Mexican Embassy Claims ‘Strict Political Neutrality’ After Reconquista Bombshells in Peter Schweizer’s The Invisible Coup

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The Mexican embassy in Washington issued a statement this week insisting that all its activities were conducted with “strict political neutrality” and that its vast network of more than 50 consulates was needed to help Americans – a move that some Mexico observers have linked directly to the release of Peter Schweizer’s explosive book. The invisible blow.

Switzerland, a New York Times-bestselling investigative journalist and senior contributor to Breitbart News, published the book on January 20, which details the infiltration of American politics by anti-American state interests around the world, through, in part, mass migration. The Mexican government, led by the left of former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and his protégé, current President Claudia Sheinbaum, looms large in the book. Schweizer presents ample evidence that high-ranking Mexican government officials, all the way up to the presidency, openly discuss the colonization of much of the United States as a problem. reconquista – or the reconquest of territories lost to the United States almost two centuries ago.

Among the scandalous activities of the Mexican government detailed in The invisible blow These include the mass shipment of textbooks to the United States containing pro-Mexican regime propaganda, former President López Obrador touring the United States in 2017 to galvanize anti-American sentiment among Mexican migrants, and “working with U.S. policy advisors to transform legal and illegal migrants in the United States into a political force to be wielded for their benefit.”

The Mexican Embassy in Washington issued a statement dated today The invisible blowbut updated on January 24, without mentioning the book but defending itself, seemingly out of nowhere, against accusations of improper political interference.

“All consular actions are subject to the Vienna Convention and are taken with full respect for the sovereignty and laws of the United States,” the statement said in part. “Mexico maintains strict political neutrality, focusing exclusively on consular, administrative and protection functions.”

The statement defended the exorbitant number of consulates in the United States as necessary because of Americans’ allegedly prodigious demand for tourism in Mexico.

“Mexican consulates… offer guidance on travel to Mexico – tourist and business [trips] – as well as visas for investors and students,” the statement said. “According to official Mexican government statistics, in 2025, more than 14 million American tourists entered the country, reflecting the strength of ties between the two nations.”

“Mexico reaffirms its commitment to operating a responsible and legal consular network aligned with international law,” the statement concluded, “prioritizing the service and protection of Americans in Mexico as well as Mexicans in the United States.”

Mexican media highlighted the broader context of the release of The invisible blow as relevant to the embassy statement.

“Everything indicates, even if it has not been explained, that the publication of this book was the reason why the Mexican embassy in Washington issued a statement assuring that its consular network in this country maintains strict political neutrality,” writes the Mexican newspaper. Daytime observed Wednesday.

Daytime observed that U.S. law prohibits “any foreign government or individual from contributing to political candidates in this country at any level,” and that those who advance the interests of a foreign state must be registered with the U.S. government.

Outside the embassy, ​​which represents Mexico’s Foreign Ministry, an arm of Sheinbaum’s radical left political party, Morena, also responded to the book, personally attacking Schweizer on social media. A group claiming to be Morena’s New York branch responded to a video highlighting Mexico’s use of its extensive consular network by claiming that Schweizer was lying.

“This statement is false,” the Morena account responded to the video, without specifying which claim in the video it was objecting to. “Mexico and the United States are allies, friends and partners. »

Additionally, a former Mexican ambassador to America, Arturo Sarukhan, called The invisible blow ‘dangerous’, calling on Mexican government to directly address evidence against him in book, newspaper says Milénio.

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