XINHUA

Mexico is currently in contact with the United States over the potential impact of designating drug cartels as terrorist groups, Mexican Foreign Relations (SRE) Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said Wednesday, Nov. 27.

The proposal floated by U.S. President Donald Trump has worried both officials and average citizens in Mexico, who fear the measure might entail imminent military intervention by U.S. forces.

“Already in communication with the U.S. government. We will undertake diplomacy of national unity to defend our sovereignty and own decisions,” Ebrard posted on Twitter.

In a radio interview with conservative U.S. commentator Bill O’Reilly on Tuesday, Nov. 26, Trump said he would “absolutely” designate Mexican drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, a step his administration has been working on for the past three months.

“I have been working on that for the last 90 days. You know, designation is not that easy. You have to go through a process and we are well into that process,” said Trump.

Following the broadcast, Ebrard responded via Twitter that Mexico would not accept any measures that “mean violating its national sovereignty.”

SRE also issued a media release stating that Mexico will seek high-level talks with Washington to discuss the matter.

As early as March of this year, Trump mentioned the possibility of including the cartels on the terrorist list.

The proposal gained traction again earlier this month, after the massacre of a U.S. Mormon family in northern Mexico. The shocking crime saw cartel hitmen slaughter women and children in a hail of bullets.

The Mormon community on Sunday sent a letter to the White House asking for the cartels to be designated as terrorists.