Trump's fentanyl WMD order prompts US-China cooperation talks, Canada outreach

Following President-elect Donald Trump's executive order last week designating fentanyl a 'weapon of mass destruction,' analysts note it aligns with ongoing US-China anti-drug efforts without straining ties. Canada is separately seeking deeper collaboration with China to curb fentanyl precursors entering North America.

Trump's executive order, signed on December 15 amid honors for border-securing troops, frames fentanyl trafficking by cartels as a national security and terrorism threat, warning of its potential weaponization for mass attacks. It directs top officials—including secretaries of state, defense, and homeland security—to intensify responses, building on prior cartel designations and maritime strikes.

Though not naming countries, the move underscores fentanyl's deadliness (as little as 2mg lethal) and addresses emerging synthetics like nitazenes. Trump highlighted 200,000-300,000 annual US deaths, though official data shows lower overdose totals.

Analysts view the WMD label as 'not necessarily bad' for US-China relations, given bilateral cooperation on the opioid crisis amid tensions over trade and Taiwan. Separately, Canada's fentanyl tsar Kevin Brosseau told Bloomberg his nation wants closer ties with China to block precursors, stressing it's collaborative, not accusatory.

The order escalates federal tools against cartels, potentially aiding international partnerships to stem cross-border flows.

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President Trump signs executive order designating illicit fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction, honoring U.S. troops securing the Mexico border.
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Trump signs order classifying illicit fentanyl as weapon of mass destruction

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