Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

How Narco Drones Turn Mexico's Cartels Into A Low-Cost Air Force


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Mexican cartels are importing drone-warfare tactics from Ukraine, turning cheap quadcopters into battlefield tools in the drug war.
  • Narco drones now threaten civilians, security forces and border security while governments struggle to keep up with technology criminals adopt first.
  • A legal and technological gray zone around drones and anti-drone systems is letting organized crime build its own low-cost“air force.”

    Mexican drug cartels have entered a new phase of conflict in which air power fits inside a backpack. What began as smugglers using hobby drones to ferry drugs over the U.S. border has evolved into a low-cost air war featuring explosive“kamikaze” drones, homemade munitions and anti-drone rifles in cartel hands.

    Ukraine's battlefield sits at the center of this shift. Foreign volunteers, including some Mexicans and Colombians, have joined units in Ukraine and trained in FPV (first-person-view) drone tactics, explosives and electronic warfare.

    They then carry that knowledge back to Latin America, where techniques used against Russian armor are adapted to strike rival gunmen and security forces.



    On the ground in Mexico, cartels now use commercial quadcopters for far more than smuggling. Defense data show hundreds of explosive drone attacks since 2020, concentrated in states like Guerrero, Michoacán and Tamaulipas.

    Many involve cheap Chinese drones fitted with improvised steel tubes packed with gunpowder, shrapnel or even C4. FPV pilots steer these devices directly into vehicles, houses or rural encampments, turning them into guided missiles for a few hundred dollars.

    The air war cuts both ways. Cartel factions linked to Sinaloa have reportedly bought Chinese-made jamming guns and other anti-drone systems through legal loopholes in the United States, using them to shield drug labs and safe houses from army drones and rivals.

    Security forces respond with their own drones and jammers, but they often move slower than criminal innovators and face tighter political and legal constraints.

    For residents in contested areas and communities along the U.S.–Mexico border, the result is growing insecurity from weapons that are easy to buy, hard to regulate and simple to learn.

    The more governments hesitate or underinvest, the more cartels and armed groups will shape this low-cost sky.

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  • The Rio Times

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