoD personnel working along the border report any sighting of drones to their respective leadership staff and the EPT-IOC,» it said.
Fox News Digital has reached out to the U.S. Border Patrol, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
News Nation, which first reported the memo, reported TikTok posts and other social media sites used by Mexican drug cartels have also advised illegal immigrants to spit and urinate on ICE agents and defecate in their vehicles.
Other posts have urged assassins to target border personnel.
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Last week, Border Patrol agents received gunfire from cartel members in Mexico while patrolling in Fronton, Texas, the Texas Department of Public Safety said. The cartel members fled Mexico because of a military presence and sought refuge on an island between Mexico and the U.S., DPS said.
The warning comes as the Trump administration has launched deportation raids targeting illegal immigrants with criminal records and enacted tougher measures to secure the southern border.
Cartel leaders have realized a proactive U.S. presence on the border could cut into their drug and human smuggling profits, the memo showed, according to the Post.
Last week, U.S. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, suggested the idea of the U.S. green-lighting private parties to target drug cartels for profit.
«Congress could issue letters of marque and reprisal authorizing private security firms or specially trained civilians to intercept cartel operations, particularly those involving drug shipments or human trafficking across borders,» Lee wrote on X. «Focus on disrupting supply lines, capturing high-value targets, or seizing assets like boats, vehicles, cash, gold, or equipment used in criminal activities.»
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Lee suggested it would lower costs to American taxpayers, since privateers would be paid a portion of what they capture and bring back to the U.S.
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