If you haven't been scammed there'd be nothing to report, especially if the messages originate overseas. Sending SMS messages inviting you to click a link isn't illegal - it's the later part where the scam actually happens that is illegal.
Don't answer read the messages or answer the calls. Easy. Or get something like Bitdefender; I get the same messages as you showed but Bitdefender immediately recognises them and diverts them to a scam file, before the incoming message tone has even finished and from where they can be deleted.
Don't worry about it, no one cares who you ignore and it has no effect, whatsoever, on anyone but you. I suppose, though, that it does give you something to pompously crow about when you make the "new addition to my Ignore List" announcements.
But he didn't "serve their wars all over the world"! Why should the Embassy set a precedent by funding the repatriation of a citizens/remains, something that it is not there for nor has the authority to do?
Just in case what? The mainstream retail banks won't go down that route, but, so what if they did, they're private businesses, it would be their prerogative to do so
"Mule" accounts, not "mute" accounts. A mule account is an account opened by an individual who is paid to do so, the passbook and card for which is then passed on to a third party for, usually, nefarious use. Your accounts are neither "mute" nor "mule".