Claudia Sheinbaum resists handing over her corrupt officials to the U.S.; in Central America, critics point to the complicity of Nasry Asfura’s new government with Washington’s interventionism

14ymedio, San Salvador, Federico Hernández Aguilar, May 11, 2026 — Two enormous scandals are currently shaking Hispanic America: the so-called Hondurasgate, in the country located at the very center of the continent, and the formal request by the United States to Mexico to extradite a group of senior officials from the ruling party, Morena, in the state of Sinaloa. Both cases are of enormous importance and could demonstrate the existence of extensive criminal networks and political clientelism in the region.
Perhaps because the media outlets that have reported Hondurasgate are clearly ideological in the way they handle the news — something I allow myself to point out with the same ease with which those same outlets label opposing media as “conservative” or “far-right” — the revelation of compromising audio recordings involving former president Juan Orlando Hernández and current Honduran president Asfura, along with other public figures in that country, has not had in Central America the impact it should have had. And that is a shame.
A media outlet’s political subjectivity is not sufficient reason to ignore everything it says, especially when it presents evidence. Nor should we be naive and think that large media conglomerates tend toward objectivity by definition. What is regrettable is that ideological tug-of-war intervenes so deeply in journalism that colleagues accuse each other of “pushing agendas,” each forgetting that free expression protects their work and that people themselves, according to their own conscience and education, will reward each outlet with their attention and preference.
A media outlet’s political subjectivity is not sufficient reason to ignore everything it says, especially when it presents evidence
In the case of Hondurasgate, for example, the recordings can be freely heard on the very platform that published them. And it is very difficult to deny the credibility of these 37 leaks. The voices of those involved are there, clear, with their unmistakable tones and inflections. In those exchanges, Hernández and Asfura appear willing to facilitate the installation of a network of U.S. and Israeli interventionism in Honduras, something that would explain why Donald Trump pardoned the former and supported the latter in the most recent presidential election.
Certainly, the shameless way in which the President of the United States supported Asfura at the end of last year’s campaign, almost at the same time he released Hernández — sentenced to nearly half a century in prison for drug trafficking crimes — would have a real underlying reason: turning Honduras into a regional hub for systematic interventionism, including electronic surveillance, lucrative investments, political interference, and citizen control.
The matter goes much further and would prove several hypotheses. Former president Xiomara Castro, of course, would like us to buy the thesis that fraud was committed against her party, but the truth is that Libre candidate Rixi Moncada never gained traction in the polls and barely managed a distant third place, with less than 20% of the vote. No. What these conversations reveal is that the old Honduran two-party system, made up of the National Party (of Hernández and Asfura) and the Liberal Party (now in opposition), is susceptible to corruption at the highest level, involving electoral authorities, legislators, businessmen, and even gangs of drug traffickers and hitmen.
From this entire plot there would also emerge a supposed warning to Mexico, because the broader plan allegedly includes the creation of digital structures for attacks and smear campaigns against the “progressive” governments of Claudia Sheinbaum in Mexico and Gustavo Petro in Colombia. There is no doubt that Trump does not sympathize with Sheinbaum, but let us be frank: he does not need any sophisticated machinery to undermine her government. She herself seems willing to do that work without her adversaries even asking. To illustrate this, let us look at the clumsy way the president is handling her own domestic scandal.
In force since 1980, the United States and Mexico have an extradition treaty that stipulates the procedures through which criminals will be exchanged between the two nations. Using this historic bilateral agreement, a formal 34-page indictment issued by a Grand Jury in the Southern District of New York and therefore not subject to manipulation by the White House is now asking Mexico for the arrest and extradition of about ten public officials from the state of Sinaloa.
In force since 1980, the United States and Mexico have an extradition treaty that stipulates the procedures through which criminals will be exchanged between the two nations.
Just as in 2025 other alleged perpetrators of crimes related to drug trafficking, bribery, and organized crime — Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada, the Treviño brothers, or Abigael González, to mention a few — were sent through the same process, today the Mexican Attorney General’s Office should proceed with the arrests of those accused without demanding any additional evidence beyond the indictment itself, because the legal cycle of accusation does not require any further element, since the evidence will naturally be presented during the corresponding trials.
But now Claudia Sheinbaum, instead of taking advantage of the opportunity to rid herself of so many discredited figures, has chosen to wrap herself in the Mexican flag, claiming sovereignty, and with a speed worthy of a better cause has backed the Attorney General’s Office over which she does have influence in demanding proof from its northern neighbor against the officials from her party who are implicated. The scandal threatens to grow and become the Watergate of Mexico’s ruling establishment.
As things appear to be unfolding, simple moral principles may end up being more decisive than stale ideologies. “Left” and “right” are merely labels, wrappers, shells… The old misery of human nature prevails.
Translated by Regina Anavy
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