Thursday, November 13, 2025

AMLO will cancel purchase of 8 Seahawk military helicopters

Andrés Manuel López Obrador won’t be sworn in as the next president of Mexico for more than four months, but he is already moving ahead on campaign promises.

Speaking after a meeting with his party’s elected lawmakers, López Obrador said yesterday that his administration will cancel the purchase of eight MH60R combat helicopters worth US $1.2 billion.

The Navy has ordered the eight Seahawk aircraft from the United States manufacturer Lockheed-Martin and in April the U.S. State Department authorized the sale, on the grounds that the helicopters would improve the security operations of a regional strategic partner and would aid in the fight against organized crime.

When the purchase was announced, López Obrador asked that the order be cancelled.

“That purchase is going to be cancelled because we cannot make that expenditure,” said the president-elect yesterday.

He made this announcement as he prepares for his first meeting with representatives of the U.S. government as president-elect.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Jared Kushner, senior advisor to President Donald Trump, are scheduled to travel to Mexico City tomorrow.

On the campaign trail López Obrador was critical of federal spending on military equipment.

He also plans to sell the presidential airplane, a Boeing 787 Dreamliner purchased by the federal government two years ago. The president-elect has said he would never “board that plane.” Instead he plans to continue flying on commercial flights.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
A National Guard truck drives past a sign reading Rancho Sac Lol

Remains of 16 people found in clandestine cemetery near Cancún

0
The state attorney general said forensic work is ongoing at the site, located in the municipality of Puerto Morelos.
Stolen painting returned

Painting stolen from Teotihuacán church returns a quarter of a century later

0
The sacred painting was one of 18 artworks stolen nearly 25 years ago and was finally recovered after a special organization dedicated to recovering missing art was alerted to its attempted sale at auction.

US senators push legislation that blocks water from going to Mexico

From The Texas Tribune: U.S. senators Ted Cruz and John Cornyn want to limit the United States’ engagement with Mexico after the country failed to deliver water to Texas under a 1944 international water treaty.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity