Drug Cartel Now Assassinates Its Enemies With Bomb-Toting Drones

The tactic has become widespread on battlefields overseas and now appears to be 
proliferating to organized crime.

BY JOSEPH TREVITHICK 
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/36013/mexican-drug-cartel-now-assassinating-its-enemies-with-improvised-explosive-toting-drones


Mexico's drug cartels are notoriously well armed and equipped, with some 
possessing very heavy weaponry, including armored gun trucks sporting heavy 
machine guns.

Now at least one of these groups appears to be increasingly making use of small 
quadcopter-type drones carrying small explosive devices to attack its enemies.

This is just the latest example of a trend that has been growing worldwide in 
recent years, including among non-state actors, such as terrorists and 
criminals, which underscores the potential threats commercially-available 
unmanned systems pose on and off the battlefield.

A civilian self-defense militia in the city of Tepalcatepec, in Mexico's 
southwestern Michoacan state, reportedly recovered two dozen explosive-laden 
quadcopters from a car that a team of sicarios – cartel hitmen – had apparently 
abandoned, possibly after a failed or aborted hit, on July 25, 2020. The bombs 
attached to the drones consisted of Tupperware-like containers filled with C4 
charges and ball bearings to act as shrapnel.

The vehicle and its contents were said to be tied to the Cártel de Jalisco 
Nueva Generación (CJNG), or Jalisco New Generation Cartel, which has its main 
hub in neighboring Jalisco state, but exerts control over a wider swatch of 
territory. This includes areas much further down Mexico's southwestern Pacific 
coastline and along the Gulf of Mexico on the opposite side of the country.

CJNG first emerged in 2009 as an offshoot of the Milenio Cartel and has since 
waged a particularly violent campaign against many of Mexico's other drug 
cartels, as well as Mexican authorities and civilian self-defense 
organizations, growing in size and scope in the process. As of July, American 
authorities estimated that CJNG was responsible for the movement of 
approximately one-third of all drugs from Mexico into the United States. It has 
also been working to expand its operations into Europe and Asia.

That revenue has clearly translated into new weapons, vehicles, and equipment 
for the CJNG's sicarios and other footsoldiers. In July, the cartel released a 
particularly striking video of a convoy of camouflage-painted trucks, pickups, 
and SUVs, some with mounted weapons and very visible add-on armor, together 
with heavily armed personnel in tactical gear, that all looked more like a 
military unit than a criminal gang.

These personnel, who all shouted of the nickname of their top boss, Nemesio "El 
Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes, throughout the footage, reportedly belong to a 
"special forces" contingent within the cartel's overall force structure. This 
video followed a failed CJNG assassination attempt against Mexico City's police 
chief Omar Garcia Harfuch in June. Harfuch was wounded in the shootout and two 
of his bodyguard's died.

CJNG's growing resources have also translated into its new aerial capabilities. 
There were reports in April that CJNG had been dropping improvised explosive 
devices from small, conventional manned aircraft in attacks on members of the 
Tepalcatepec self-defense militia. The cartel apparently dropped this tactic 
quickly after Mexican authorities stepped up aerial surveillance in the region 
and has since shifted to using the diminutive drones.

Quadcopters with explosives believed to belong CJNG were recovered in the city 
of Puebla, in the state of the same name, southeast of Mexico City, in April, 
as well. Mexican officials said they believed those had been destined for 
attacks on the Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel in Guanajuato state to the northwest. 
The discovery of those drones led to raids that found more quadcopters, as well 
as various electronics and bomb-making supplies, including more C4.

It's not surprising at all that CJNG, especially, has turned to small unmanned 
systems as a means of carrying out its various violent campaigns throughout 
Mexico. Mexican cartels, among other criminal groups, have already been using 
them to carry drugs over walls and past other barriers, as well as conduct 
surveillance. There have been more sporadic reports of other cartels using 
small explosive-armed drones since at least 2017, too.

The barrier to entry when it comes to crafting small bomb-carrying quad and 
hexcopter-type drones is notably low, in general. This is something The War 
Zone has highlighted on multiple occasions in the past, which makes the concept 
particularly attractive to non-state actors.

In 2018, a group opposed to dictatorial Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro 
attempted to assassinate him at a public rally using a commercially available 
multi-rotor drone system. This came years after ISIS terrorists had very much 
brought the concept to an actual battlefield in Iraq.

Small drones of various kinds of improvised munitions had steadily proliferated 
among terrorists and other armed groups in Iraq and Syria since then. Russia's 
Syrian outpost at Khmeimim Air Base has been subjected to a regular stream of 
drone attacks since 2018.

In July, authorities in the Iraqi capital Baghdad recovered a quadcopter drone 
with a very purpose-built-looking looking bomb underneath in a neighboring near 
the heavily fortified Green Zone area that is home to various government 
buildings and Embassies, including that of the United States. Iranian-backed 
militias often use these adjacent areas to stage rocket attacks on the U.S. 
Embassy compound.

These are just a small number of the readily available examples of this tactic 
being employed. In fact, when it comes to the danger of drones being used for 
gangland assassinations, Japanese authorities warned back in 2015 about Yakuza 
families doing exactly what CJNG is doing right now in Mexico.

Even larger nation-state militaries are starting to leverage the relative 
simplicity of hobby-like quadcopter drones as a starting place for more complex 
weaponized systems, including designs capable of operating cooperatively in 
autonomous swarms. Turkey is now putting such a drone system into production, 
which you read all about here.

This reality has left the United States, among others, scrambling to catch up 
when it comes to developing countermeasures. The U.S. military, as a whole, has 
been investigating a wide array of different counter-drone technologies to 
handle these lower-tier threats, ranging from jammers to directed-energy 
weapons, including both lasers and high-power microwave beams.

"I argue all the time with my Air Force friends that the future of flight is 
vertical and it's unmanned," U.S. Marine General Kenneth McKenzie, head of U.S. 
Central Command, said at a public event in June. "I'm not talking about large 
unmanned platforms, which are the size of a conventional fighter jet that we 
can see and deal with, as we would any other platform. I'm talking about the 
one you can go out and buy at Costco right now in the United States for a 
thousand dollars, four quad, rotorcraft, or something like that that can be 
launched and flown," he added. "And with very simple modifications, it can make 
made into something that can drop a weapon like a hand grenade or something 
else."

CJNG's recent activities only underscore that there is a serious need for 
countermeasures off the battlefield to safeguard VIPs, critical infrastructure, 
and more from spying and potentially dangerous harassment, as well as 
deliberate lethal attacks. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security identified 
the need for some kind of mobile counter-drone capability as an "emerging 
requirement" just this week.

If this cartel successfully adds small armed drones to its already significant 
arsenal, and shows that they can be useful on a more regular basis, it could 
easily lead to an explosion of other criminal groups in the country, and 
elsewhere, adopting this tactic, as well.

Contact the author: [email protected]
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