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The Mexican drug war is an ongoing asymmetric armed conflict between the
Mexican government The Federal government of Mexico (alternately known as the Government of the Republic or ' or ') is the national government of the United Mexican States, the central government established by its constitution to share sovereignty over the republ ...
and various drug trafficking syndicates. When the
Mexican military The Mexican Armed Forces () are the military forces of the United Mexican States. The Spanish crown established a standing military in colonial Mexico in the eighteenth century. After Mexican independence in 1821, the military played an importan ...
intervened in 2006, the government's main objective was to reduce drug-related violence. The Mexican government has asserted that its primary focus is dismantling the cartels and preventing
drug trafficking A drug is any chemical substance other than a nutrient or an essential dietary ingredient, which, when administered to a living organism, produces a biological effect. Consumption of drugs can be via inhalation, injection, smoking, ingestion, ...
. The conflict has been described as the Mexican
theater Theatre or theater is a collaborative form of performing art that uses live performers, usually actors to present experiences of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place, often a stage. The performers may communi ...
of the global war on drugs, as led by the
United States federal government The Federal Government of the United States of America (U.S. federal government or U.S. government) is the Federation#Federal governments, national government of the United States. The U.S. federal government is composed of three distinct ...
. Violence escalated after the arrest of
Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo (born January 8, 1946), commonly referred to by his aliases ''El Jefe de Jefes'' ('The Boss of Bosses') and ''El Padrino'' ('The Godfather'), is a convicted Mexican drug kingpin who was one of the founders of the ...
in 1989. He was the leader and the co-founder of the first major Mexican
drug cartel A drug cartel is a criminal organization composed of independent drug lords who collude with each other in order to improve their profits and dominate the illegal drug trade. Drug cartels form with the purpose of controlling the supply of the i ...
, the
Guadalajara Cartel The Guadalajara Cartel (), also known as The Federation (), was a Mexican drug cartel which was formed in the late 1970s by Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo, Rafael Caro Quintero, and Ernesto Fonseca Carrillo in order to ship cocaine and marijuan ...
, an alliance of the current existing cartels (which included the
Sinaloa Cartel The Sinaloa Cartel (, , after the native Sinaloa region), also known as the ''CDS'', the ''Guzmán-Loera Organization'', the ''Federation'', the ''Sinaloa Cartel'', or the Pacific Cartel, is a large, drug trafficking transnational organized cri ...
, the Juarez Cartel, the
Tijuana Cartel The Tijuana Cartel (, ), formerly also known as the Arellano-Félix Cartel (, CAF), is a Mexican drug cartel based in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. Founded by the Arellano-Félix family, the cartel once was described as "one of the biggest a ...
, and the
Sonora Cartel The Sonora Cartel, also known as Caro Quintero Organization, was a Mexico based criminal cartel. Upon the cartel's disintegration, its leaders were incorporated into the Tijuana Cartel and Sinaloa Cartel. By 2007, the Sonora Cartel, Colima Car ...
with Aldair Mariano as the leader). After his arrest, the alliance broke, and high-ranking members formed their own cartels, fighting for control of territory and trafficking routes. Although Mexican drug trafficking organizations have existed for several decades, their influence increased after the demise of the Colombian
Cali Santiago de Cali (), or Cali, is the capital of the Valle del Cauca department, and the most populous city in southwest Colombia, with 2,280,522 residents estimate by National Administrative Department of Statistics, DANE in 2023. The city span ...
and
Medellín Medellín ( ; or ), officially the Special District of Science, Technology and Innovation of Medellín (), is the List of cities in Colombia, second-largest city in Colombia after Bogotá, and the capital of the department of Antioquia Departme ...
cartels in the 1990s. By 2007, Mexican drug cartels controlled 90% of the
cocaine Cocaine is a tropane alkaloid and central nervous system stimulant, derived primarily from the leaves of two South American coca plants, ''Erythroxylum coca'' and ''Erythroxylum novogranatense, E. novogranatense'', which are cultivated a ...
entering the United States. Arrests of key cartel leaders, particularly in the Tijuana and
Gulf A gulf is a large inlet from an ocean or their seas into a landmass, larger and typically (though not always) with a narrower opening than a bay (geography), bay. The term was used traditionally for large, highly indented navigable bodies of s ...
cartels, have led to increasing drug violence as cartels fight for control of the trafficking routes into the United States. Federal law enforcement has been reorganized at least five times since 1982 in various attempts to control
corruption Corruption is a form of dishonesty or a criminal offense that is undertaken by a person or an organization that is entrusted in a position of authority to acquire illicit benefits or abuse power for one's gain. Corruption may involve activities ...
and reduce cartel violence. During the same period, there were at least four elite
special forces Special forces or special operations forces (SOF) are military units trained to conduct special operations. NATO has defined special operations as "military activities conducted by specially designated, organized, selected, trained and equip ...
created as new, corruption-free soldiers who could fight Mexico's endemic bribery system. Analysts estimate wholesale earnings from illicit drug sales range from $13.6 to $49.4 billion annually. The U.S. Congress passed legislation in late June 2008 to provide Mexico with US$1.6 billion for the
Mérida Initiative The Mérida Initiative (named after Mérida, the city where it was agreed upon), also called Plan Mexico (in reference to Plan Colombia), was a security cooperation agreement among the United States, the government of Mexico, and the countries o ...
and technical advice to strengthen the national justice systems. By the end of President
Felipe Calderón Felipe de Jesús Calderón Hinojosa (; born 18 August 1962) is a Mexican politician and lawyer who served as the 63rd president of Mexico from 2006 to 2012 and Secretary of Energy during the presidency of Vicente Fox between 2003 and 2004. ...
's administration (December 1, 2006 – November 30, 2012), the official death toll of the Mexican drug war was at least 60,000. Estimates set the death toll above 120,000 killed by 2013, not including 27,000 missing. When
Andrés Manuel López Obrador Andrés Manuel López Obrador (; born 13 November 1953), also known by his initials AMLO, is a Mexican former politician, political scientist, public administrator and writer who served as the 65th president of Mexico from 2018 to 2024. He se ...
took office as president in 2018, he declared the war was over; his comment was criticized, as the homicide rate remains high.


Background

Due to its location, Mexico has long been used as a staging and transshipment point for narcotics and contraband between Latin America and U.S. markets. Mexican
bootleggers A bootleg is the upper part (or shaft) of a boot. Bootleg, bootlegging or bootlegger(s) may also refer to: Common meanings * Rum-running, the illegal business of transporting and trading in alcoholic beverages * Moonshine, illicitly made an ...
supplied
alcohol Alcohol may refer to: Common uses * Alcohol (chemistry), a class of compounds * Ethanol, one of several alcohols, commonly known as alcohol in everyday life ** Alcohol (drug), intoxicant found in alcoholic beverages ** Alcoholic beverage, an alco ...
to American gangsters throughout
Prohibition in the United States The Prohibition era was the period from 1920 to 1933 when the United States prohibited the production, importation, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages. The alcohol industry was curtailed by a succession of state legislatures, an ...
, and the onset of the
illegal drug trade The illegal drug trade, drug trafficking, or narcotrafficking is a global black market dedicated to the cultivation, manufacture, distribution and sale of drug prohibition, prohibited drugs. Most jurisdictions prohibitionism, prohibit trade, exce ...
with the U.S. began when Prohibition came to an end in 1933. Near the end of the 1960s, Mexicans started to smuggle drugs on a major scale. In 1940, under president
Lázaro Cárdenas Lázaro Cárdenas del Río (; 21 May 1895 – 19 October 1970) was a Mexican army officer and politician who served as president of Mexico from 1934 to 1940. Previously, he served as a general in the Constitutional Army during the Mexican Revo ...
and the impulsion of Mexican psychiatrist
Leopoldo Salazar Viniegra Leopoldo Salazar Viniegra (December 17, 1898 – September 23, 1957) was a Mexican doctor, psychiatrist, writer and professor whose scientific investigations influenced the legalization of drugs during the Lázaro Cárdenas administration in 1 ...
, Mexico legalized all drugs, in an early attempt to prevent the development of illegal drug trafficking organizations. The law was in effect for about 5 months when the Mexican government repealed it, allegedly under the increasing economic and political pressure from the U.S. In the 1960s and 1970s, Mexico was part of both
Operation Intercept Operation Intercept was an anti-drug measure engaged by President Richard Nixon from 21 September to 11 October 1969 that resulted in a near shutdown of border crossings between Mexico and the United States. The initiative was intended to reduce th ...
and
Operation Condor Operation Condor (; ) was a campaign of political repression by the right-wing dictatorships of the Southern Cone of South America, involving intelligence operations, coups, and assassinations of left-wing sympathizers in South America which fo ...
, developed between 1975 and 1978, with the pretext to fight against the cultivation of
opium Opium (also known as poppy tears, or Lachryma papaveris) is the dried latex obtained from the seed Capsule (fruit), capsules of the opium poppy ''Papaver somniferum''. Approximately 12 percent of opium is made up of the analgesic alkaloid mor ...
and marijuana in the "Golden Triangle", particularly in
Sinaloa Sinaloa (), officially the (), is one of the 31 states which, along with Mexico City, compose the Federal Entities of Mexico. It is divided into 18 municipalities, and its capital city is Culiacán Rosales. It is located in northwest Mexic ...
. The operation, commanded by General José Hernández Toledo, was a failure, with no major drug lord captures and reported abuse and repression in rural zones. During the 1970s and early 1980s,
Colombia Colombia, officially the Republic of Colombia, is a country primarily located in South America with Insular region of Colombia, insular regions in North America. The Colombian mainland is bordered by the Caribbean Sea to the north, Venezuel ...
's
Pablo Escobar Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria (; ; 1 December 19492 December 1993) was a Colombian drug lord, narcoterrorist, and politician who was the founder and leader of the Medellín Cartel. Dubbed the "King of Cocaine", Escobar was one of the wealthie ...
was the main exporter of
cocaine Cocaine is a tropane alkaloid and central nervous system stimulant, derived primarily from the leaves of two South American coca plants, ''Erythroxylum coca'' and ''Erythroxylum novogranatense, E. novogranatense'', which are cultivated a ...
and dealt with organized criminal networks all over the world. While Escobar's Medellin Cartel and the Cali Cartel would manufacture the products,
Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo (born January 8, 1946), commonly referred to by his aliases ''El Jefe de Jefes'' ('The Boss of Bosses') and ''El Padrino'' ('The Godfather'), is a convicted Mexican drug kingpin who was one of the founders of the ...
's
Guadalajara Cartel The Guadalajara Cartel (), also known as The Federation (), was a Mexican drug cartel which was formed in the late 1970s by Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo, Rafael Caro Quintero, and Ernesto Fonseca Carrillo in order to ship cocaine and marijuan ...
would oversee distribution. When enforcement efforts intensified in South Florida and the Caribbean, the Colombian organizations formed partnerships with Mexico-based traffickers to transport cocaine by land through Mexico into the United States. This was easily accomplished because Mexico had long been a major source of heroin and
cannabis ''Cannabis'' () is a genus of flowering plants in the family Cannabaceae that is widely accepted as being indigenous to and originating from the continent of Asia. However, the number of species is disputed, with as many as three species be ...
, and drug traffickers from Mexico had already established an infrastructure that stood ready to serve the Colombia-based traffickers. By the mid-1980s, the organizations from Mexico were well-established and reliable transporters of
Colombian cocaine The illegal drug trade in Colombia has, since the 1970s, centered successively on four major drug cartels, drug trafficking cartels: Medellín Cartel, Medellín, Cali Cartel, Cali, Norte del Valle Cartel, Norte del Valle, and North Coast Cartel, N ...
. At first, the Mexican gangs were paid in cash for their transportation services. However, in the late 1980s, the Mexican transport organizations and the Colombian drug traffickers settled on a payment-in-product arrangement. Transporters from Mexico usually were given 35% to 50% of each cocaine shipment. This arrangement meant that organizations from Mexico became involved in the distribution, as well as the transportation of cocaine, and became formidable traffickers in their own right. In recent years, the
Sinaloa Cartel The Sinaloa Cartel (, , after the native Sinaloa region), also known as the ''CDS'', the ''Guzmán-Loera Organization'', the ''Federation'', the ''Sinaloa Cartel'', or the Pacific Cartel, is a large, drug trafficking transnational organized cri ...
and the
Gulf Cartel The Gulf Cartel ( , or ''Golfos'') is a criminal syndicate, Drug cartel, drug trafficking organization, and U.S.-designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, which is perhaps one of the oldest organized crime groups in Mexico. It is currently bas ...
have taken over trafficking cocaine from Colombia to the worldwide markets. The balance of power between the various Mexican cartels continually shifts as new organizations emerge and older ones weaken and collapse. A disruption in the system, such as the arrests or deaths of cartel leaders, generates bloodshed as rivals move in to exploit the power vacuum. Leadership vacuums are sometimes created by law enforcement successes against a particular cartel, so cartels often will attempt to pit law enforcement against one another, either by bribing corrupt officials to take action against a rival or by leaking intelligence about a rival's operations to the Mexican or U.S. government's
Drug Enforcement Administration The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) is a Federal law enforcement in the United States, United States federal law enforcement agency under the U.S. Department of Justice tasked with combating illicit Illegal drug trade, drug trafficking a ...
(DEA). While many factors have contributed to the escalating violence, security analysts in Mexico City trace the origins of the rising scourge to the unraveling of a longtime implicit arrangement between narcotics traffickers and governments controlled by the
Institutional Revolutionary Party The Institutional Revolutionary Party (, , PRI) is a List of political parties in Mexico, political party in Mexico that was founded in 1929 as the National Revolutionary Party (, PNR), then as the Party of the Mexican Revolution (, PRM) and fin ...
(PRI), which began to lose its grip on political power in the late 1980s. The fighting between rival drug cartels began in earnest after the 1989 arrest of Félix Gallardo, who ran the cocaine business in Mexico. There was a lull in the fighting during the late 1990s, but the violence has steadily worsened since 2000. According to researchers, as of 2023, an estimated 175,000 people are working for the drug cartels. The head of the U.S. drug enforcement reported that there are an estimated 45,000 members, associates, and brokers spread over more than 100 countries working under the Sinaloa cartel and the Jalisco New Generation cartel.


Presidents

The dominant PRI party ruled Mexico for around 70 years until 2000. During this time, drug cartels expanded their power and political influence, and anti-drug operations focused mainly on destroying marijuana and opium crops in mountainous regions. There were no large-scale, high-profile military operations against their core structures in urban areas until the
2000 Mexican election General elections were held in Mexico on Sunday, 2 July 2000. Voters went to the polls to elect a new president to serve a single six-year term, replacing President Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León, who was ineligible for re-election under the 19 ...
when the right-wing PAN party gained the presidency and started a crackdown on cartels on their turf.


Vicente Fox

In 2000, Vicente Fox, from the right-wing PAN party, became the first Mexican president since the
Mexican Revolution The Mexican Revolution () was an extended sequence of armed regional conflicts in Mexico from 20 November 1910 to 1 December 1920. It has been called "the defining event of modern Mexican history". It saw the destruction of the Federal Army, its ...
not to be from the PRI; his presidency passed with relative peace, having a
crime index Crime statistics refer to systematic, quantitative results about crime, as opposed to crime news or anecdotes. Notably, crime statistics can be the result of two rather different processes: * scientific research, such as criminological studies, vi ...
not too different from that of previous administrations and Mexican public opinion was mainly optimistic with the regime change, with Mexico showing a decline in homicide rates from 2000 to 2007. One of the Fox administration's strongest criticisms arose from its management of the peasant unrest in San Salvador Atenco.
Los Zetas Los Zetas (, Spanish for "The Zs") is a Mexican criminal syndicate and designated terrorist organization, known as one of the most dangerous of Mexico's drug cartels. They are known for engaging in brutally violent " shock and awe" tactics suc ...
, the armed wing of the Gulf Cartel, based in Nuevo Laredo, escalated violence to unprecedented levels in the summer of 2003 through gruesome violence and military-like tactics against the Sinaloa Cartel. Los Zetas also instilled terror against journalists and civilians of Nuevo Laredo. This set a new precedent, which cartels later mimicked. All these activities by Mexican criminal organizations were not widely reported by the Mexican media. However, key conflicts occurred, including the Sinaloa Cartel attacks and the advance on the Gulf Cartel's main regions in
Tamaulipas Tamaulipas, officially the Free and Sovereign State of Tamaulipas, is a state in Mexico; one of the 31 states which, along with Mexico City, comprise the 32 federal entities of Mexico. It is divided into 43 municipalities. It is located in nor ...
. It is estimated that in the first eight months of 2005, about 110 people died in
Nuevo Laredo Nuevo Laredo () is a city in the Municipality of Nuevo Laredo in the Mexican List of states of Mexico, state of Tamaulipas. The city lies on the banks of the Rio Grande, across from Laredo, Texas, Laredo, United States. The 2010 census popula ...
, Tamaulipas, as a result of the fighting between the Gulf and Sinaloa cartels. The same year, there was another surge in violence in the state of
Michoacán Michoacán, formally Michoacán de Ocampo, officially the Free and Sovereign State of Michoacán de Ocampo, is one of the 31 states which, together with Mexico City, compose the Political divisions of Mexico, Federal Entities of Mexico. The stat ...
as
La Familia Michoacana La Familia Michoacana (, LFM; English: ''The Michoacán Family''), La Familia (English: ''The Family''), is a Mexican drug cartel & organized crime syndicate based in the Mexican state of Michoacán. They are known to produce large amounts of m ...
drug cartel established itself after splintering from its former allies, the Gulf Cartel and
Los Zetas Los Zetas (, Spanish for "The Zs") is a Mexican criminal syndicate and designated terrorist organization, known as one of the most dangerous of Mexico's drug cartels. They are known for engaging in brutally violent " shock and awe" tactics suc ...
.


Felipe Calderón

On December 11, 2006, newly elected
President President most commonly refers to: *President (corporate title) * President (education), a leader of a college or university *President (government title) President may also refer to: Arts and entertainment Film and television *'' Præsident ...
Felipe Calderón Felipe de Jesús Calderón Hinojosa (; born 18 August 1962) is a Mexican politician and lawyer who served as the 63rd president of Mexico from 2006 to 2012 and Secretary of Energy during the presidency of Vicente Fox between 2003 and 2004. ...
, from the PAN party, dispatched 6,500 Mexican Army soldiers to Michoacán, his home state, to end drug violence. This action is regarded as the first major deployment of government forces against cartels and is generally viewed as the starting point of the Mexican drug war. As time passed, Calderón continued to escalate his anti-drug campaign. By 2008, there were about 45,000 troops involved, along with state and federal police forces. The government was initially successful in detaining drug lords. Drug-related violence spiked markedly in contested areas along the U.S. border, such as
Ciudad Juárez Ciudad Juárez ( , ; "Juárez City"), commonly referred to as just Juárez (Lipan language, Lipan: ''Tsé Táhú'ayá''), is the most populous city in the Administrative divisions of Mexico, Mexican state of Chihuahua (state), Chihuahua. It was k ...
,
Tijuana Tijuana is the most populous city of the Mexican state of Baja California, located on the northwestern Pacific Coast of Mexico. Tijuana is the municipal seat of the Tijuana Municipality, the hub of the Tijuana metropolitan area and the most popu ...
, and Matamoros. Some analysts, including U.S. Ambassador in Mexico
Carlos Pascual Carlos Pascual could refer to: * Carlos Pascual (baseball) (1931-2011), Cuban baseball player *Carlos Pascual (diplomat) Carlos Pascual (born 1959) is a Cuban-American diplomat and the former United States Ambassador to Mexico, U.S. Ambassador ...
, argued that this rise in violence was a direct result of Felipe Calderón's military measures. Since Calderón launched his military strategy against organized crime, there has been an alarming increase in violent deaths related to organized crime: more than 15,000 people have died in suspected drug cartel attacks since it was launched at the end of 2006. More than 5,000 people were murdered in Mexico in 2008, followed by 9,600 murders in 2009; 2010 saw more than 15,000 homicides across the country. By the end of Calderón's presidency, his administration statistics claimed that, during his 6-year term, 50,000 drug-related homicides occurred. Outside sources claimed more than 120,000 murders happened in the same period as a result of his
militaristic Militarism is the belief or the desire of a government or a people that a state should maintain a strong military capability and to use it aggressively to expand national interests and/or values. It may also imply the glorification of the mili ...
anti-drug policy.


Enrique Peña Nieto

In 2012, newly elected President
Enrique Peña Nieto Enrique Peña Nieto (; born 20 July 1966), commonly referred to by his initials EPN, is a Mexican former politician and lawyer who was the 64th president of Mexico from 2012 to 2018. A member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), he p ...
, from the PRI party, emphasized that he did not support the involvement of armed American agents in Mexico and was only interested in training Mexican forces in
counter-insurgency Counterinsurgency (COIN, or NATO spelling counter-insurgency) is "the totality of actions aimed at defeating irregular forces". The Oxford English Dictionary defines counterinsurgency as any "military or political action taken against the ac ...
tactics. Peña Nieto stated that he planned to de-escalate the conflict, focusing on lowering criminal violence rates, as opposed to the previous policy of attacking drug-trafficking organizations by arresting or killing the most-wanted drug lords and intercepting their shipments. In the first 14 months of his administration, between December 2012 and January 2014, 23,640 people died in the conflict. In 2013, Mexico saw the rise of the controversial ''
grupos de autodefensa comunitaria ''Grupos de autodefensas'' (self-defenders groups) or Policía Comunitaria (Community Police) or Policía Popular (People's Police) are vigilante self-defense groups that arose in the Gulf of Mexico and South Mexico regions between 2012 and 20 ...
'' (self-defense groups) in southern Mexico, para-military groups led by land-owners, ranchers, and other rural inhabitants that took up arms against the criminal groups that wanted to impose dominance in their towns, entering a new phase in the Mexican war on drugs. This strategy, allegedly proposed by General Óscar Naranjo, Peña Nieto's security advisor from Colombia, crumbled when ''autodefensas'' started to have internal organization struggles and disagreements with the government, as well as infiltration by criminal elements, that deprived the government forces the ability to distinguish between armed-civilian convoys and drug-cartel convoys, forcing Peña Nieto's administration to distance from them. Peña Nieto's handling of the
2014 Iguala mass kidnapping On September 26, 2014, forty-three male students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers' College disappeared after being forcibly abducted in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico, in what has been called one of Mexico’s most infamous human rights cases. ...
and the 2015 escape of drug lord
Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera (; born 4 April 1957), commonly known as "El Chapo", is a Mexican former drug lord and a former leader within the Sinaloa Cartel. Guzmán is believed to be responsible for the deaths of over 34,000 people, ...
from the Altiplano maximum security prison sparked international criticism. A great part of Peña Nieto's strategy consisted in making the Mexican
Interior Ministry An interior ministry or ministry of the interior (also called ministry of home affairs or ministry of internal affairs) is a government department that is responsible for domestic policy, public security and law enforcement. In some states, the ...
solely responsible for public security and the creation of a national military-level police force called the
National Gendarmerie The National Gendarmerie ( ) is one of two national law enforcement forces of France, along with the National Police (France), National Police. The Gendarmerie is a branch of the French Armed Forces placed under the jurisdiction of the Minister ...
. In December 2017, the Law of Internal Security was passed by legislation but was met with criticism, especially from the
National Human Rights Commission A human rights commission, also known as a human relations commission, is a body set up to investigate, promote or protect human rights. The term may refer to international, national or subnational bodies set up for this purpose, such as nationa ...
, accusing it gave the president a
blank check A blank cheque or blank check in the literal sense is a cheque that has no monetary value written in, but is already signed. In the figurative sense, it is used to describe a situation in which an agreement has been made that is open-ended or v ...
.


Andrés Manuel López Obrador

Andrés Manuel López Obrador Andrés Manuel López Obrador (; born 13 November 1953), also known by his initials AMLO, is a Mexican former politician, political scientist, public administrator and writer who served as the 65th president of Mexico from 2018 to 2024. He se ...
, the president of the center-left
Morena Morena or MORENA may refer to: Places * Morena, Madhya Pradesh, a town in central India * Morena (Lok Sabha constituency), Madhya Pradesh * Morena (Vidhan Sabha constituency), Madhya Pradesh * Morena, San Diego, California, a neighborhood * Mo ...
party, took office on December 1, 2018. One of his campaign promises was a controversial "strategy for peace", which would give
amnesty Amnesty () is defined as "A pardon extended by the government to a group or class of people, usually for a political offense; the act of a sovereign power officially forgiving certain classes of people who are subject to trial but have not yet be ...
to Mexicans involved in drug production and trafficking as a way to stop the drug trade and the resulting turf violence. His aides explained that the plan was not to pardon real criminals, like violent drug cartel members, but to prevent other people from following that path, especially low-income people, farmers forced into drug cultivation by cartels, and young people who may end up in jail for drug possession. López Obrador pointed out that the past approaches failed because they were based on misunderstanding the core problem. According to him, the underlying issue was Mexico's great social disparities, which previous governments' economic policies did not reduce. For law enforcement, he promised to hold a referendum for the creation of a temporary national guard, merging elite parts of the
Federal Police A law enforcement agency (LEA) is any government agency responsible for law enforcement within a specific jurisdiction through the employment and deployment of law enforcement officers and their resources. The most common type of law enforcement ...
, military police,
Navy A navy, naval force, military maritime fleet, war navy, or maritime force is the military branch, branch of a nation's armed forces principally designated for naval warfare, naval and amphibious warfare; namely, lake-borne, riverine, littoral z ...
, Chief of Staff's Guard, and other top Mexican security agencies, intending to finally give a legal framework to the military grade forces that have been doing police work in the last years. He promised not to use arms to suppress the people and announced the release of political prisoners. His approach is to pay more attention to the victims of violent crime, and he wants to revisit two previously taken strategies. In 2019, the promised Mexican National Guard was created. Despite the new government's planned strategy changes, during the first two months of the new presidency, the violence between drug trafficking organizations sustained the same levels as in previous years. On July 15, 2022, authorities captured
Rafael Caro-Quintero Rafael "Rafa" Caro Quintero (born October 24, 1952) is a Mexican former drug lord who co-founded the now-disintegrated Guadalajara Cartel with Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo and other drug traffickers in the late 1970s. He is the brother of fellow ...
, a former leader of the Guadalajara cartel. However, they lost fourteen soldiers in an aircraft crash in the remote mountains near Sinaloa's border with Chihuahua. On January 30, 2019, López Obrador declared the end of the Mexican war on drugs, stating that he would now focus on reducing spending and direct its military and police efforts primarily on stopping the armed gasoline theft rings —locally called
huachicolero In Mexico, a ''huachicolero'' or ''guachicolero'' is a person dedicated to the theft and illicit sale of motor fuel (primarily petrol and diesel) and adulterated alcoholic beverages. Fuel theft has been on the increase in the country in recent years ...
s— that had been stealing more than 70 thousand barrels of oil,
diesel Diesel may refer to: * Diesel engine, an internal combustion engine where ignition is caused by compression * Diesel fuel, a liquid fuel used in diesel engines * Diesel locomotive, a railway locomotive in which the prime mover is a diesel engine ...
, and gasoline daily, costing the Mexican state-owned company
Pemex Pemex (a portmanteau of Petróleos Mexicanos, which translates to ''Mexican Petroleum'' in English; ) is the Mexico, Mexican State ownership, state-owned Petroleum industry, petroleum corporation managed and operated by the government of Mexico, ...
around 3 billion dollars every year. On October 17, 2019, based on an extradition request sent to Mexico by a Washington, D.C. judge, a failed operation to capture alleged kingpin
Ovidio Guzmán López Ovidio Guzmán López (born 29 March 1990) is a Mexican former drug lord and high-ranking member of the Sinaloa Cartel, a criminal group based in the state of Sinaloa. He is the son of the drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, once considered M ...
was carried out by the Mexican National Guard, in which fourteen people died (mostly from the armed forces and cartel enforcers and one civilian bystander). Guzmán was released after approximately 700 cartel enforcers, armed with .50 caliber rifles,
rocket-propelled grenade A rocket-propelled grenade (RPG), also known colloquially as a rocket launcher, is a Shoulder-fired missile, shoulder-fired anti-tank weapon that launches rockets equipped with a Shaped charge, shaped-charge explosive warhead. Most RPGs can ...
s (RPGs), and 40 mm grenades, took multiple hostages, including the housing unit where military families live in Culiacan. The cartels used burning vehicles to block roads, a tactic taken from militant protesters, with the event described as a mass insurrection. López Obrador defended the decision to release Ovidio Guzmán, arguing it prevented further loss of life, and insisted that he wanted to avoid more massacres. He further stated that the capture of one drug smuggler could not be more valuable than the lives of innocent civilians and that even though they underestimated the cartel's forces and ability to respond, the criminal process against Ovidio is still ongoing. In 2019, the federal forces deployed 8,000 troops and police reinforcements to restore peace in Culiacan. This strategy of avoiding armed confrontations while drug organizations have continued violent altercations has been controversial. One of the strongest critics of the new approach and a firm proponent of continuing the armed struggle is former President Felipe Calderón, who originally started the military operations against traffickers in 2006. Calderón's militaristic strategy to capture cartel heads has also been criticized by local and foreign experts, as well as by multiple media outlets. President López Obrador, known for his strong criticism of previous administrations' approach to public security through militarization, campaigned on the promise of removing the military from the streets and returning them to the barracks. However, under the López Obrador administration, deployments and military expenditures have reached unprecedented levels. The current number of soldiers deployed for security duties is 76% higher than during
Felipe Calderón Felipe de Jesús Calderón Hinojosa (; born 18 August 1962) is a Mexican politician and lawyer who served as the 63rd president of Mexico from 2006 to 2012 and Secretary of Energy during the presidency of Vicente Fox between 2003 and 2004. ...
's presidency, whom López Obrador holds responsible for the militarization of the drug war. Consequently, defense spending has surged 87% between 2012, Calderón's last year in office, and 2022. Although the number of deployed soldiers is higher, available data indicates that they assume a more restrained role. They engage in fewer confrontations, seize fewer firearms, and prioritize non-confrontational strategies to deter criminals. This has resulted in lower weapon seizures and fewer arrests of alleged criminals. Additionally, President López Obrador has broadened their duties, such as overseeing vaccine distribution and addressing irregular migration flows.


Drug sources and use


Sources

The
U.S. State Department The United States Department of State (DOS), or simply the State Department, is an executive department of the U.S. federal government responsible for the country's foreign policy and relations. Equivalent to the ministry of foreign affairs ...
estimates that 90 percent of cocaine entering the United States is produced in Colombia (followed by
Bolivia Bolivia, officially the Plurinational State of Bolivia, is a landlocked country located in central South America. The country features diverse geography, including vast Amazonian plains, tropical lowlands, mountains, the Gran Chaco Province, w ...
and
Peru Peru, officially the Republic of Peru, is a country in western South America. It is bordered in the north by Ecuador and Colombia, in the east by Brazil, in the southeast by Bolivia, in the south by Chile, and in the south and west by the Pac ...
) and that the main transit route is through Mexico. Drug cartels in Mexico control approximately 70% of the foreign narcotics flow into the United States. Mexican cartels distribute Asian
methamphetamine Methamphetamine (contracted from ) is a potent central nervous system (CNS) stimulant that is mainly used as a recreational drug use, recreational or Performance-enhancing substance, performance-enhancing drug and less commonly as a secon ...
to the United States. It is believed that almost half the cartels' revenues come from cannabis. Cocaine, heroin, and, increasingly, methamphetamine are also traded. Although Mexico accounts for only a small share of worldwide heroin production, it supplies a large share of the heroin distributed in the United States. Since 2003, Mexican cartels have used the dense, isolated portions of U.S. federal and state parks and forests to grow marijuana under the canopy of thick trees. Billions of dollars worth of marijuana has been produced annually on U.S. soil. In 2006, federal and state authorities seized over 550,000 marijuana plants worth an estimated 1 billion dollars in
Kentucky Kentucky (, ), officially the Commonwealth of Kentucky, is a landlocked U.S. state, state in the Southeastern United States, Southeastern region of the United States. It borders Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio to the north, West Virginia to the ...
's remote Appalachian counties. Cartels profited from marijuana growing operations from
Arkansas Arkansas ( ) is a landlocked state in the West South Central region of the Southern United States. It borders Missouri to the north, Tennessee and Mississippi to the east, Louisiana to the south, Texas to the southwest, and Oklahoma ...
to Hawaii. A 2018 study found that the reduction in drugs from Colombia contributed to Mexican drug violence. The study estimated that "between 2006 and 2009, the decline in cocaine supply from Colombia could account for 10%–14% of the increase in violence in Mexico."


Use

Illicit drug use in Mexico is low compared to the United States but is on the rise. With Mexico's increased role in the trafficking and production of
illegal drugs Illegal may refer to: Law * Violation of law ** Crime In ordinary language, a crime is an unlawful act punishable by a State (polity), state or other authority. The term ''crime'' does not, in modern criminal law, have any simple and uni ...
, the availability of narcotics has risen slowly locally since the 1980s. In the decades before this period, consumption was not generalized – reportedly occurring mainly among persons of high
socioeconomic status Socioeconomic status (SES) is a measurement used by economics, economists and sociology, sociologsts. The measurement combines a person's work experience and their or their family's access to economic resources and social position in relation t ...
, intellectuals, and artists. As the US is the world's largest consumer of cocaine, as well as of other illegal drugs, its demand is what motivates the drug business, and the main goal of Mexican cartels is to introduce narcotics into the US. The export rate of cocaine to the US decreased following stricter
border control Border control comprises measures taken by governments to monitor and regulate the movement of people, animals, and goods across land, air, and maritime borders. While border control is typically associated with international borders, it als ...
measures in response to the
September 11 attacks The September 11 attacks, also known as 9/11, were four coordinated Islamist terrorist suicide attacks by al-Qaeda against the United States in 2001. Nineteen terrorists hijacked four commercial airliners, crashing the first two into ...
. This led to a surplus of cocaine, which resulted in local Mexican dealers attempting to offload extra narcotics along trafficking routes, especially in border areas popular among North American tourists. Drug shipments are often delayed in Mexican border towns before delivery to the U.S., which has forced drug traffickers to increase prices to account for transportation costs of products across international borders, making it a more profitable business for the drug lords, and has likely contributed to the increased rates of local drug consumption. With increased cocaine use, there has been a parallel rise in demand for drug user treatment in Mexico.


Poverty

One of the main factors driving the Mexican drug war is widespread poverty. From 2004 to 2008, the portion of the population who received less than half of the
median income The median income is the income amount that divides a population into two groups, half having an income above that amount, and half having an income below that amount. It may differ from the mean (or average) income. Both of these are ways of unde ...
rose from 17% to 21%, and the proportion of the population living in extreme or moderate poverty rose from 35 to 46% (52 million persons) between 2006 and 2010. Among the
OECD The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD; , OCDE) is an international organization, intergovernmental organization with 38 member countries, founded in 1961 to stimulate economic progress and international trade, wor ...
countries, Mexico has the second highest economic disparity between the extremely poor and the rich. The bottom ten percent in the income hierarchy has 1.36% of the country's resources, whereas the upper ten percent has almost 36%. The OECD also notes that Mexico's budgeted
poverty alleviation Poverty reduction, poverty relief, or poverty alleviation is a set of measures, both economic and humanitarian, that are intended to permanently lift people out of poverty. Measures, like those promoted by Henry George in his economics classi ...
and
social development Social development can refer to: * Psychosocial development * Social change Social change is the alteration of the social order of a society which may include changes in social institutions, social behaviours or social relations. Sustained at ...
expenses are only about a third of the OECD average. In 2012, it was estimated that Mexican cartels employed over 450,000 people directly, and a further 3.2 million people's livelihoods depended on various parts of the drug trade. In cities such as Ciudad Juárez, up to 60% of the economy depended on illegal sources of income.


Education

A problem that goes hand in hand with poverty in Mexico is the level of
schooling A school is the educational institution (and, in the case of in-person learning, the building) designed to provide learning environments for the teaching of students, usually under the direction of teachers. Most countries have systems of fo ...
. In the 1960s, when Mexican narcotic smugglers started to smuggle drugs on a major scale, only 5.6% of the Mexican population had more than six years of schooling. More recently, researchers from the
World Economic Forum The World Economic Forum (WEF) is an international non-governmental organization, international advocacy non-governmental organization and think tank, based in Cologny, Canton of Geneva, Switzerland. It was founded on 24 January 1971 by German ...
have noted that despite the Mexican economy ranking 31st out of 134 economies for investment in education (5.3% of its GDP), as of 2009, the nation's primary education system is ranked only 116th, thereby suggesting "that the problem is not how much but rather how resources are invested". The WEF further explained: "The powerful teachers union, the
SNTE Tin telluride is a compound of tin and tellurium (SnTe); is a IV-VI narrow band gap semiconductor and has direct band gap of 0.18 eV. It is often alloyed with lead to make lead tin telluride, which is used as an infrared detector material. Tin ...
, the largest labor union in Latin America, has been largely responsible for blocking reforms that would increase the quality of spending and help ensure equal access to education." The result of the high levels of poverty, lack of well-paid jobs, government corruption, and the systemic failure of Mexico's schools has been the appearance of ''ninis'', a youth underclass of school dropouts who '' neither work nor study'', who might have ended up as combatants on behalf of the cartels. Teachers' unions have opposed reforms that propose their testing and grading on their students' performance with standardized tests that do not take into account the socioeconomic differences between middle-class urban schools and under-equipped, poor rural schools, which has an important effect on students' performance. Also, teachers' unions have argued that the legislation is ambiguous, focuses exclusively on teachers without evaluating the Education Ministry, and will allow more abuse and political corruption.


Mexican cartels


Origins

The birth of most Mexican drug cartels is traced to former Mexican Judicial Federal Police agent
Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo (born January 8, 1946), commonly referred to by his aliases ''El Jefe de Jefes'' ('The Boss of Bosses') and ''El Padrino'' ('The Godfather'), is a convicted Mexican drug kingpin who was one of the founders of the ...
(), who founded the
Guadalajara Cartel The Guadalajara Cartel (), also known as The Federation (), was a Mexican drug cartel which was formed in the late 1970s by Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo, Rafael Caro Quintero, and Ernesto Fonseca Carrillo in order to ship cocaine and marijuan ...
in 1980 and controlled most of the illegal drug trade in Mexico and the trafficking corridors across the Mexico–U.S. border along with Juan García Ábrego throughout the 1980s. He started off by smuggling marijuana and
opium Opium (also known as poppy tears, or Lachryma papaveris) is the dried latex obtained from the seed Capsule (fruit), capsules of the opium poppy ''Papaver somniferum''. Approximately 12 percent of opium is made up of the analgesic alkaloid mor ...
into the U.S., and was the first Mexican drug chief to link up with Colombia's cocaine
cartels A cartel is a group of independent market participants who collaborate with each other as well as agreeing not to compete with each other in order to improve their profits and dominate the market. A cartel is an organization formed by producers ...
in the 1980s. Through his connections, Félix Gallardo became the person at the forefront of the
Medellín Cartel The Medellín Cartel () was a powerful and highly organized Colombian drug cartel and terrorist organization originating in the city of Medellín, Colombia, that was founded and led by Pablo Escobar. It is often considered to be the first major ...
, which was run by
Pablo Escobar Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria (; ; 1 December 19492 December 1993) was a Colombian drug lord, narcoterrorist, and politician who was the founder and leader of the Medellín Cartel. Dubbed the "King of Cocaine", Escobar was one of the wealthie ...
. This was accomplished because Félix Gallardo had already established a marijuana trafficking infrastructure that stood ready to serve the Colombia-based cocaine traffickers. There were no other cartels at that time in Mexico. He oversaw operations with his cronies and the politicians who sold him protection. The Guadalajara Cartel suffered a major blow in 1985 when the group's co-founder
Rafael Caro Quintero Rafael "Rafa" Caro Quintero (born October 24, 1952) is a Mexican former drug lord who co-founded the now-disintegrated Guadalajara Cartel with Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo and other drug traffickers in the late 1970s. He is the brother of fellow ...
was captured, and later convicted, for the murder of DEA agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena. Félix Gallardo then kept a low profile and in 1987 he moved with his family to
Guadalajara Guadalajara ( ; ) is the capital and the most populous city in the western Mexican List of states of Mexico, state of Jalisco, as well as the most densely populated municipality in Jalisco. According to the 2020 census, the city has a population ...
. According to Peter Dale Scott, the Guadalajara Cartel prospered largely because it enjoyed the protection of the
Dirección Federal de Seguridad The Dirección Federal de Seguridad (''Federal Security Directorate'', DFS) was a Mexican intelligence agency and secret police. It was created in 1947 under Mexican president Miguel Alemán Valdés with the assistance of U.S. intelligence age ...
(DFS), under its chief Miguel Nazar Haro. Félix Gallardo was arrested on April 8, 1989. He then divested the trade he controlled as it would be more efficient and less likely to be brought down in one law enforcement swoop. He sent his lawyer to convene the nation's top drug traffickers at a house in
Acapulco Acapulco de Juárez (), commonly called Acapulco ( , ; ), is a city and Port of Acapulco, major seaport in the Political divisions of Mexico, state of Guerrero on the Pacific Coast of Mexico, south of Mexico City. Located on a deep, semicirc ...
where he designated ''plazas'' or territories. The Tijuana route would go to his nephews the Tijuana Cartel, Arellano Felix brothers. The Juárez Cartel, Ciudad Juárez route would go to the Amado Carrillo Fuentes, Carrillo Fuentes family. Miguel Caro Quintero would run the Sonora Cartel, Sonora corridor. Meanwhile, Joaquín Guzmán Loera and Ismael Zambada García would take over Pacific coast operations, becoming the
Sinaloa Cartel The Sinaloa Cartel (, , after the native Sinaloa region), also known as the ''CDS'', the ''Guzmán-Loera Organization'', the ''Federation'', the ''Sinaloa Cartel'', or the Pacific Cartel, is a large, drug trafficking transnational organized cri ...
. Guzmán and Zambada brought veteran Héctor Luis Palma Salazar back into the fold. The control of the Matamoros, Tamaulipas corridor—then becoming the
Gulf Cartel The Gulf Cartel ( , or ''Golfos'') is a criminal syndicate, Drug cartel, drug trafficking organization, and U.S.-designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, which is perhaps one of the oldest organized crime groups in Mexico. It is currently bas ...
—would be left undisturbed to its founder Juan García Ábrego, who was not a party to the 1989 pact. Félix Gallardo still planned to oversee national operations, as he maintained important connections, but he would no longer control all details of the business. When he was transferred to a high-security prison in 1993, he lost any remaining control over the other drug lords.


Major cartels in the war


Sinaloa Cartel

The Sinaloa Cartel began to contest the Gulf Cartel's domination of the coveted southwest Texas corridor following the arrest of Gulf Cartel leader Osiel Cárdenas in March 2003. The "Federation" was the result of a 2006 accord between several groups located in the Pacific state of
Sinaloa Sinaloa (), officially the (), is one of the 31 states which, along with Mexico City, compose the Federal Entities of Mexico. It is divided into 18 municipalities, and its capital city is Culiacán Rosales. It is located in northwest Mexic ...
. The cartel was led by
Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera (; born 4 April 1957), commonly known as "El Chapo", is a Mexican former drug lord and a former leader within the Sinaloa Cartel. Guzmán is believed to be responsible for the deaths of over 34,000 people, ...
, who was Mexico's most-wanted drug trafficker with an estimated net worth of U.S. $1 billion. This made him the 1140th richest man in the world and the 55th most powerful, according to his ''Forbes'' magazine profile. He was arrested and escaped in July 2015, and re-arrested in January 2016. In February 2010, new alliances were formed against Los Zetas and Beltrán-Leyva Cartel. The Sinaloa Cartel fought the Juárez Cartel in a long and bloody battle for control over drug trafficking routes in and around the northern city of Ciudad Juárez. The battle eventually resulted in defeat for the Juárez Cartel, resulting in the deaths of between 5,000 and 12,000 people. During the war for the turf in Ciudad Juárez the Sinaloa Cartel used several gangs (e.g. Los Mexicles, the Artistas Asesinos and Gente Nueva) to attack the Juárez Cartel. The Juárez Cartel similarly used gangs such as La Línea (gang), La Línea and the Barrio Azteca to fight the Sinaloa Cartel. As of May 2010, numerous reports by Mexican and U.S. media stated that Sinaloa had infiltrated the Mexican federal government and military, and colluded with it to destroy the other cartels. The Colima Cartel, Colima, Sonora and Milenio Cartels are now branches of the Sinaloa Cartel.
Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera (; born 4 April 1957), commonly known as "El Chapo", is a Mexican former drug lord and a former leader within the Sinaloa Cartel. Guzmán is believed to be responsible for the deaths of over 34,000 people, ...
was arrested on January 8, 2016, and extradited to the United States a year later. On February 4, 2019, in Brooklyn, NY, he was found guilty of ten counts of drug trafficking and sentenced to life imprisonment. Guzman unsuccessfully attempted to convince prosecutors that he has assumed charges on behalf of Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada "El Chapo" alleged that he had paid former presidents
Enrique Peña Nieto Enrique Peña Nieto (; born 20 July 1966), commonly referred to by his initials EPN, is a Mexican former politician and lawyer who was the 64th president of Mexico from 2012 to 2018. A member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), he p ...
and Felipe Calderón bribes, which was quickly denied by both men. In March 2019, El Chapo's successor, Ismael Zambada García, alias "El Mayo," was reported to be Mexico's "last Capo" and even more feared than his closest rival Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias "El Mencho," who serves as leader of the Jalisco Cartel New Generation. On January 5, 2023, the arrest of Ovidio Guzmán López, Ovidio Guzmán, son of jailed drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán, 2023 Sinaloa unrest, sparked a wave of violence in the state of Sinaloa. The violence prompted the Mexican Army, Mexican military to launch a series of armed raids using planes and helicopters to attack Sinaloa cartel members.


Beltrán-Leyva Cartel

The Beltrán-Leyva Cartel was a Mexican drug cartel and organized crime syndicate founded by the four Beltrán Leyva brothers: Marcos Arturo Beltrán-Leyva, Marcos Arturo, Carlos Beltrán Leyva, Carlos, Alfredo Beltrán Leyva, Alfredo and Héctor Beltrán Leyva, Héctor. In 2004 and 2005, Arturo Beltrán Leyva led powerful groups of assassins to fight for trade routes in northeastern Mexico for the Sinaloa Cartel. Through corruption or intimidation, the Beltrán-Leyva Cartel infiltrated Mexico's political, judicial and police institutions to feed classified information about anti-drug operations, and even infiltrated the Interpol office in Mexico. Following the December 2009 death of the cartel's leader Arturo Beltrán Leyva by Mexican Marines the cartel entered into an internal power struggle between Arturo's brother, Héctor Beltrán Leyva, and Arturo's top enforcer Edgar Valdez Villarreal. Meanwhile, the cartel continued to dissolve with factions such as the South Pacific Cartel, La Mano Con Ojos, Independent Cartel of Acapulco, and La Barredora forming and the latter two cartels starting yet another intra-Beltrán Leyva Cartel conflict. The Mexican Federal Police considers the cartel to have been disbanded, and the last cartel leader, Héctor Beltrán Leyva, was captured in October 2014.


Juárez Cartel

The Juárez Cartel controls one of the primary transportation routes for billions of dollars' worth of illegal drug shipments annually entering the United States from Mexico. Since 2007, the Juárez Cartel has been locked in a vicious battle with its former partner, the Sinaloa Cartel, for control of Ciudad Juárez. La Línea is a group of Mexican drug traffickers and corrupt Juárez and Chihuahua state police officers who work as the armed wing of the Juárez Cartel. Vicente Carrillo Fuentes headed the Juárez Cartel until his arrest in 2014. Since 2011, the Juárez Cartel continues to weaken. It is present in the three main points of entry into El Paso, Texas. The Juárez Cartel is only a shadow of the organization it was a decade ago, and its weakness and inability to effectively fight against Sinaloa's advances in Juarez contributed to the lower death toll in Juarez in 2011.


Tijuana Cartel

The Tijuana Cartel, also known as the Arellano Félix Organization, was once among Mexico's most powerful. It is based in Tijuana, one of the most strategically important border towns in Mexico, and continues to export drugs even after weakening by an internal war in 2009. Due to infighting, arrests and the deaths of some of its top members, the Tijuana Cartel is a fraction of what it was in the 1990s and early 2000s, when it was considered one of the most potent and violent criminal organizations in Mexico by the police. After the arrest or assassination of various members of the Arellano Félix family, the cartel is currently allegedly headed by Edwin Huerta Nuño alias "El Flako".


Gulf Cartel

The Gulf Cartel (CDG), based in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, has been one of Mexico's two dominant cartels in recent years. In the late 1990s, it hired a private mercenary army (an enforcer group now called Los Zetas), which in 2006 stepped up as a partner but, in February 2010, their partnership was dissolved, and both groups engaged in widespread violence across several border cities of Tamaulipas state, turning several border towns into "ghost towns". The CDG was strong at the beginning of 2011, holding off several Zetas incursions into its territory. As the year progressed, internal divisions led to intra-cartel battles in Matamoros and Reynosa, Tamaulipas state. The infighting resulted in several arrests and deaths in Mexico and in the United States. The CDG has since broken apart, and it appears that one faction, known as Los Metros, has overpowered its rival Los Rojos faction and is now asserting its control over CDG operations. The infighting has weakened the CDG, but the group seems to have maintained control of its primary plazas, or smuggling corridors, into the United States. The Mexican federal government has made notable successes in capturing the leadership of the Gulf Cartel. Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, his brothers Antonio Cárdenas Guillén, Mario Cárdenas Guillén, and Jorge Eduardo Costilla Sánchez have all been captured and incarcerated during Felipe Calderón's administration.


Los Zetas

In 1999, Gulf Cartel's leader, Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, hired a group of 37 corrupt former elite military soldiers to work for him. These former Airmobile Special Forces Group (Grupo Aeromóvil de Fuerzas Especiales, GAFE), and Amphibian Group of Special Forces (GANFE) soldiers became known as Los Zetas and began operating as a private army for the Gulf Cartel. During the early 2000s the Zetas were instrumental in the Gulf Cartel's domination of the drug trade in much of Mexico. After the 2007 arrest and extradition of Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, the Zetas seized the opportunity to strike out on their own. Under the leadership of Heriberto Lazcano, the Zetas, numbering about 300, gradually set up their own independent drug, arms and human-trafficking networks. In 2008, Los Zetas made a deal with ex-Sinaloa cartel commanders, the Beltrán-Leyva brothers and since then, became rivals of their former employer/partner, the Gulf Cartel. In early 2010 the Zetas made public their split from the Gulf Cartel and began a bloody war with the Gulf Cartel over control of northeast Mexico's drug trade routes. This war has resulted in the deaths of thousands of cartel members and suspected members. Furthermore, due to alliance structures, the Gulf Cartel-Los Zetas conflict drew in other cartels, namely the Sinaloa Cartel which fought the Zetas in 2010 and 2011. The Zetas are notorious for targeting civilians, including the mass murder of 72 migrants in the 2010 San Fernando massacre, San Fernando massacre. The Zetas involved themselves in more than drug trafficking and have also been connected to human trafficking, pipeline trafficked oil theft, extortion, and trading unlicensed CDs. Their criminal network is said to reach far from Mexico including into Central America, the U.S. and Europe. On July 15, 2013, the Mexican Navy arrested the top Zeta boss Miguel Treviño Morales. In recent times, Los Zetas have experienced severe fragmentation and seen its influence diminish. As of December 2016, two subgroups calling themselves Los Zetas Grupo Bravo (Group Bravo) and Zetas Vieja Escuela (Old School Zetas) formed an alliance with the Gulf Cartel against a group known as El Cartel del Noreste (The Cartel of the Northeast).


La Familia Cartel

La Familia Michoacana was a major Mexican drug cartel based in Michoacán between at least 2006 and 2011. It was formerly allied to the Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas, but split off and became an independent organization. In 2009–10, a counter-narcotics offensive by Mexican and U.S. government agencies produced the arrest of at least 345 suspected La Familia members in the U.S., and the incorrectly presumed death of one of the cartel's founders, Nazario Moreno González, on December 9, 2010. The cartel then divided into the Knights Templar Cartel and a José de Jesús Méndez Vargas-led faction, which kept the name La Familia. Following the cartel's fragmentation in late 2010 and early 2011, the La Familia Cartel under Méndez Vargas fought the Knights Templar Cartel but on June 21, 2011, Méndez Vargas was arrested by Mexican authorities and in mid-2011 the attorney general in Mexico (PGR) stated that La Familia Cartel had been "exterminated", leaving only the splinter group, the Knights Templar Cartel. In February 2010, La Familia forged an alliance with the Gulf Cartel against Los Zetas and Beltrán-Leyva Cartel.


Knights Templar

The Knights Templar drug cartel (Spanish: ''Caballeros Templarios'') was created in Michoacán in March 2011 after the death of the charismatic leader of La Familia Michoacana cartel, Nazario Moreno González. The Cartel is headed by Enrique Plancarte Solís and Servando Gómez Martínez who formed the Knights Templar due to differences with José de Jesús Méndez Vargas, who had assumed leadership of La Familia Michoacana. After the emergence of the Knights Templar, sizable battles flared up during the spring and summer months between the Knights Templar and La Familia. The organization has grown from a splinter group to a dominant force over La Familia, and at the end of 2011, following the arrest of José de Jesús "El Chango" Méndez Vargas, leader of La Familia, the cartel appeared to have taken over the bulk of La Familia's operations in Mexico and the U.S. In 2011 the Knights Templar appeared to have aligned with the Sinaloa Federation in an effort to root out the remnants of La Familia and to prevent Los Zetas from gaining a more substantial foothold in the Michoacán region of central Mexico. Alliances or agreements between drug cartels have been shown to be fragile, tense and temporary. Mexican drug cartels have increased their co-operation with U.S. street and prison gangs to expand their distribution networks within the U.S. On March 31, 2014, Enrique Plancarte Solís, a high-ranking leader in the cartel, was killed by the Mexican Navy. On September 6, 2016, a Mexican police helicopter was shot down by a gang, killing four people. The police were conducting an operation against criminal groups and drug cartels in Apatzingán, including the Knights Templar Cartel.


CJNG

The Jalisco New Generation Cartel (, ''CJNG'', ''Los Mata Zetas'' and ''Los Torcidos'') is a Mexican criminal group based in Jalisco and headed by Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes ("El Mencho"), one of Mexico's most-wanted drug lords. Jalisco New Generation Cartel started as one of the splits of Milenio Cartel, beside La Resistencia. La Resistencia accused CJNG of giving up Oscar Valencia (El Lobo) to the authorities and called them Los Torcidos (The Twisted Ones). Jalisco Cartel defeated La Resistencia and took control of Millenio Cartel's smuggling networks. Jalisco New Generation Cartel expanded its operation network from coast to coast in only six months, making it one of the criminal groups with the greatest operating capacity in Mexico as of 2012. Through online videos, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel has tried to seek society's approval and tacit consent from the Mexican government to confront Los Zetas by posing as a "righteous" and "nationalistic" group. Such claims have stoked fears that Mexico, just like Paramilitarism in Colombia, Colombia a generation before, may be witnessing the rise of paramilitary drug gangs. By 2018 the CJNG was hyped as the most powerful cartel in Mexico. though Insight Crime has said the Sinaloa Cartel is still the most powerful cartel and called the CJNG its closest rival. In 2019, the group was greatly weakened by infighting, arrests of senior operatives, and a war with the Sinaloa Cartel and its allies.


Nueva Plaza Cartel

CJNG co-founder Érick Valencia Salazar (alias "El 85") and former high-ranking CJNG leader Enrique Sánchez Martínez (alias "El Cholo") had also departed from the CJNG and formed a rival cartel known as the Nueva Plaza Cartel. Since 2017, the cartel has been engaged in a war with the CJNG. The Nueva Plaza Cartel has also become aligned with the Sinaloa Cartel to fight the CJNG.


Cartel propaganda and messaging

Criminal organizations in Mexico are heavily involved in information warfare. These groups have a variety of tools they use to influence public opinion, such as food handouts, sponsoring of community development, social media posts, filmed press release-style video communications, physical narco messages, narco corridos, and private messaging such as WhatsApp chats. The goal of narco propaganda is to influence public opinion, threaten or accuse rivals, and generally communicate with those outside their organization. Many cartels have controlled the information environment by threatening journalists, bloggers, and others who speak out against them. Their primary method of communication is the physical narco message, which can range from professionally-printed banners to hastily written messages on cardboard or paper. They are commonly displayed in public places, such as bridges, town centers, and highways. Many are often also left at crime scenes, such as after an assassination. Some cartels, such as the CJNG, have sophisticated propaganda arms capable of producing large numbers of professional styled narco messages to advance their interests. These messages use stock phrases or slogans, cartel logos, and have cohesive messaging. In 2011, then President Felipe Calderón (2006–2012) met with Mexico's major media outlets to discuss their role in what he argued was sensationalizing the violence and providing free press coverage to cartels and their messages. They agreed to limit coverage of the drug war and the messaging of criminal groups.


Paramilitaries

Paramilitary groups work alongside cartels to provide protection. This protection began with a focus on maintaining the drug trade, then moved to theft from other valuable industries such as oil and mining. It has been suggested that the rise in paramilitary groups coincides with a loss of security within the government. These paramilitary groups came about in a number of ways. First, waves of elite armed forces and government security experts have left the government to join the side of the cartels, responding to large bribes and an opportunity for wealth they may not have received in government positions. One such paramilitary group, Los Zetas, employed military personnel to create one of the largest groups in Mexico. Some of the elite armed forces members who join paramilitaries are trained in the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHINSEC, formerly known as the School of the Americas). One theory is that the paramilitaries have sprung out of deregulation of the Mexican army, which has been slowly replaced by private security firms. Paramilitaries, including the Zetas, have now entered uncharted territories. Branching out of just protecting drug cartels, paramilitary groups have entered many other financially profitable industries, such as oil, gas, kidnapping, and counterfeiting electronics. There has been a complete and total loss of control by the government, and the only response has been to increase army presence, notably an army whose officials are often on the drug cartels' payroll. The United States has stepped in to offer support in the "War on Drugs" through funding, training and military support, and transforming the Mexican judicial system to parallel the American system.


Women

Women in the Mexican drug war have been participants and civilians. They have served for and/or been harmed by all belligerents. There have been female combatants in the military, police, cartels, and gangs. Women officials, judges, prosecutors, lawyers, paralegals, reporters, business owners, social media influencers, teachers, and non-governmental organizations directors and workers have also been involved in different capacities. Women citizens and foreigners, including migrants, have been raped, tortured, and murdered in the conflict. Women's involvement in the cartel is noticeably less than males, but they do play an important role nonetheless. Often, because no one would suspect a woman to commit such a serious crime, it makes them the perfect smuggler. Women smugglers could drive up to a checkpoint with a car full of drugs, and more often than not, no one would suspect them of anything. Women may find allure in a criminal lifestyle for the sense of freedom. Mexico already has a male-dominated culture, but by working in the drug trade, they can be empowered and even liberated. If women cannot obtain freedom through legal means, then it is possible they will use illegal avenues to achieve the same goal. Cartels and gangs fighting in the conflict carry out sex trafficking in Mexico as an alternative source of profits. Some members of the criminal organizations also abduct women and girls to use as their personal sex slaves and carry out sexual assault of migrants from Latin America to the United States.


Firearms


Smuggling of firearms

Mexicans have a constitutional right to own firearms, but legal purchase from the single Mexican gun shop in Mexico City is extremely difficult. Firearms that make their way to Mexico come primarily from the American civilian market. Most grenades and rocket-launchers are smuggled through Guatemalan borders, as Contras, leftovers from past conflicts in Nicaragua. Some grenades are also smuggled from the U.S. to Mexico or stolen from the Mexican military. The most common weapons used by the cartels are the AR-15, M16 rifle, M16, M4 carbine, M4, AK-47, AKM and Type 56 assault rifle, Type 56 assault rifles. Handguns are very diverse, but the FN Five-seven (dubbed ''Matapolicías'' or ''Cop-killer'' by criminals) is a popular choice due to its armor-piercing capability. Grenade launchers are known to have been used against Mexican security forces, while Heckler & Koch G36, H&K G36s and M4 carbines with M203 grenade launchers have been confiscated.


Gun origins

Some researchers have asserted that most weapons and arms trafficked into Mexico come from gun dealers in the United States. There is strong evidence for this conclusion, and there is a geographic coincidence between the supposed American origin of the firearms and the places where these weapons are seized, mainly in the northern Mexican states. Most grenades and rocket-launchers are smuggled through Guatemalan borders from Central America. Some grenades are also smuggled from the US to Mexico or stolen from the Mexican military. United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials have stated that the statistic is misleading: out of approximately 30,000 weapons seized in drug cases in Mexico in 2004–2008, 7,200 appeared to be of U.S. origin, approximately 4,000 were found in ATF manufacturer and importer records, and 87 percent of those—3,480—originated in the United States. In an effort to control smuggling of firearms, the U.S. government is assisting Mexico with technology, equipment and training. Project Gunrunner was one such effort between the U.S. and Mexico to collaborate in tracing Mexican guns which were manufactured in or imported legally to the U.S. In 2008, it was falsely reported that ninety percent of arms either captured in Mexico or interdicted were from the United States. The DHS and others have dismissed these claims, pointing that the Mexican sample submitted for ATF tracing is the fraction of weapons seized that appear to have been made in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. In 2015, official reports of the U.S. government and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) revealed that over the last years, Mexican cartels improved their firearm power, and that 71% of their weapons come from the U.S. Many of those guns were manufactured in Romania and Bulgaria, and then imported into the U.S. The Mexican cartels acquire those firearms mainly in the southern states of Texas, Arizona and California. After the United States, the top five countries of origin of firearms seized from Mexico were Spain, China, Italy, Germany and Romania. These five countries represent 17% of firearms smuggled into Mexico. Some cartels such as the Beltrán Leyva Cartel use counterfeit M16s made with aftermarket parts.


Project Gunrunner

ATF Project Gunrunner has stated that the official objective is to stop the sale and export of guns from the United States into Mexico in order to deny Mexican drug cartels the firearms considered "tools of the trade". In February 2011, it brought about a scandal when the project was accused of accomplishing the opposite by ATF permitting and facilitating "straw purchase" firearm sales to traffickers, and allowing the guns to "walk" and be transported to Mexico. Allegedly, the ATF allowed to complete the transactions to expose the supply chain and gather intelligence. It has been established that this operation violated long-established ATF policies and practices and that it is not a recognized investigative technique. Several of the guns sold under the Project Gunrunner were recovered from crime scenes in Arizona, and at crime scenes throughout Mexico, resulting in considerable controversy. One notable incident was the "Black Swan operation" where Joaquín Guzmán Loera was finally captured. The ATF confirmed that one of the weapons the Mexican Navy seized from Guzmán's gunmen was one of the many weapons that were "lost" during the Project Gunrunner. Many weapons from Project Gunrunner were found in a secret compartment in the "safe house" of José Antonio Marrufo "El Jaguar", one of Guzmán's most sanguinary lieutenants. He is accused of many killings in Ciudad Juárez, including the notorious Ciudad Juárez rehab center attack, massacre of 18 patients at a "El Aliviane" rehabilitation center. It is believed that Marrufo armed his gunmen with weapons purchased in the United States.


Operations


Operation Michoacán

Although violence between drug cartels had been occurring long before the war began, the government held a generally passive stance regarding cartel violence in the 1990s and early 2000s. That changed on December 11, 2006, when newly elected President Felipe Calderón sent 6,500 Federal troops to the state of Michoacán to end drug violence there. This action is regarded as the first major operation against organized crime, and became the starting point of the war between the government and the drug cartels. Calderón escalated his anti-drug campaign, in which there are now about 45,000 troops involved in addition to state and federal police forces. In 2010, Calderón said that the cartels seek "to replace the government" and "are trying to impose a monopoly by force of arms, and are even trying to impose their own laws". As of 2011, Mexico's military captured 11,544 people who were believed to have been involved with the cartels and organized crime. In the year prior, 28,000 individuals were arrested on drug-related charges. The decrease in eradication and drug seizures, as shown in statistics calculated by federal authorities, poorly reflects Calderón's security agenda. Since the war began, over forty thousand people have been killed as a result of cartel violence. During Calderón's presidential term, the murder rate of Mexico increased dramatically. Although Calderón set out to end the violent warfare between rival cartel leaders, critics argue that he inadvertently made the problem worse. The methods that Calderón adopted involved confronting the cartels directly. These aggressive methods have resulted in public killings and torture from both the cartels and the country's own government forces, which aids in perpetuating the fear and apprehension that the citizens of Mexico have regarding the war on drugs and its negative stigma. As cartel leaders are removed from their positions, by arrest or death, power struggles for leadership in the cartels have become more intense, resulting in enhanced violence within the cartels themselves. Calderón's forces concentrate on taking down cartel members that have a high ranking in the cartel in an attempt to take down the whole organization. The resulting struggle to fill the recently vacated position is one that threatens the existence of many lives in the cartel. Typically, many junior-level cartel members then fight amongst one another, creating more and more chaos. The drug cartels are more aggressive and forceful now than they were in the past and at this point, the cartels hold much of the power in Mexico. Calderón relies heavily on the military to defend and fight against cartel activity. Calderón's military forces have yet to yield significant results in dealing with the violent cartels due in part to the fact that many police working for the Mexican government are suspected of corruption. There is suspicion that cartels have corrupted and infiltrated the military at a high level, influencing many generals and officers. Mexico's National Human Rights Commission has received nearly 5,800 complaints regarding military abuse since the beginning of the drug war in 2006. Additionally, the National Human Rights Commission has completed nearly 90 in-depth reports since 2007, addressing the many human rights violations of civilians that have occurred while the military officers were actively participating in law enforcement activities. Violence in May 2012 in which nearly 50 bodies were found on a local highway between the Mexico–United States border and Monterrey has led to the arrests of 4 high-ranking Mexican military officials. These officials were suspected of being on the cartel payrolls and alerting them before military action against them. Such actions demonstrate that Calderón's significant military offensive will continue to reveal mixed results until the military itself is rid of the corrupting influences of the cartels whom they supposedly aim to persecute.


Escalation (2008–12)

In April 2008, General Sergio Aponte, the man in charge of the anti-drug campaign in the state of Baja California, made a number of allegations of corruption against the police forces in the region. Among his allegations, Aponte stated that he believed Baja California's anti-kidnapping squad was actually a kidnapping team working in conjunction with organized crime, and that bribed police units were used as bodyguards for drug traffickers. These accusations sent shock waves through state government. Many of the more than 50 accused officials quit or fled. The progress against drug cartels in Mexico has been hindered by bribery, intimidation, and corruption; four months later the General was relieved of his command. On April 26, 2008, a major battle took place between members of the Tijuana and Sinaloa cartels in the city of Tijuana, Baja California, that left 17 people dead. In March 2009, President Calderón called in an additional 5,000 Mexican Army troops to Ciudad Juárez. The DHS also said that it was considering using state National Guard of the United States, National Guard troops to help the United States Border Patrol, U.S. Border Patrol counter the threat of drug violence in Mexico from spilling over the border into the U.S. The governors of Arizona and Texas have encouraged the federal government to use additional National Guard troops from their states to help those already there supporting state law enforcement efforts against drug trafficking. According to the National Drug Intelligence Center, Mexican cartels are the predominant smugglers and wholesale distributors of South American cocaine and Mexico-produced cannabis, methamphetamine and heroin. Mexico's cartels have existed for some time, but have become increasingly powerful in recent years with the demise of the Medellín and Cali cartels in Colombia. The Mexican cartels are expanding their control over the distribution of these drugs in areas controlled by Colombian and Dominican criminal groups, and it is now believed they control most of the illegal drugs coming into the U.S. No longer mere intermediaries for Colombian producers, Mexican cartels are now powerful organized-crime syndicates that dominate the drug trade in the Americas. Mexican cartels control large swaths of Mexican territory and dozens of municipalities, and they exercise increasing influence in Mexican electoral politics. Cartels have waged violent turf battles over control of key smuggling corridors from Matamoros to San Diego. Mexican cartels employ hitmen and groups of enforcers, known as ''sicarios''. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration reports that the Mexican drug cartels operating today along the border are far more sophisticated and dangerous than any other organized criminal group in U.S. law enforcement history. The cartels use grenade launchers, automatic weapons, Ballistic vest, body armor, Kevlar helmets, and sometimes unmanned aerial vehicles. Some groups have also been known to use improvised explosive devices (IEDs). Casualty numbers have escalated significantly over time. According to a Stratfor report, the number of drug-related deaths in 2006 and 2007 (2,119 and 2,275) more than doubled to 5,207 in 2008. The number further increased substantially over the next two years, from 6,598 in 2009 to over 11,000 in 2010. According to data of the Mexican government, the death numbers are even higher: 9,616 in 2009, 15,273 in 2010, coming to a total of 47,515 killings since their military operations against drug cartels began in 2006, as stated in the government's report of January 2012. On October 7, 2012, the Mexican Navy responded to a civilian complaint reporting the presence of armed gunmen in Sabinas, Coahuila. Upon the navy's arrival, the gunmen threw grenades at the patrol from a moving vehicle, triggering a shootout that left Lazcano and another gunman dead and one marine slightly wounded. The vehicle was found to contain a grenade launcher, 12 grenades, possibly a rocket-propelled grenade launcher and two rifles, according to the navy. The Navy confirmed his death through fingerprint verification and photographs of his corpse before handing the body to the local authorities. Lazcano is the most powerful cartel leader to be killed since the start of Mexico's drug war in 2006, according to Reuters. This death came just hours after the navy arrested a high-ranking Zeta member in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Salvador Alfonso Martínez Escobedo. The death of Lazcano benefited three parties; the Mexican Navy, who scored a significant blow to organized crime with the death of Lazcano, Miguel Treviño Morales, who rose as the "uncontested" leader of Los Zetas, and Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, the leader of the Sinaloa Cartel and the main rival of Los Zetas. ''El Chapo'' was perhaps the biggest winner of the three, since his primary goal was to take over the smuggling routes in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, the headquarters of Treviño Morales. If the body had not been stolen, it would also have been a symbolic victory for Felipe Calderón, who could have said that his administration took down one of the founders and top leaders of Los Zetas and consequently boost the morale of the Mexican military.


Effects in Mexico


Casualties

It is often not clear what deaths are part of the Mexican drug war versus general criminal homicides, and different sources give different estimates. Casualties are often measured indirectly by estimated total deaths from organized crime in Mexico. This amounts to about 115,000 people in the years 2007–2018. From 2018 to 2020, it was estimated that there were 11,400 reports of gang violence, and over 80% of the attacks targeted civilians, resulting in 13,000 related-deaths during the period.


Violence

The Mexican attorney general's office has claimed that 9 of 10 victims of the Mexican drug war are members of organized-crime groups, although this figure has been questioned by other sources. Deaths among military and police personnel are an estimated 7% of the total. The states that suffer from the conflict most are Baja California, Guerrero, Chihuahua (state), Chihuahua, Michoacán, Tamaulipas, Nuevo León and Sinaloa. By January 2007, these various operations had extended to the states of Guerrero as well as the so-called "Golden Triangle States" of Chihuahua, Durango, and Sinaloa. In the following February the states of Nuevo León and Tamaulipas were included as well. On July 10, 2008, the Mexican government announced plans to nearly double the size of its Federal Preventive Police, Federal Police force to reduce the role of the military in combating drug trafficking. The plan, known as the Comprehensive Strategy Against Drug Trafficking, involved purging local police forces of corrupt officers. Elements of the plan included a massive police recruiting and training effort intended to reduce the country's dependence in the drug war on the military. On July 16, 2008, the Mexican Navy intercepted a 10-meter long narco-submarine travelling about 200 kilometers off the southwest of Oaxaca; in a raid, Fuerzas Especiales, Special Forces rappelled from a helicopter onto the deck of the submarine and arrested four smugglers before they could scuttling, scuttle their vessel. The vessel was found to be loaded with 5.8 tons of cocaine and was towed to Huatulco, Oaxaca, by a Mexican Navy patrol boat. One escalation in this conflict is the traffickers' use of new means to claim their territory and spread fear. Cartel members have broadcast executions on YouTube and on other video sharing platforms or shock sites. Cartels have also hung banners on streets stating demands and warnings. The 2008 Morelia grenade attacks took place on September 15, 2008, when two hand grenades were thrown onto a crowded plaza, killing ten people and injuring more than 100. Some see these efforts as intended to sap the morale of government agents assigned to crack down on the cartels; others see them as an effort to let citizens know who is winning the war. At least one dozen Mexican ''norteño'' musicians have been murdered. Most of the victims performed what are known as ''narcocorridos'', popular folk songs that tell the stories of the Mexican drug trade—and celebrate its leaders as folk heroes. Increasing violence has jeopardized foreign investment in Mexico. Finance Minister, Agustín Carstens, said that the deteriorating security alone is reducing gross domestic product annually by 1% in Mexico, Latin America's second-largest economy. Teachers in the Acapulco region were "extorted, kidnapped and intimidated" by cartels, including death threats demanding money. They went on strike in 2011.


Government corruption

Mexican cartels advance their operations, in part, by corrupting or intimidating law enforcement officials. Mexican municipal, state, and federal government officials, along with the police forces, often work together with the cartels in an organized network of corruption. A ''Pax Mafioso'', is a specific example of corruption which guarantees a politician votes and a following in exchange for not impeding a particular cartel. The International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) reports that although the central government of Mexico has made concerted efforts to reduce corruption in recent years, it remains a serious problem. Some agents of the Federal Investigations Agency (AFI) are believed to work as enforcers for various cartels, and the Attorney General of Mexico, Attorney General (PGR) reported in December 2005 that nearly 1,500 of AFI's 7,000 agents were under investigation for suspected criminal activity and 457 were facing charges. In recent years, the federal government conducted purges and prosecution of police forces in Nuevo Laredo, Michoacán, Baja California and Mexico City. The anti-cartel operations begun by President Calderón in December 2006 includes ballistic checks of police weapons in places where there is concern that police are also working for the cartels. In June 2007, President Calderón purged 284 federal police commanders from all 31 states and the Federal District. Under the 'Cleanup Operation' performed in 2008, several agents and high-ranking officials have been arrested and charged with selling information or protection to drug cartels; some high-profile arrests were: Victor Gerardo Garay Cadena, (chief of the Federal Police), Noé Ramírez Mandujano (ex-chief of the SEIDO, Organized Crime Division (SEIDO)), José Luis Santiago Vasconcelos (ex-chief of the Organized Crime Division (SEIDO)), and Ricardo Gutiérrez Vargas who is the ex-director of Mexico's Interpol office. In January 2009, Rodolfo de la Guardia García, ex-director of Mexico's Interpol office, was arrested. Julio César Godoy Toscano, who was just elected July 6, 2009, to the lower house of Congress, is charged with being a top-ranking member of La Familia Michoacana drug cartel and of protecting this cartel. He is now a fugitive. In May 2010, an NPR report collected allegations from dozens of sources, including U.S. and Mexican media, Mexican police officials, politicians, academics, and others, that Sinaloa Cartel had infiltrated and corrupted the Mexican federal government and the Mexican military by bribery and other means. According to a report by the U.S. Army Intelligence section in Leavenworth, over a six-year period, of the 250,000 soldiers in the Mexican Army, 150,000 deserted and went into the drug industry. The 2010 NPR report also stated that the Sinaloa Cartel was colluding with the government to destroy other cartels and protect itself and its leader, 'Chapo'. Mexican officials denied any corruption in the government's treatment of drug cartels. Cartels had previously been reported as difficult to prosecute "because members of the cartels have infiltrated and corrupted the law enforcement organizations that are supposed to prosecute them, such as the Office of the Attorney General."


Effects on human rights

The drug control policies Mexico has adopted to prevent drug trafficking and to eliminate the power of the drug cartels have adversely affected the human rights situation in the country. These policies have given the responsibilities for civilian drug control to the military, which has the power to not only carry out anti-drug and public security operations but also enact policy. According to the U.S. State Department, the police and the military in Mexico were accused of committing serious human rights violations as they carried out government efforts to combat drug cartels. Some groups are especially vulnerable to human rights abuses collateral to drug law enforcement. Specifically in northern border states that have seen elevated levels of drug-related violence, human rights violations of injection drug users (IDUs) and sex workers by law enforcement personnel include physical and sexual violence, extortion, and targeting for accessing or possession of injection equipment or practicing sex work, although these activities are legal. Such targeting is especially deleterious because members of these marginalized communities often lack the resources and social or political capital to enforce their rights. Immense power in the executive branch and corruption in the legislative and judiciary branches also contribute to the worsening of Mexico's human rights situation, leading to such problems as police forces violating basic human rights through torture and threats, the autonomy of the military and its consequences and the ineffectiveness of the judiciary in upholding and preserving basic human rights. Some of the forms of human rights violations in recent years presented by human rights organizations include illegal arrests, secret and prolonged detention, torture, rape, extrajudicial execution, and fabrication of evidence. Drug policy fails to target high-level traffickers. In the 1970s, as part of the international
Operation Condor Operation Condor (; ) was a campaign of political repression by the right-wing dictatorships of the Southern Cone of South America, involving intelligence operations, coups, and assassinations of left-wing sympathizers in South America which fo ...
, the Mexican government deployed 10,000 soldiers and police to a poverty-stricken region in northern Mexico plagued by drug production and leftist insurgency. Hundreds of peasants were arrested, tortured, and jailed, but no major drug traffickers were captured. The emergence of internal federal agencies that are often unregulated and unaccountable also contributes to the occurrence of human rights violations. The AFI of Mexico had been involved with numerous human rights violation cases involving torture and corruption. In one case, detainee Guillermo Velez Mendoza died while in the custody of AFI agents. The AFI agent implicated in his death was arrested and escaped on bail. Similarly, nearly all AFI agents evaded punishment and arrest due to the corrupt executive and judiciary system and the supremacy of these agencies. The Attorney General's Office reported in December 2005 that one-fifth of its officers were under investigation for criminal activity, and that nearly 1,500 of AFI's 7,000 agents were under investigation for suspected criminal activity and 457 were facing charges. The AFI was finally declared a failure and was disbanded in 2009. Ethnic prejudices have also emerged in the drug war, and indigenous communities have been targeted by the police, military, drug traffickers and the justice system. According to the National Human Rights Commission (Mexico) (Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos-CNDH), nearly one-third of the indigenous prisoners in Mexico in 2001 were in prison for federal crimes, which are mostly drug-related. Another major concern is the lack of implementation of the Leahy Law in U.S. and the consequences of that in worsening the human rights situation in Mexico. Under this U.S. law, no member or unit of a foreign security force that is credibly alleged to have committed a human rights violation may receive U.S. security training. It is alleged that the U.S., by training the military and police force in Mexico, is in violation of the Leahy Law. In this case, the U.S. embassy officials in Mexico in charge of human rights and drug control programs are blamed with aiding and abetting these violations. In December 1997, a group of heavily armed Mexican special forces soldiers kidnapped twenty young men in Ocotlan, Jalisco, brutally torturing them and killing one. Six of the implicated officers had received U.S. training as part of the Grupo Aeromóvil de Fuerzas Especiales (GAFE) training program.


Effects on public health

As a result of "spillover" along the U.S.-bound drug trafficking routes and more stringent border enforcement, Mexico's northern border states have seen increased levels of drug consumption and abuse, including elevated rates of drug injection 10 to 15 times the national average. These rates are accompanied by mounting rates of HIV and STIs among injection drug users (IDUs) and sex workers, reaching a 5.5% prevalence in cities such as Tijuana and Ciudad Juárez, which also report STI rates of 64% and 83%, respectively. Violence and extortion of IDUs and sex workers directly and indirectly elevate the levels of risk behavior and poor health outcomes among members of these groups. Marginalization of these vulnerable groups by way of physical and sexual violence and extortion by police threatens the cross-over of infection from high-prevalence groups to the general population. In particular, decreased access to public health services such as syringe exchange programs and confiscation of syringes can precipitate a cascade of health harms. Geographic diffusion of epidemics from the northern border states elsewhere is also possible with the rotation of police and military personnel stationed in drug conflict areas with high infection prevalence.


Journalists and the media

The increase in violence related with organized crime has significantly deteriorated the conditions in which local journalism is practiced. In the first years of the 21st century, Mexico was considered the most dangerous country in the world to practice journalism, according to groups like the National Human Rights Commission, Reporters Without Borders, and the Committee to Protect Journalists. Between 2000 and 2012, several dozen journalists, including Miguel Ángel López Velasco, Luis Carlos Santiago, and Valentín Valdés Espinosa, were murdered there for covering narco-related news. The offices of Televisa and local newspapers have been bombed. The cartels have also threatened to kill news reporters in the U.S. who have done coverage on the drug violence. Some media networks simply stopped reporting on drug crimes, while others have been infiltrated and corrupted by drug cartels. In 2011, Notiver journalist Miguel Angel Lopez Velasco, his wife, and his son were murdered in their home. About 74 percent of the journalists killed since 1992 in Mexico have been reporters for print newspapers, followed in number by Internet media and radio at about 11 percent each. Television journalism only includes 4 percent of the deaths. These numbers are not proportional to the audience size of the different mediums; most Mexican households have a television, a large majority have a radio, but only a small number have the internet, and the circulation numbers for Mexican newspapers are relatively low. Since harassment neutralized many traditional media outlets, anonymous, sensationalized blogs like Blog del Narco took on the role of reporting on events related to the drug war. The drug cartels responded by murdering bloggers and social media users. Twitter users have been tortured and killed for posting and denouncing information of the drug cartels' activities. In September 2011, user NenaDLaredo of the website Nuevo Laredo Envivo was allegedly murdered by Los Zetas. In May 2012, several journalist murders occurred in Veracruz. Regina Martinez of ''Proceso (magazine), Proceso'' was murdered in Xalapa. A few days later, three Veracruz photojournalists were tortured and killed and their dismembered bodies were dumped in a canal. They had worked for various news outlets, including Notiver, Diario AZ, and TV Azteca. Human rights groups condemned the murders and demanded the authorities investigate the crimes.


Murders of politicians

Since the start of the Mexican drug war in 2006, the drug trafficking organizations have slaughtered their rivals, killed policemen, and have increasingly targeted politicians – especially local leaders. Most of the places where these politicians have been killed are areas plagued by drug-related violence. Part of the strategy used by criminal groups behind the killings of local figures is the weakening of the local governments. For example, María Santos Gorrostieta Salazar, former mayor of Tiquicheo, Tiquicheo, Michoacán, who had survived three earlier assassination attempts and the murder of her husband, was abducted and beaten to death in November 2012. Extreme violence puts politicians at the mercy of the cartels, allowing them to increase their control of government structures and expand their influence. In addition, because mayors usually appoint local Chief of police, police chiefs, they are seen by the cartels as key assets in their criminal activities to control the police forces in their areas of influence. The cartels also seek to control the local governments to win government contracts and concessions; these "public works" help them ingrain themselves in the community and gain the loyalty and respect of the communities in which they operate. Politicians are usually targeted for three reasons: (1) Political figures who are honest pose a direct threat to organized crime, and are consequently killed by the cartels; (2) Politicians make arrangements to protect a certain cartel and are killed by a rival cartel; and (3) A cartel kills politicians to heat up the turf of the rival cartel that operates in the area.


Massacres and exploitation of migrants

Cartels have engaged in kidnapping, ransom, murder, robbery, and extortion of Central American migrant caravans, migrants traveling from Central America through Mexico on their way to the United States and Canada. Cartels have also forced migrants to join their organization and work for them, a situation that has been described as slavery. Mass graves have been also discovered in Mexico containing bodies of migrants. In 2011, 177 bodies were discovered in a mass grave in San Fernando, Tamaulipas, the same area where the bodies of 72 migrants were discovered in 2010, where most victims "died of blunt force trauma to the head." Cartels have also infiltrated the Mexican government's immigration agencies, and attacked and threatened immigration officers. The National Human Rights Commission (Mexico), National Human Rights Commission of Mexico (Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos, CNDH) said that 11,000 migrants had been kidnapped in 6 months in 2010 by drug cartels.


Human trafficking

There are documented links between the drug cartels and human trafficking for forced labor, forced prostitution, and rape. The wife of a drug lord described a system in which young girls became prostitutes and then were forced to work in drug factories. In the early 2010s, Los Zetas reportedly began to move into the prostitution business (including the prostitution of children) after previously only supplying women to already existing networks. The U.S. State Department says that the practice of forced labor in Mexico is larger in extent than forced prostitution. Mexican journalists like Lydia Cacho have been threatened and forced into exile for reporting on these events.


Effects internationally


Europe

Improved cooperation between Mexico and the U.S. has led to the arrests of hundreds of Sinaloa Cartel suspects in U.S. cities and towns, but the U.S. market is being eclipsed by booming demand for cocaine in Europe, where users now pay twice the going U.S. rate. In 2008, U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey announced that an international drug interdiction operation, Project Reckoning, involving law enforcement in the United States, Italy, Canada, Mexico and Guatemala had netted more than 500 organized crime members involved in the cocaine trade. The announcement highlighted the Italian-Mexican cocaine connection. Concerns about European security and the trafficking of drugs through the European continent have grown in recent years, and, in December 2022, Europol (the law enforcement agency of the EU) and the DEA released a joint report on the situation involving Mexican drug trafficking through the EU. In December 2011, the government of Spain remarked that Mexican cartels had multiplied their operations in that country, becoming the main entry point of cocaine into Europe. In 2012, it was reported that Mexican drug cartels had joined forces with the Sicilian Mafia, when Italian officials unearthed information that Palermo's black market, along with other Italian ports, was used by Mexico's drug cartels as a conduit to bring drugs to the European market, in which they had been trafficking drugs, particularly cocaine, throughout the Atlantic Ocean for over 10 years to Europe. In 2016, investigation into transatlantic drug trafficking revealed that the Kinahan Clan, Ireland's largest drug trafficker, among other prominent drug traffickers in Mexico, South America, West Africa, and Europe had created an informal "Super Cartel" in an attempt to improve business and increase buyers. However, the extent of the prevalence of the Super Cartel is largely unknown, since many trafficking relationships may exist without any real central plan. The 2017 guest list to the wedding of Daniel Kinahan led to the discovery of most of the key players in the Super Cartel Alliance. Those that have been most investigated include top underworld figures such as: Ridouan Taghi, Ricardo Riquelme Vega, aka El Rico, caged assassin Noufal Fassih and Italian Camorra boss Raffaele Imperiale. In 2022/2023 - In January 2023, two alleged drug lords said to be kingpins in the mostly European Super Cartel were released just two months after being arrested in Dubai. Edin Gacanin, (Tito) a Dutch-Bosnian national described by the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) as one of the top 50 drug traffickers in the world, and Zuhair Belkhair, a Dutch-Moroccan accused of trafficking huge amounts of cocaine through the port of Rotterdam, were among 49 suspects arrested in a massive, highly publicised, international police operation. Most of the others arrested are awaiting trial or have pled guilty.


Guatemala

The Mexican Army crackdown has driven some cartels to seek a safer location for their operations across the border in Guatemala, attracted by corruption, weak policing and its position on the overland smuggling route. The smugglers pick up drugs from small planes that land at private airstrips hidden in the Guatemalan jungle. The cargo is then moved up through Mexico to the U.S. border. Guatemala has also arrested dozens of drug suspects and torched huge cannabis and poppy fields. The U.S. government sent speedboats and night-vision goggles under a regional drug aid package. In February 2009, Los Zetas threatened to kill the president of Guatemala, Álvaro Colom. On March 1, 2010, Guatemala's chief of national police and the country's top anti-drugs official were arrested over alleged links to drug trafficking. A report from the Brookings Institution warns that, without proactive, timely efforts, the violence will spread throughout the Central American region. According to the United States government, Los Zetas control 75% of Guatemala through violence, political corruption and infiltration in the country's institutions. Sources mentioned that Los Zetas gained ground in Guatemala after they killed several high-profile members and the supreme leader of ''Los Leones'', an organized crime group from Guatemala.


West Africa

At least nine Mexican and Colombian drug cartels have established bases in 11 West African nations. They have reportedly worked closely with local criminal gangs to carve out a staging area for access to the lucrative European market. The Colombian and Mexican cartels have discovered that it is easier to smuggle large loads into West Africa and then break that up into smaller shipments to Europe – mostly Spain, the United Kingdom and France. Higher demand for cocaine in Western Europe in addition to North American interdiction campaigns has led to dramatically increased trafficking in the region: nearly 50% of all non-U.S. bound cocaine, or about 13% of all global flows, is now smuggled through West Africa.


Canada

The Mexican Army severely curtailed the ability of the Mexican drug cartels to move cocaine inside the U.S. and Canada, prompting an upsurge in 2009 Vancouver gang war, gang violence in Vancouver in 2009, where the cocaine price has increased from $23,300 to almost $39,000 per kilo as the Canadian drug markets experienced prolonged shortages. As evidence of this pressure, the U.S. government stated the amount of cocaine seized on U.S. soil dropped by 41 percent between early 2007 and mid-2008. Since 2009, Vancouver has become the Mexican drug cartels' main center of operations in Canada.


South America

Patricio Pazmiño, the Interior Minister of Ecuador, stated that the February 2021 Ecuadorian prison riots, February 2021 riots at three prisons that took 79 lives were related to Mexican and Colombian drug gangs. The government intercepted a record 126 tons of cocaine in 2020. On September 8, 2021, National Prosecutor Jorge Abbott declared that Mexican cartels were attempting to establish themselves in Chile. It is known that
Sinaloa Cartel The Sinaloa Cartel (, , after the native Sinaloa region), also known as the ''CDS'', the ''Guzmán-Loera Organization'', the ''Federation'', the ''Sinaloa Cartel'', or the Pacific Cartel, is a large, drug trafficking transnational organized cri ...
has attempted to use Chile as a transit route for the shipment of cocaine to Rotterdam in the Netherlands. The activity of Jalisco New Generation Cartel includes an attempt at establishing a drug laboratory in Iquique as well as the import of marihuana through the port of San Antonio, Chile, San Antonio.


United States

The United States Department of Justice, U.S. Justice Department considers the Mexican drug cartels to be the "greatest organized crime threat to the United States." During the first 18 months of Calderón's presidency, the Mexican government spent about US$7 billion in the war against drugs. In seeking partnership from the United States, Mexican officials point out that the illicit drug trade is a shared problem in need of a shared solution, and remark that most of the financing for the Mexican traffickers comes from American drug consumers. On March 25, 2009, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stated that "[America's] insatiable demand for illegal drugs fuels the drug trade", and that "the United States bears shared responsibility for the drug-fueled violence sweeping Mexico." U.S. State Department officials knew that Mexican ex-president Felipe Calderón's willingness to work with the United States was unprecedented on issues of security, crime and drugs, so the United States Congress, U.S. Congress passed legislation in late June 2008 to provide Mexico and Central American countries with US$1.6 billion for the
Mérida Initiative The Mérida Initiative (named after Mérida, the city where it was agreed upon), also called Plan Mexico (in reference to Plan Colombia), was a security cooperation agreement among the United States, the government of Mexico, and the countries o ...
, a three-year international assistance plan. The Mérida Initiative provides Mexico and Central American countries with law enforcement training and equipment, as well as technical advice to strengthen the national justice systems. The Mérida Initiative does not include cash or weapons. Currently, the Mexican drug cartels already have a presence in most major U.S. cities. In 2009, the Justice Department reported that Mexican drug cartels distribute drugs in nearly 200 cities across the United States, including Los Angeles, Chicago and Atlanta. Gang-related activity and violence has increased along the U.S. Southwest Mexico–United States border, border region, as U.S.-based gangs act as enforcers for Mexican drug cartels.


U.S. death toll and national security

U.S. authorities reported a spike in killings, kidnappings and home invasions connected to Mexican cartels, and at least 19 Americans were killed in 2008. Another 92 Americans were killed between June 2009 and June 2010. The United States Joint Forces Command, U.S. Joint Forces Command noted in a December 2008 report that in terms of worst-case scenarios, Mexico bears some consideration for sudden collapse in the next two decades as the government, its politicians, police, and judicial infrastructure are all under sustained assault and pressure by criminal gangs and drug cartels. The Joint Forces Command stated concern that the conflict will have a major impact on the stability of the Mexican state over the next several years, and therefore would demand an American response based on the implications for homeland security alone. After the JFC broached this issue in its 2008 report, several journalists and academics have discussed the possibility that Mexico could become a failed state. The Mexican government responded negatively to the U.S. government raising the prospect of Mexico becoming a failed state. In a February 2009 interview with the Associated Press, President Calderón said it was "absolutely false" to label his country a failed state. To smooth over relations with Mexico over this issue, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton personally visited Mexico City in March 2009, followed by a visit by President Barack Obama a month later. In March 2009, the U.S. DHS said that it was considering using the National Guard to counter the threat of drug violence in Mexico from spreading to the U.S. The governors of Arizona and Texas have asked the federal government to send additional National Guard troops to help those already there supporting local law enforcement efforts against drug trafficking. Calls for National Guard deployment on the border greatly increased after the 2010 murder of Arizona rancher Robert Krentz, possibly at the hands of Mexican drug smugglers. In March 2009, the Obama administration outlined plans to redeploy more than 500 federal agents to border posts and redirect $200 million to combat smuggling of illegal drugs, money and weapons. On May 25, 2010, President Obama authorized deployment of 1,200 National Guard troops to the U.S. border with Mexico to assist with border protection and enforcement activities, as well as help train additional Customs and Border Protection agents. The Washington Office on Latin America said the U.S. southwest border region remained calm, with a homicide rate lower than the national average. In 2021, around 80,411 people died from opioid overdoses in the United States. Many of the deaths are from an extremely potent opioid, fentanyl, which is trafficked from Mexico. The drug's precursor chemicals, which have a variety of legitimate uses, are manufactured in China, then shipped to Mexico, where it is processed and packaged, which is then smuggled into the US by drug cartels. The opioid epidemic in the United States, opioid crisis in the United States is largely fueled by drugs smuggled from Mexico; approximately 98% of fentanyl entering the U.S. comes from Mexico. In 2023, the Biden administration announced a crackdown on members of the
Sinaloa Cartel The Sinaloa Cartel (, , after the native Sinaloa region), also known as the ''CDS'', the ''Guzmán-Loera Organization'', the ''Federation'', the ''Sinaloa Cartel'', or the Pacific Cartel, is a large, drug trafficking transnational organized cri ...
smuggling fentanyl into the United States. In 2025, President Donald Trump launched a process to designate Mexican drug cartels and other criminal organizations as United States Department of State list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations, foreign terrorist organizations. The Trump administration has considered Drone warfare, drone strikes against cartels in Mexico.


Controversies

Vicente Zambada Niebla, a member of the Sinaloa Cartel and son of Ismael Zambada García, one of the top drug lords in Mexico, claimed after his arrest to his attorneys that he and other top Sinaloa cartel members had received immunity by U.S. agents and a virtual licence to smuggle cocaine over the United States border, in exchange for intelligence about rival cartels engaged in the Mexican drug war. In October 2013, two former federal agents and an ex-CIA contractor told an American television network that CIA operatives including Félix Rodríguez (soldier), Félix Rodríguez were involved in the kidnapping and murder of DEA covert agent Enrique Camarena, because he was a threat to the agency's drug operations in Mexico. According to the three men, the CIA was collaborating with drug traffickers moving cocaine and marijuana to the United States, and using its share of the profits to finance Nicaraguan Contra rebels attempting to overthrow Nicaragua's Sandinista National Liberation Front, Sandinista government. A CIA spokesman responded, calling it "ridiculous" to suggest that the Agency had anything to do with the murder of a U.S. federal agent or the escape of his alleged killer. According to former Presidents Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil, Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico and César Gaviria of Colombia, the United States-led drug war is pushing Latin America into a downward spiral; Mr. Cardoso said in a conference that "the available evidence indicates that the war on drugs is a failed war". The panel of the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy commission, headed by Cardoso, stated that the countries involved in this war should remove the "taboos" and re-examine the anti-drug programs. Latin American governments have followed the advice of the U.S. to combat the drug war, but the policies had little effect. The commission made some recommendations to United States President Barack Obama to consider new policies, such as Decriminalization of non-medical cannabis in the United States, decriminalization of marijuana and to treat drug use as a public health problem and not as a security problem. The Council on Hemispheric Affairs states it is time to seriously consider drug decriminalization and drug legalization, legalization, a policy initiative that would be in direct opposition to the interests of criminal gangs.


Money laundering

Despite the fact that Mexican drug cartels and their Colombian suppliers generate, launder and remove $18 billion to $39 billion from the United States each year, the U.S. and Mexican governments have been criticized for their unwillingness or slow response to confront the various cartels' financial operations, including money laundering. The U.S. DEA has identified the need to increase financial investigations relating to the movement of illegal drug funds to Mexico. The DEA states that attacking the financial infrastructure of drug cartels has to play a key role in any viable drug enforcement strategy. The U.S. DEA has noted that the U.S. and Mexican financial services industry continues to be a facilitator for drug money movement. Following suit, in August 2010 President Felipe Calderón proposed sweeping new measures to crack down on the cash smuggling and money laundering. Calderón proposes a ban on cash purchases of real estate and of certain luxury goods that cost more than 100,000 pesos (about US$8,104.) His package would also require more businesses to report large transactions, such as real estate, jewelry and purchases of armor plating. In June 2010, Calderón "announced strict limits on the amount in U.S. dollars that can be deposited or exchanged in banks", but the proposed restrictions to financial institutions are facing tough opposition in the Mexican legislature. In 2011, Wachovia, at one time a major U.S. bank, was implicated in laundering money for Mexican drug lords. In a settlement, Wachovia paid federal authorities $110 million in forfeiture. A United States Senate, U.S. Senate report from the permanent subcommittee for investigations revealed in July 2012 that HSBC – one of Europe's biggest banks- moved $7 billion in bulk cash from Mexico to the U.S., most of it suspected to assist Mexican drug lords and U.S. drug cartels in moving money to the U.S. While money laundering problems at HSBC have been flagged by regulators for nearly a decade, the bank continued to avoid compliance. On December 12, 2012, HSBC settled for a $1.93 billion fine.


Drug demand

RAND studies released in the mid-1990s found that using drug user treatment to reduce drug consumption in the United States is seven times more cost effective than law enforcement efforts alone, and it could potentially cut consumption by a third. In FY2011, the Obama administration requested approximately $5.6 billion to support demand reduction. This includes a 13% increase for prevention and almost a 4% increase for treatment. The overall FY2011 counter-drug request for supply reduction and domestic law enforcement is $15.5 billion with $521.1 million in new funding.


See also

* 2011–12 in the Mexican drug war * Drug liberalization * List of journalists and media workers killed in Mexico * List of politicians killed in the Mexican drug war * Narcoterrorism * Naval operations of the Mexican drug war * Uppsala Conflict Data Program


References

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''Latin American Herald Tribune'', ''La Jornada'', and Wikileaks.
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, access-date=October 9, 2012 , newspaper=Reuters , date=October 9, 2012 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121010060756/http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/09/us-mexico-drugs-idUSBRE8980ZD20121009 , archive-date=October 10, 2012 , url-status=live , location=Mexico City {{cite news , last=Longmire , first=Sylvia , title=Mexican Navy Believes It Killed Ruthless Gang Kingpin , url=http://borderviolenceanalysis.typepad.com/mexicos_drug_war/2012/10/mexican-navy-believes-it-killed-ruthless-gang-kingpin.html , access-date=October 9, 2012 , newspaper=Mexico's drug war , date=October 9, 2012 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121013011143/http://borderviolenceanalysis.typepad.com/mexicos_drug_war/2012/10/mexican-navy-believes-it-killed-ruthless-gang-kingpin.html , archive-date=October 13, 2012 , url-status=live {{cite web, url=https://justiceinmexico.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/2017_DrugViolenceinMexico.pdf, title=Drug Violence in Mexico – Data and Analysis Through 2016, author=Kimberly Heinle, Octavio Rodríguez Ferreira, and David A. Shirk Department of Political Science & International Relations. University of San Diego. March 2017 *80,000 during 2007–2016: {{cite web, url=https://justiceinmexico.org/data/, title=Organized Crime-related Homicides 2007–2016 (by Milenio), website=justiceinmexico.org *12,500 during 2017 and 22,500 during 2018 (by Milenio): {{cite web, url=https://justiceinmexico.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Organized-Crime-and-Violence-in-Mexico-2019.pdf, title=Organized Crime and Violence in Mexico, Analysis Through 2018, website=Justice in Mexico, Department of Political Science & International Relations, University of San Diego, author=Laura Y. Calderón, Kimberly Heinle, Octavio Rodríguez Ferreira, and David A. 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{{webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120616055217/http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2011/06/20/journalist-2-family-members-murdered-in-mexico/ , date=June 16, 2012, EFE from foxnews.com
Tuckman, Jo.
Mexico's drug war — told in tweets and whispers
" ''Dawn (newspaper), Dawn''. Tuesday September 28, 2010. Retrieved on February 15, 2010.
Mexico journalists tortured and killed by drug cartels
Jo Tuckman, ''The Guardian'', Friday May 4, 2012

May 3, 2011, by Karla Zabludovsky, ''New York Times''
{{cite news, last=Beaubien, first=Jason, title=Mayors Are New Targets In Mexico's Deadly Drug War , url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130491241, access-date=June 16, 2012, publisher=NPR, date=October 11, 2010 {{cite news, last=Ramsey , first=Geoffrey , title=3rd Mexican Mayor Killed in 2 Weeks as Cartels Increasingly Target Politicians , url=http://www.insightcrime.org/component/k2/item/432-third-mexican-mayor-killed-in-two-weeks-as-cartels-increasingly-target-politicians , access-date=June 16, 2012 , newspaper=InSight Crime , date=January 14, 2011 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110118075429/http://insightcrime.org/component/k2/item/432-third-mexican-mayor-killed-in-two-weeks-as-cartels-increasingly-target-politicians , archive-date=January 18, 2011 Crossing Continents: Murder, migration and Mexico
Linda Pressly BBC, August 2011
{{cite news, last=Saner , first=Emine , title=Mexican journalist Lydia Cacho: 'I don't scare easily' , url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/sep/01/lydia-cacho-mexican-journalist-interview?newsfeed=true , access-date=September 12, 2012 , newspaper=The Guardian , date=August 31, 2012 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120911113526/http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/sep/01/lydia-cacho-mexican-journalist-interview?newsfeed=true , archive-date=September 11, 2012 , url-status=live , location=London {{cite news , first=Julian , last=Miglierini , title=Guatemala police chief arrested over 'cocaine link' , date=March 2, 2010 , work=BBC News , url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8546590.stm , access-date=March 3, 2010 {{cite news , first=Arthur , last=Brice , title=Latin American drug cartels find home in West Africa , date=September 21, 2009 , publisher=CNN , url =http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/africa/09/21/africa.drug.cartels/index.html , access-date=September 21, 2009 {{cite news, title=Mexican Cartels: Drug organizations extending reach farthen into U.S , year=2009 , agency=Associated Press , url=http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_international/mexican_cartels/index.html?SITE=AP , access-date=August 31, 2009 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090914051958/http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_international/mexican_cartels/index.html?SITE=AP , archive-date=September 14, 2009 {{cite book, contribution=The Joint Operating Environment, title=Challenges and implications for the future Joint Force, editor=United States Joint Forces Command, publisher=The Joint Operating Environment, location=Norfolk, VA, pages=38, 40, date=December 2008, contribution-url=http://www.jfcom.mil/newslink/storyarchive/2008/JOE2008.pdf, access-date=March 3, 2009, archive-date=March 4, 2009, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090304102406/http://www.jfcom.mil/newslink/storyarchive/2008/JOE2008.pdf, url-status=dead David Rieff
"The Struggle for Mexico"
''The New Republic'', March 17, 2011.
{{cite web, url=http://www.svherald.com/content/news/2010/05/04/dever-says-nothing-new-investigation , archive-url=https://archive.today/20110716171247/http://www.svherald.com/content/news/2010/05/04/dever-says-nothing-new-investigation , url-status=dead , archive-date=July 16, 2011 , title=Dever says nothing new in investigation , publisher=Sierra Vista Herald , first=Derek , last=Jordan , date=May 4, 2010 , access-date=May 4, 2010 {{cite web , url=http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/bill-conroy/2011/09/court-pleadings-point-cia-role-alleged-cartel-immunity-deal , title=Court Pleadings Point to CIA Role in Alleged "Cartel" Immunity Deal | the narcosphere , publisher=Narcosphere.narconews.com , access-date=July 20, 2012 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120620133326/http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/bill-conroy/2011/09/court-pleadings-point-cia-role-alleged-cartel-immunity-deal , archive-date=June 20, 2012 , url-status=dead {{cite web , 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''Excelsior'' Author: Jorge Fernández Menéndez. (April 12, 2010)
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''Diario de Morelos'' (December 23, 2011)
Cae "El Marranero", jefe de los Beltrán Leyva en Guerrero
{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160128212458/http://www.proceso.com.mx/?p=284543 , date=2016-01-28 ''Proceso'' (October 16, 2011)
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, date = February 23, 2011 , url = http://tucsoncitizen.com/view-from-baja-arizona/2011/02/23/inside-atf-an-ugly-picture-how-many-dead-bodies-are-out-there-as-a-result-of-project-gunrunner/ , work = The Tucson Citizen , url-status = dead , archive-url = https://archive.today/20120723090602/http://tucsoncitizen.com/view-from-baja-arizona/2011/02/23/inside-atf-an-ugly-picture-how-many-dead-bodies-are-out-there-as-a-result-of-project-gunrunner/ , archive-date = July 23, 2012 , access-date = March 1, 2017 , df = dmy-all {{cite news , first = Mike M. , last = Ahlers , title = ATF officials admit mistakes in Operation Fast and Furious gun program , date = July 26, 2011 , url = https://edition.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/07/26/atf.fast.and.furious/index.html?iref=NS1 , publisher = CNN , access-date = July 26, 2011 , archive-date = August 4, 2020 , archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200804044244/http://edition.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/07/26/atf.fast.and.furious/index.html?iref=NS1 , url-status = live {{cite news , title=CCRKBA to Holder on ATF Scandal: 'Investigate and Fire, or Resign' , date=February 24, 2011 , url=http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ccrkba-to-holder-on-atf-scandal-investigate-and-fire-or-resign-116840913.html , publisher=PR Newswire , access-date=February 26, 2011 {{cite web, url=http://www.milenio.com/policia/arma_Chapo-Rapido_y_Furioso-Chapo_arma_Rapido_Furioso-armas_rapido_furioso_0_701929899.html, title=Arma en guarida de 'El Chapo' sí es de Rápido y Furioso: EU, website=Milenio, date=16 March 2016 , access-date=March 16, 2016 {{Cite web, url=http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/entrada-de-opinion/columna/hector-de-mauleon/nacion/2016/05/10/el-chapo-queria-ciudad-juarez, title='El Chapo' quería Ciudad Juárez, website=El Universal, access-date=May 17, 2016, date=May 10, 2016 {{cite news , title=Mexican cartels move beyond drugs, seek domination , date=August 4, 2010 , publisher=NBC News News , url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna38565051 , agency=Associated Press , access-date=October 5, 2010 {{cite web, title=4 De Diciembre De 2011 – Lomas De Sotelo, D.F. , url=http://www.sedena.gob.mx/index.php/sala-de-prensa/comunicados-de-prensa/8123-4-de-diciembre-de-2011-lomas-de-sotelo-df , publisher=SEDENA Mexican National Defense Department , access-date=May 22, 2012 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120316230701/http://www.sedena.gob.mx/index.php/sala-de-prensa/comunicados-de-prensa/8123-4-de-diciembre-de-2011-lomas-de-sotelo-df , archive-date=March 16, 2012 {{cite web, last=Corcoran , first=Patrick , title=Release of Mexico Murder Stats Reveals Shifting Landscape , url=http://www.insightcrime.org/insight-latest-news/item/1744-release-of-mexico-government-info-reveals-shifting-landscape , publisher=InSight , access-date=May 22, 2012 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120321054227/http://www.insightcrime.org/insight-latest-news/item/1744-release-of-mexico-government-info-reveals-shifting-landscape , archive-date=March 21, 2012 , date=October 24, 2011 {{cite web, last=Lee, first=Roger, title=The Mexican drug war (2006–Present), url=http://www.historyguy.com/mexico_drug_war.htm, publisher=The History Guy, access-date=May 22, 2012 {{cite book, title=World Report 2012: Mexico , url=https://www.hrw.org/world-report-2012/mexico, publisher=Human Rights Watch, access-date=May 22, 2012, date=January 22, 2012 {{cite news, last=Wilkinson, first=Tracy, title=Dozens of Bodies, Many Mutilated, Dumped in Mexico., url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2012-may-13-la-fg-mexico-bodies-20120514-story.html, access-date=May 22, 2012, newspaper=Los Angeles Times, date=May 13, 2012 {{cite news , url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2008-aug-09-fg-general9-story.html , title=Anti-drug general ousted , date=August 9, 2008 , first=Richard , last=Marosi , work=Los Angeles Times {{cite news , url=https://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSN2639514820080427 , title=Seventeen killed in Mexico drug battle , date=April 26, 2008 , work=Reuters The United States is undermining its own security
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{{cite web , url=http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/mexican_cartels_and_fallout_phoenix/ , title=Mexican Cartels and the Fallout From Phoenix , publisher=Stratfor , access-date=March 28, 2011 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110215143638/http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/mexican_cartels_and_fallout_phoenix , archive-date=February 15, 2011 {{cite web, url=http://www.californiachronicle.com/articles/view/72312 , title=Mexican Drug cartels terror reaches Alabama , publisher=Californiachronicle.com , access-date=March 28, 2011 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708111930/http://www.californiachronicle.com/articles/view/72312 , archive-date=July 8, 2011 {{cite web , url=http://www.fpri.org/enotes/200805.grayson.loszetas.html , title=Los Zetas: the Ruthless Army Spawned by a Mexican Drug Cartel , publisher=Fpri.org , access-date=March 28, 2011 , url-status=dead , 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url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article5026787.ece , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629112825/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article5026787.ece , url-status=dead , archive-date=June 29, 2011 , work=The Times , access-date=November 2, 2008 , location=London {{cite news , first=Marc , last=Lacey , title=In Mexico, Sorting Out Good Guys From Bad , date=November 1, 2008 , url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/02/world/americas/02mexico.html?ref=americas , work=The New York Times , access-date=November 2, 2008 {{cite news, first=Guy , last=Lawson , title=The Making of a Narco State , date=March 4, 2009 , magazine=Rolling Stone , url=http://guylawson.com/pdf/rollingstone/NarcoState.pdf , access-date=March 30, 2009 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101010180856/http://guylawson.com/pdf/rollingstone/NarcoState.pdf , archive-date=October 10, 2010 Video-report on high-profile arrests.
{{webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090129054138/http://videos.eluniversal.com.mx/n_videos/showVideo.php?id=10261 , date=January 29, 2009 January 15, 2009. Spanish.
{{cite news , title=Encarcelan al ex comisionado de PFP Gerardo Garay Cadena , date=December 11, 2008 , url=http://www.cronica.com.mx/nota.php?id_nota=403216 , work=La Cronica de Hoy , access-date=March 1, 2010 , language=es , archive-date=June 11, 2010 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100611140638/http://www.cronica.com.mx/nota.php?id_nota=403216 , url-status=dead {{cite news , first=María de la Luz , last=González , title=Ordenan arrestar a ex mandos de Interpol , date=January 16, 2009 , url=http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/165134.html , work=El Universal , access-date=January 16, 2009 , language=es , archive-date=January 19, 2009 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090119154826/http://eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/165134.html , url-status=dead {{cite news , title=2 Mexican politicians sought; drug cartel link alleged , date=July 15, 2009 , url=http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/americas/07/15/mexico.violence/ , publisher=CNN , access-date=August 14, 2009 {{cite web, url=http://uprisingradio.org/home/2010/04/26/murder-city-ciudad-juarez-and-the-global-economys-new-killing-fields/#sthash.1iJYKkcP.dpuf, title=Charles Bowden on the Mexican drug war, website=Uprisingradio.org, access-date=October 22, 2014, archive-date=March 28, 2019, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190328165756/http://uprisingradio.org/home/2010/04/26/murder-city-ciudad-juarez-and-the-global-economys-new-killing-fields/#sthash.1iJYKkcP.dpuf, url-status=dead U.S. State Department, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, "Mexico," Country Reports on Human rights Practices-2002, March 31, 2003. 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''La Jornada'', "Admite el Pentagono que Adiestro a 6 Militares Mexicanos Violadores de Derechos Humanos," June 28, 1998. {{cite news , last1=Verza , first1=Maria , title=Mexico's 'invisible' wounds of gang violence , url=https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/mexico-invisible-wounds-gang-violence-180409064106883.html , access-date=August 4, 2018 , work=Al Jazeera English {{cite journal , last1=Blankenship , first1=KM , last2=Koester , first2=S , title=Criminal law, policing policy, and HIV risk in female street sex workers and injection drug users. , journal=The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics , date=2002 , volume=30 , issue=4 , pages=548–559 , pmid=12561263 , doi=10.1111/j.1748-720x.2002.tb00425.x, s2cid=7242766 , url=https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/23890209 {{cite journal , last=Rodelo , first=Frida V. , date=2009 , title=Journalism in violent environments: the case of journalists in Culiacan, Sinaloa, journal=Comunicación y Sociedad , issue=12 , pages=101–118 , url=https://www.academia.edu/33251014 {{cite news, title=Periodista asesinada en Tamaulipas denunciaba anónimamente al narcotráfico, url=http://mexico.cnn.com/nacional/2011/09/27/periodista-asesinada-en-tamaulipas-denunciaba-anonimamente-al-narcotrafico, publisher=CNN Mexico, date=September 27, 2011, url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928143701/http://mexico.cnn.com/nacional/2011/09/27/periodista-asesinada-en-tamaulipas-denunciaba-anonimamente-al-narcotrafico, archive-date=September 28, 2011 {{cite news, title="Narcos" atacan estación de Televisa , url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/spanish/latin_america/newsid_7815000/7815395.stm, publisher=BBC Mundo, date=January 7, 2009 {{cite news, title=Mexican Drug Cartel Threatens to Kill Texas News Reporters , url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Z9K-UbN3Ms , archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211213/4Z9K-UbN3Ms , archive-date=December 13, 2021 , url-status=live, publisher=CNN, date=July 16, 2007{{cbignore {{cite news, title=Periodistas mexicanos trabajan para el narco, acusa diario de EU, url=http://www.lapoliciaca.com/nota-roja/periodistas-mexicanos-trabajan-para-el-narco-acusa-diario-de-eu-2/, access-date=September 27, 2011, newspaper=La Policiaca, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110830162936/http://www.lapoliciaca.com/nota-roja/periodistas-mexicanos-trabajan-para-el-narco-acusa-diario-de-eu-2/, archive-date=August 30, 2011, url-status=dead {{cite news , first1=José de , last1=Córdoba , first2=Nicholas , last2=Casey , title=Violence in Mexico Takes Rising Toll on Press , date=August 20, 2010 , url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748703824304575435623953338224?KEYWORDS=Violence+in+Mexico+Takes+Rising+Toll+on+Press , work=The Wall Street Journal , access-date=August 21, 2010 {{cite web, url=http://www.cpj.org/killed/americas/mexico/ , title=Journalists Killed in Mexico – Committee to Protect Journalists , publisher=Cpj.org , access-date=May 27, 2012 {{cite web , url=http://abcas3.accessabc.com/ecirc/newstitlesearchus.asp , title=ACCESS ABC: eCirc for US Newspapers , publisher=Abcas3.accessabc.com , access-date=May 27, 2012 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050119030914/http://abcas3.accessabc.com/ecirc/newstitlesearchus.asp , archive-date=January 19, 2005 {{cite web, url=http://www.inegi.org.mx/ , title=Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía , publisher=INEGI , access-date=May 27, 2012 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120528181141/http://www.inegi.org.mx/ , archive-date=May 28, 2012 {{cite news, title=Bodies hanging from bridge in Mexico are warning to social media users , url=http://articles.cnn.com/2011-09-14/world/mexico.violence_1_zetas-cartel-social-media-users-nuevo-laredo?_s=PM:WORLD , publisher=CNN , date=September 14, 2011 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120510001812/http://articles.cnn.com/2011-09-14/world/mexico.violence_1_zetas-cartel-social-media-users-nuevo-laredo?_s=PM%3AWORLD , archive-date=May 10, 2012 Woman murdered over social media anti-drug lord advocacy
{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190409114609/https://www.tgdaily.com/security-features/58718-woman-murdered-over-social-media-anti-drug-lord-advocacy , date=2019-04-09 September 27, 2011, by Sylvie Barak, ''TG Daily'' (Velum Media / DD&M Inc)
Mexican Crime Reporters Risk Becoming The Story
by John Burnett, NPR, May 9, 2012
{{cite news, last=McKittrick, first=David, title=Doctor Maria Santos Gorrostieta: Politician murdered for her fight against drug cartels, url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/doctor-maria-santos-gorrostieta-politician-murdered-for-her-fight-against-drug-cartels-8360441.html, newspaper=The Independent, date=November 28, 2012, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121130030855/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/doctor-maria-santos-gorrostieta-politician-murdered-for-her-fight-against-drug-cartels-8360441.html, url-status=live, archive-date=November 30, 2012 {{cite news, title=Killing Escalates Mexico Drug War, url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748703964104575334942693439322, access-date=June 16, 2012 , newspaper=The Wall Street Journal, date=June 29, 2010, first1=David, last1=Luhnow, first2=Nicholas, last2=Casey {{cite news , first=Tracy , last=Wilkinson , title=Body count from mass graves in Mexico rises to 145 , date=April 15, 2011 , url=https://www.latimes.com/world/la-xpm-2011-apr-15-la-fg-mexico-bodies-20110416-story.html , work=Los Angeles Times , access-date=August 18, 2011 {{cite news, url=http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/02/world/americas/mexico-drug-war-fast-facts/, title=Mexico Drug War Fast Facts , date=September 2, 2013, publisher=CNN, access-date=October 22, 2014 {{cite news , first1=Nick , last1=Miroff , first2=William , last2=Booth , title=Mass graves in Mexico reveal new levels of savagery , date=April 24, 2011 , url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/mass-graves-in-mexico-reveal-new-levels-of-savagery/2011/04/23/AFPoasbE_story.html , newspaper=The Washington Post , access-date=August 18, 2011 More than 11,000 migrants abducted in Mexico
BBC, February 23, 2011
{{cite news , last=O'Connor , first=Anne-Marie , title=Mexican cartels move into human trafficking , url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/americas/mexican-cartels-move-into-human-trafficking/2011/07/22/gIQArmPVcI_story.html , access-date=September 12, 2012 , newspaper=The Washington Post , date=July 27, 2011 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110728044637/http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/americas/mexican-cartels-move-into-human-trafficking/2011/07/22/gIQArmPVcI_story.html , archive-date=July 28, 2011 , url-status=live {{cite web , title=Trafficking in Persons Report 2010 , url=https://2009-2017.state.gov/j/tip/rls/tiprpt/2010/142760.htm , publisher=United States Department of State , access-date=September 12, 2012 {{cite news , first=Ana , last=Anabitarte , title=Crece en España mafia mexicana , date=December 30, 2010 , url=http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/primera/36105.html , work=El Universal , access-date=December 30, 2010 , language=es , archive-date=January 2, 2011 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110102071659/http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/primera/36105.html , url-status=dead {{cite news, url=http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2012/06/21/mexico-drug-cartels-supply-italian-mafia-with-cocaine-for-europe/, title=Mexican Drug Cartels Join Forces with Italian Mafia to Supply Cocaine to Europe, publisher=Fox News Latino, date=June 21, 2012, access-date=November 23, 2012, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161201041012/http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2012/06/21/mexico-drug-cartels-supply-italian-mafia-with-cocaine-for-europe/, archive-date=December 1, 2016, url-status=dead {{cite news, url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUKN18280587 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090221203536/http://uk.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUKN18280587 , url-status=dead , archive-date=February 21, 2009 , title=Mexican drug gang menace spreads in Guatemala , publisher=Uk.reuters.com , date=February 18, 2009, access-date=March 28, 2011 {{cite news, last=McDermott , first=Jeremy , url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/centralamericaandthecaribbean/guatemala/4928428/Mexican-cartel-threatens-Guatemala-President.html , archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/centralamericaandthecaribbean/guatemala/4928428/Mexican-cartel-threatens-Guatemala-President.html , archive-date=January 11, 2022 , url-access=subscription , url-status=live , title=Mexican cartel threatens Guatemala President , publisher=Telegraph.co.uk , date=March 2, 2009 , access-date=March 28, 2011 , location=London{{cbignore {{cite news , first=Kevin , last=Casas-Zamora , title='Guatemalastan': How to Prevent a Failed State in our Midst , publisher=Brookings Institution , url=http://www.brookings.edu/opinions/2009/0522_guatemala_casaszamora.aspx , access-date=May 26, 2009 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100226015931/http://www.brookings.edu/opinions/2009/0522_guatemala_casaszamora.aspx , archive-date=February 26, 2010 {{cite news, first=Phil , last=Leggiere , title=Guatemala on the brink? , date=May 25, 2009 , publisher=Homeland Security Insight nd Analysis , url=http://www.hstoday.us/content/view/8634/149/ , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090530001220/http://www.hstoday.us/content/view/8634/149 , url-status=dead , archive-date=May 30, 2009 , access-date=May 26, 2009 {{cite news, title=El cártel mexicano de Los Zetas controla el 75% de Guatemala, url=http://america.infobae.com/notas/16232-El-cartel-mexicano-de-Los-Zetas-controla-el-75-de-Guatemala, newspaper=Infobae, date=December 24, 2010, url-status=dead, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120530081337/http://america.infobae.com/notas/16232-El-cartel-mexicano-de-Los-Zetas-controla-el-75-de-Guatemala, archive-date=May 30, 2012 {{cite news, title=Los Zetas controlan seis regiones en Guatemala, url=http://www.elsalvador.com/mwedh/nota/nota_completa.asp?idCat=6358&idArt=5433354, newspaper=El Salvador Noticias, date=December 25, 2010 Vanda Felbab-Brown, Felbab-Brown, Vanda
"The West African Drug Trade in the Context of the Region's Illicit Economies and Poor Governance"
{{webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110328064335/http://www.brookings.edu/speeches/2010/1014_africa_drug_trade_felbabbrown.aspx , date=March 28, 2011
The Brookings Institution
October 14, 2010.
{{cite news , title=Carteles Mexicanos se Disputan Canada , date=May 6, 2012 , url=http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/845459.html , work=El Universal , access-date=May 6, 2012 , language=es , archive-date=May 8, 2012 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120508225829/http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/845459.html , url-status=dead {{cite web , url=https://www.dhs.gov/ynews/testimony/testimony_1237993537881.shtm , title=Testimony of Secretary Janet Napolitano before Senate (March 25, 2009) , publisher=Dhs.gov , date=March 25, 2009 , access-date=March 28, 2011 {{cite web, url=http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/25/1166487.aspx , title=Americans finance Mexican traffickers , publisher=MSNBC , access-date=March 28, 2011 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091227101143/http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/06/25/1166487.aspx , archive-date=December 27, 2009 "Drugs, Guns and a Reality Check", ''The Washington Post''
Retrieved July 21, 2009.
Border violence threatens Americans
. ''The Washington Times''. April 1, 2010.

. USATODAY.com. March 9, 2009
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Fbi.gov.
{{cite web , url=http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/84945 , title=American Death toll , publisher=Americanchronicle.com , access-date=March 28, 2011 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110707131426/http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/84945 , archive-date=July 7, 2011 {{cite news, url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/02/09/mexican-drug-violence-spi_n_165422.html , title=Mexican Drug Violence Spills Over Into US , publisher=Huffingtonpost.com , date= February 9, 2009, access-date=March 28, 2011 {{cite web, url=http://www.spislandbreeze.com/articles/killed-11646-hartley-shot.html , title=Officials: 92 Americans killed by homicide in Mexico in last year | killed, hartley, shot – Island Breeze , location=26.11184;-97.168126 , publisher=spislandbreeze.com , date=November 2, 2010 , access-date=March 28, 2011 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110407125907/http://www.spislandbreeze.com/articles/killed-11646-hartley-shot.html , archive-date=April 7, 2011 {{cite book, last=White, first=Jonathan R., title=Terrorism & Homeland Security, year=2011, publisher=Cengage Learning, pages=98–100, edition=7th {{cite book, last=Walker, first=Samuel, title=Sense and Nonsense about Crime, Drugs, and Communities, year=2010, publisher=Cengage Learning, pages=313–314, edition=7th {{cite book, last=Grayson, first=George W., title=Mexico: Narco-Violence and a Failed State?, year=2010, publisher=Transaction Publishers, page=4 {{cite book, last=Gibler, first=John, title=To Die in Mexico: Dispatches from Inside the Drug War, year=2011, publisher=City Lights Books, page=190 Anonymous

''The Daily Telegraph, The Telegraph'', February 26, 2009.
{{cite news , url=https://www.foxnews.com/politics/lawmakers-demand-administration-deploy-national-guard-border-patrol-after-killing/ , title=Lawmakers Demand Administration Deploy National Guard, Border Patrol After Killing , publisher=Fox News , date=March 30, 2010 , access-date=April 30, 2010 {{cite news, url=https://www.reuters.com/article/vcCandidateFeed1/idUSN25352630 , title=Obama Mexico border plan not enough-US senator , work=Reuters , date= March 25, 2009, access-date=March 28, 2011 Obama Authorizes Deployment of More National Guard Troops Along Border
ABC News. May 25, 2010.
{{cite web, last=Isacson, first=Adam, title=Is Arizona suffering "increased crime and drugs" because of the border?, url=http://borderfactcheck.tumblr.com/post/29317170766/is-arizona-suffering-increased-crime-and-drugs, work=Border Fact Check, publisher=Washington Office on Latin America {{cite web, title=New Study Separates Rhetoric from Reality on U.S.-Mexico Border, url=http://www.wola.org/news/new_study_separates_rhetoric_from_reality_on_security_drugs_and_migration_along_the_border, publisher=Washington Office on Latin America, access-date=September 24, 2012, date=April 18, 2012 {{cite news, title="Te CIA helped kill DEA agent Enrique 'Kiki' Camarena," say witnesses, url=http://elpais.com/elpais/2013/10/15/inenglish/1381856701_704435.html, access-date=October 21, 2013, newspaper=El País (Spain), date=October 15, 2013, language=es {{cite news, url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB123439889394275215?mod=googlenews_wsj , work=The Wall Street Journal , title=Latin American Panel Calls U.S. Drug War a Failure , date=February 12, 2009 , first=Jose , last=De Cordoba {{cite news , last=Goodman , first=Joshua , url=https://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601086&sid=ao_Yr_Is1T6E&refer=latin_america , title=Cardoso, Gaviria, Zedillo Urge Obama to Decriminalize Marijuana , publisher=Bloomberg.com , date=February 11, 2009 , access-date=March 28, 2011 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090216214315/http://bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601086&sid=ao_Yr_Is1T6E&refer=latin_america , archive-date=February 16, 2009 {{cite web , url=http://www.coha.org/2009/04/time-to-debate-a-change-in-washington%E2%80%99s-international-drug-policies/ , title=Time to Debate a Change in Washington's Failed Latin American Drug Policies , access-date=April 13, 2009 , last1=Birns , first1=Larry , first2=Michael , last2=Ramirez , date=April 1, 2009 , publisher=The Council on Hemispheric Affairs , archive-date=June 10, 2009 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090610004359/http://www.coha.org/2009/04/time-to-debate-a-change-in-washington%E2%80%99s-international-drug-policies/ , url-status=dead {{cite news , first=Samuel , last=González , title=Los dilemas con el narcotráfico , date=October 26, 2010 , url=http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/181459.html , work=El Universal , access-date=October 26, 2010 , language=es , archive-date=November 4, 2010 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101104162909/http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/181459.html , url-status=dead {{cite news , author=Office of the Spokesman , title=United States-Mexico Partnership: Anti-Arms Trafficking and Anti-Money Laundering , date=March 23, 2010 , url=https://2009-2017.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2010/03/138924.htm , work=U.S. Department of State , access-date=October 26, 2010 {{cite news , first=Michael , last=Smith , title=Banks Financing Mexico Gangs Admitted in Wells Fargo Deal , date=June 29, 2010 , url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-06-29/banks-financing-mexico-s-drug-cartels-admitted-in-wells-fargo-s-u-s-deal.html , work=Bloomberg , access-date=October 26, 2010 How a big US bank laundered billions from Mexico's murderous drug gangs
Ed Vulliamy, ''The Observer'', April 3, 20, 2011, guardian.co.uk
How a big US bank laundered billions from Mexico's murderous drug gangs
April 2, 2011
{{cite news, url=http://4closurefraud.org/2012/07/16/us-senate-report-u-s-vulnerabilities-to-money-laundering-drugs-and-terrorist-financing-hsbc-case-history/, title=HSBC Exposed U.S. Financial System to Money Laundering, Drug, Terrorist Financing Risks, date=July 17, 2012, work=United States Senate, The Permanent Subcommittee On Investigations, access-date=December 23, 2012 {{cite news, url=http://www.hsgac.senate.gov/subcommittees/investigations/media/hsbc-exposed-us-finacial-system-to-money-laundering-drug-terrorist-financing-risks, title=HSBC Exposed U.S. Financial System to Money Laundering, Drug, Terrorist Financing Risks (press release), date=July 16, 2012, publisher=United States Senate, The Permanent Subcommittee On Investigations, access-date=December 22, 2012, archive-date=August 16, 2019, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190816090938/https://www.hsgac.senate.gov/subcommittees/investigations/media/hsbc-exposed-us-finacial-system-to-money-laundering-drug-terrorist-financing-risks, url-status=dead {{cite news, first1=Jesse , last1=Hamilton , first2=David , last2=Voreacos , title=HSBC Executive Resigns at Senate Money Laundering Hearing , date=July 17, 2012 , url=http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-07-16/hsbc-aided-money-laundering-by-iran-drug-cartels-probe-shows , work=Business Week , access-date=July 18, 2012 , url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120717230230/http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-07-16/hsbc-aided-money-laundering-by-iran-drug-cartels-probe-shows , archive-date=July 17, 2012 {{cite news, url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hsbc-probe-idUSBRE8BA05M20121211, title=HSBC in return for "no admission of wrongdoing or guilt", date=December 11, 2012, work=Reuters, access-date=December 11, 2012 {{cite news , first=Stephanie , last=Miller , title=A Regional Strategy for Drug Wars in the Americas , date=April 7, 2009 , url=http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/ideas/2009/04/040709.html , publisher=Center for American Progress , access-date=April 13, 2009 {{cite web, url=https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/security/news/2009/04/03/5987/a-regional-strategy-for-drug-wars-in-the-americas/ , title=A Regional Strategy for Drug Wars in the Americas , access-date=December 14, 2014 , date=March 2010 , publisher=Center for American Progress


Further reading


Buscaglia, Edgardo (2013). ''Vacíos de Poder en México: Como Combatir la Delincuencia Organizada.'' Editorial Penguin Random (Debate), Edición KindleAtuesta, L. H., Siordia, O. S., & Lajous, A. M. (2018). "The 'War on Drugs' in Mexico: (Official) Database of Events between December 2006 and November 2011." ''Journal of Conflict Resolution''.
*Vulliamy, Ed, ''Amexica: War Along the Borderline'', Bodley Head, 2010. {{ISBN, 978-1-84792-128-4 * {{cite book, last=Grillo, first=Ioan, author-link=Ioan Grillo, year=2012, title=El Narco: The Bloody Rise of Mexican Drug Cartels , edition=2nd, publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing , isbn=978-1-4088-2433-7, title-link=El Narco: Inside Mexico's Criminal Insurgency *{{Cite book, url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y-AYvgAACAAJ, title=In the Shadow of Saint Death: The Gulf Cartel and the Price of America's Drug War in Mexico , last=Deibert, first=Michael, publisher=Globe Pequot, year=2014, isbn=9780762791255 * Gutierrez Aire, Jose, ''Blood, Death, Drugs & Sex in Old Mexico'', CreateSpace, 2012. {{ISBN, 978-1-4775-9227-4
''The Last Narco''
book about the current phase of the drug war by journalist Malcolm Beith. * Anabel Hernández, Hernández, Anabel,
Narcoland: The Mexican Drug Lords And Their Godfathers
', Verso, 2013. {{ISBN, 978-1781680735 * {{cite book , last1=Wainwright , first1=Tom , title=Narconomics: How to Run a Drug Cartel , date=23 February 2016 , publisher=PublicAffairs , isbn=9781610395830 , url=https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25159062-narconomics * {{cite book , last1=Tuckman , first1=Jo , title=Mexico: Democracy Interrupted , date=3 July 2012 , publisher=Yale University Press , isbn=9780300160314 , url=https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13435170-mexico?ref=nav_sb_ss_1_10 , access-date=26 May 2024


External links

{{Commons category
Map of Mexican drug war violence

Borderland Beat
Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels on the border between the US and Mexico * {{Cite web , last=Bowers , first=Charles , url=http://works.bepress.com/charles_bowers/7/ , title=The Mexican Kidnapping Industry , year=2009 , access-date=April 9, 2009 , archive-date=February 23, 2015 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150223011526/http://works.bepress.com/charles_bowers/7/ , url-status=dead An academic paper examining both the emergence of kidnapping as a drug war spillover, and statewide variance in Mexico's kidnapping statutes.

– written by the Strategic Studies Institute.
Mexico page on InSight Crime
Ongoing reporting on Mexico's drug war and involved cartels. * {{cite news , title=Full Coverage Mexico Under Siege , url=http://projects.latimes.com/mexico-drug-war , newspaper=Los Angeles Times , access-date=September 12, 2016 , archive-date=April 6, 2014 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140406123112/http://projects.latimes.com/mexico-drug-war/ , url-status=dead
The Atlantic: Mexico's Drug War


Foreign Policy Association Headline Series.
Juarez, City of Death, City of Hope


June 15, 2012

{{Mexican Drug War {{Americas topic, Illegal drug trade in {{World topic, prefix= Extrajudicial killings in , title= Extrajudicial killings , Extrajudicial killings in the World , noredlinks=yes {{Ongoing military conflicts {{Post-Cold War conflicts in the Americas Mexican drug war, History of drug control 2006 crimes in Mexico 2006 in Mexico 2007 in Mexico 2008 in Mexico 2009 in Mexico 2010s conflicts 2010s in Mexico 2020 in Mexico 2021 in Mexico 2022 in Mexico 2023 in Mexico 2024 in Mexico 21st-century conflicts Articles containing video clips Conflicts in 2006 Conflicts in 2007 Conflicts in 2008 Conflicts in 2009 Conflicts in 2020 Conflicts in 2021 Conflicts in 2022 Conflicts in 2023 Conflicts in 2024 Drugs in Mexico, War George W. Bush administration controversies Law enforcement operations against drug trafficking Law enforcement operations against organized crime in Mexico Military operations against organized crime Organized crime conflicts in Mexico Organized crime conflicts in the United States Proxy wars Terrorism in Mexico