As the Yankees pursue pitching help, for better or worse, here stands the reality about their farm system:

No one is untouchable. No one should be unattainable.

That speaks in large part to the strength of their major league roster, with positions and roles claimed for the long term. It also reflects their win-now, all-in mode; they no longer reside in the pupa stage as they did from, say, 2014 through 2017, when they protected many of their top prospects.

And, yes, it says something about the condition of their farm system, which has been drained by myriad graduations and trades yet still has more than enough to offer.

“It’s a really good system,” a talent evaluator from another team said Monday, on the condition of anonymity. “They certainly have the pieces to be aggressive.”

The top piece, diminutive right-hander Deivi Garcia, recently pitched in the Futures Game and made his Triple-A debut for Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on Monday night. As YES Network researcher/statistician James Smyth noted, Garcia, at 20 years and 57 days old, became the youngest player in Triple-A.

While the Yankees certainly wouldn’t give up Garcia for a rental like Giants legendary lefty Madison Bumgarner, a high-end pitcher with more team control — the Tigers’ Matthew Boyd? Cleveland’s Trevor Bauer? The Mets’ Noah Syndergaard? — could land the Dominican right-hander in return. Omar Minaya, special assistant to Mets general manager Brodie Van Wagenen, watched Garcia’s game Monday.

Celebrated outfielder Estevan Florial, who has struggled to stay healthy, could be had in the right deal as well, according to an industry source.

Garcia and outfielder Clint Frazier, who already has proven his ability to hit major league pitching, stand as the Yankees prospects closest to major league ready. Most of the Yankees’ top trade chips are younger and play lower in the minors.

“They’ve done a great job on the international stage of late,” the official from another team said. “Lots of power arms and toolsy outfielders.”

A top power arm didn’t come to the Yankees directly from Latin America, however. Luis Gil, the 21-year-old right-hander currently pitching for Single-A Charleston, arrived in a March 2018 trade with the Twins in return for outfielder Jake Cave. Gil is likely to be in demand, too. The Yankees’ list of internationally acquired arms include right-handers Luis Medina (20 years old, at Charleston), Osiel Rodriguez (17, DSL Yankees in the Dominican Republic) and Yoendrys Gomez (19, at Rookie level Pulaski).

Joining Florial on the list of toolsy outfielders are Everson Pereira (18, Single-A Staten Island), Anthony Garcia (18, Pulaski) and Raimfer Salinas (18, Gulf Coast Yankees). Throw in guys drafted (right-hander Clarke Schmidt, catcher Anthony Seigler) and acquired in trades (outfielder Josh Stowers), and the Yankees appear well equipped for the trade sweepstakes that has yet to begin in earnest and that might have lost a key target in the Mets’ Zack Wheeler, who went on the injured list Monday . Of course, the fact the Mets probably wouldn’t have traded Wheeler across town means this news impacts the Yankees less than other clubs looking for pitching.

Remember that the Yankees made their biggest pickup of the 2018 trade deadline, Toronto’s J.A. Happ, by getting creative and using an experienced major-leaguer, Brandon Drury as the centerpiece; Drury has been a bust for the Blue Jays. In 2017, they took on a good amount of money from the White Sox, in the forms of Todd Frazier and David Robertson, and gave up only one prospect of consequence, outfielder Blake Rutherford, to also receive Tommy Kahnle, and they swapped a pair of injured minor leaguers (Dustin Fowler and James Kaprielian) as part of a package to get the A’s Sonny Gray.

This year, the Yankees’ likely angle will be younger talent, which could work given that selling clubs like the Giants and Blue Jays don’t look to contend in the near future. We’ll find out over the next two-plus weeks whether the angle works. The early guess, though, is that they’ll land what they want — since they appear to have enough of what their trading partners want.