President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump lashes out at Pelosi on Christmas, decries ‘scam impeachment’ Christmas Day passes in North Korea with no sign of ‘gift’ to US Prosecutors: Avenatti was M in debt during Nike extortion MORE proceeded with plans to designate Mexican drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations despite pushback from numerous top aides and cabinet members, according to Reuters, citing five people knowledgeable about the matter.

Aides and advisers were concerned that the plan could damage diplomatic ties between the U.S. and Mexico and imperil Mexican cooperation with U.S. efforts to prevent illegal border crossings and drug trafficking.

Some advisers also warned such a move would complicate the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce refugee admissions, as those fleeing cartel violence would now be able to say they were escaping terrorism.

White House adviser Stephen MillerStephen MillerTwenty-five Jewish lawmakers ask Trump to fire Stephen Miller over ‘white nationalist’ comments Stephen Miller floated plan to embed ICE agents in refugee agency: report Trump campaign rips Washington Post reporter for ‘Merry Impeachmas!’ tweet: ‘What a joke’ MORE, known as one of the administration’s most hardline anti-immigration voices, was one of the aides who expressed concerns about the designation plan, according to Reuters, although he declined to comment on the record to the news service.

Trump told conservative commentator Bill O’Reilly on Nov. 26 that he planned to apply the designation but announced a temporary moratorium on the designation Dec. 9. It was unclear whether he had been briefed on the advisor recommendations before the November interview, according to Reuters.

A senior administration official told the news service the delay was a deliberate pressure tactic rather than a change of mind, telling Reuters “even the threat of designation was extremely useful leverage in terms of obtaining further cooperation.”

Mexican officials, meanwhile, have also argued that the U.S. could use a terrorism designation to intervene in the nation militarily. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador reportedly told Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrMcCabe accuses Trump officials of withholding evidence in lawsuit over firing Trump says he hasn’t thought about pardoning Roger Stone Pornography consumption: The overlooked public health crisis MORE in a Dec. 5 meeting that the Mexican constitution would not allow such interference.

Former and current U.S. officials have argued against the move, stating that a 1999 law that allows U.S. officials to designate foreign drug traffickers as drug kingpins already empowers the U.S. to impose sanctions similar to those triggered by a foreign terrorist organization designation. The designation then, would be redundant. The 21-year-old law was another key factor that contributed to postponing the designation plan, according to Reuters.

Jason Blazakis, who oversaw the designation process at the State Department’s Counter-Terrorism Bureau from 2008-2018, told Reuters that the designation could also create a precedent of conflating organized crime with terrorism.

“There are hundreds of Brazilian gangs eligible for the list. There are numerous Chinese and Russian criminal gangs eligible for the list. Where would you stop?” he told Reuters.

The Hill has reached out to the White House for comment.

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