🇲🇽 “Operation Wetback”: The History They Don’t Teach Us
Posted by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita – Adventurez In Mexico
I don’t usually post political topics here on this blog — this space is about celebrating life, culture, beauty, and connection in Mexico.
But today I feel like I must break that rule — because too many people don’t know this story. And it matters deeply.
💥 What Was “Operation Wetback”?
In 1954, the U.S. government launched a massive deportation campaign called Operation Wetback — yes, they used that slur as the actual name of the program.
Under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, U.S. authorities rounded up and deported over 1 million Mexicans — many of them legal residents, and even U.S. citizens.
People were taken from their homes, schools, and workplaces with no due process.
Some were dumped in the desert without food or water.
Families were ripped apart.
Deaths occurred.
All in the name of “order” and “jobs.”
🧑🏽🌾 It Started During WWII
During World War II, the U.S. needed labor. So they launched the Bracero Program in 1942, allowing Mexican workers to legally enter and fill agricultural jobs while American men fought overseas.
Over 4 million came through official channels — but U.S. farms still wanted more cheap labor, and undocumented migration increased, often at the invitation of employers.
But after the war, everything changed.
Fear. Racism. Political pressure.
Suddenly, the very workers they welcomed were called a "problem."
And so, in 1954, Operation Wetback was born.
😢 A Legacy of Pain and Silence
Most people don’t know this history.
It’s barely taught in schools.
And when it is remembered, it’s often sanitized.
But the trauma still lives in families — and in the policies that came after.
It’s not ancient history.
It’s the same system that created today’s border walls, ICE raids, and family separations.
😬 Trump Praised It
In 2015, Donald Trump praised Operation Wetback on national TV — saying:
“They moved them out, and it worked.”
He was born in 1946, raised in Queens, New York — in a wealthy, segregated neighborhood where policies like this were seen as “normal.”
He didn’t invent the system.
But he inherited it.
And tried to bring it back.
🌵 Why I’m Sharing This
Because I love Mexico.
Because I’ve lived among kind, hardworking, beautiful people here.
Because I believe truth matters, and history must be faced.
And because algorithms and sanitized media make it too easy to forget or never learn these uncomfortable truths.
🙏 Let’s Remember, Together
If you’ve never heard of Operation Wetback — it’s okay.
Many haven’t.
But now you know.
Let’s not bury it again.
Let’s talk about it.
Let’s honour the lives it affected.
Let’s build something more just, more compassionate.
📚 Resources to Learn More:
- History.com – Operation Wetback
- Smithsonian – The Bracero Program
- Harvest of Empire by Juan González – a must-read on Latino history in the U.S.
🌎 With love, respect, and the hope that truth will set us free,
—Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita