Sophisticated Tunnel Found on US-Mexico Border as World Cup Nears
A 265-metre passage equipped with lighting and rail systems was discovered in Tijuana, spotlighting cartel tradecraft and bilateral tensions over security coordination.

A cross-border tunnel of remarkable sophistication has been unearthed in the Mexican city of Tijuana, just over a week before the football World Cup begins across North America. Mexican authorities executed a search warrant in the Nueva Tijuana neighbourhood on Saturday, revealing a 265-metre passage plunging 6.3 metres underground, complete with lighting, ventilation and an electronic sliding rail mechanism capable of transporting goods in both directions [A2]. The tunnel’s exit point is believed to emerge on a street in San Diego, California, underscoring the persistent challenge of securing the 3,100-kilometre frontier despite extensive physical barriers and heightened political rhetoric [A5].
This discovery fits a well-documented pattern of cartel adaptability. In recent months, federal operations have repeatedly intercepted refrigerated trucks on the Nayarit-to-Tijuana route, their cargoes of frozen jícamas and tomato boxes hiding hundreds of kilogrammes of methamphetamine [A3]. The tunnel represents a covert parallel to these legitimate-seeming commercial shipments, its industrial-grade infrastructure reflecting the scale of investment narco-traffickers are willing to make to circumvent border controls.
Viewed from Washington, the operation was the fruit of an investigation led by US agencies, launched as far back as December 2025. It culminated in the seizure of more than a tonne of cocaine, valued at roughly $45 million, and the arrest of four individuals [A4]. Yet in Mexico City, the attorney general’s office initially presented the find as a triumph of its own intelligence work, conspicuously omitting any American involvement. The competing narratives highlight enduring bilateral frictions, even as President Donald Trump’s border wall and his scathing criticism of Mexico frame the relationship, and President Claudia Sheinbaum accuses Washington of meddling in internal affairs [A1].
With millions of fans expected for the World Cup, the tunnel’s discovery places immense pressure on both governments to demonstrate security coordination. Analysts in London note that while the tournament may force a rare moment of public unity, underlying distrust could frustrate joint efforts. The sophistication of the tunnel suggests cartels will continue to exploit the very trade links the competition is meant to celebrate, adapting faster than politicians can build walls.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
As the World Cup kicks off in nine days across the US, Mexico and Canada, authorities discovered a giant cross-border tunnel, raising security alarms and highlighting persistent border tensions. The find recalls the sharp criticism by President Trump towards Mexico and his push for a border wall, which the tunnel appears to circumvent.
Mexican authorities uncovered a sophisticated underground passage equipped with lighting, ventilation and a rail transport system, likely used for cross-border smuggling. The tunnel runs approximately 265 meters between Tijuana and a street in San Diego, discovered during a search in the Nueva Tijuana area.
U.S. agents seized a ton of cocaine at a San Diego property linked to the tunnel, exposing a cross-border smuggling operation. Although Mexican officials initially took credit for the find, later reports revealed it stemmed from a U.S. investigation launched in December 2025, highlighting a pattern of drug trafficking concealed in agricultural shipments. A refrigerated truck carrying methamphetamine hidden among frozen jicama from Nayarit was intercepted en route to Tijuana, confirming the recurring camouflage technique.
This story appeared in
7 sources · 3 languages · 24h window