"Transnational Criminal Organizations — whether they are gangs, drug trafficking cartels or terrorist groups — are a scourge," Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who will lead the new task force, said alongside Sessions on Monday. "They sow violence and sell poisonous drugs. They bribe public officials and fuel corruption. They terrorize law-abiding citizens."
While the groups named Monday are responsible for violence and criminal activity in the US and the region, experts have differed with the Trump administration's assessment of them.
Former Justice Department officials have told Business Insider that Sessions overstates the influence of and threat posed by MS-13.
While the gang's members have committed heinous acts in the US, their crimes mostly target immigrant communities. Though the group's members in the US have contact with leaders in Central America, the organization itself is decentralized and largely involved in crimes like extortion, drug possession, and homicide, as it isn't powerful or organized enough for transnational drug-trafficking.
Mexico's cartels also have a presence in the US, as the DEA has documented. But what they do in the US appears to be vastly different from what they do in Mexico.
"The cartels use gang members. They use individuals that are living here in the United States to basically do the distribution and the logistics here in the United States," Mike Vigil, former director of international operations for the DEA, told Business Insider in 2017.
Even as violence in Mexican border cities has risen over the past decade, violence in US cities next to them has been below-average. And incidents of cartel-related violence in the US have usually been limited to people with ties to the cartels (though there have been cases of mistaken identity).
Hezbollah is also active in the US, but it appears largely focused on fraud and money laundering. Throughout the region, the group's activities appear limited to financial and logistical support for the organization based in Lebanon.
Intelligence officials have also disputed assertions by US politicians that the Venezuelan government is collaborating with Hezbollah and other militant groups.
"The whole Hezbollah line has been distorted for political purposes by the more extreme elements of the US right wing," a former CIA senior official told Reuters earlier this year.