Drug cartels using bomb-dropping drones have killed Mexican army soldiers: report

On Friday, The Mexican army acknowledged to the Associated Press that some of its soldiers have been killed by bomb-dropping drones operated by drug cartels.

The Mexican army has confirmed that drug cartel-operated bomb-dropping drones have killed soldiers in the western state of Michoacan.

Defense Secretary Gen. Luis Cresencio Sandoval did not provide exact figures on the number of casualties suffered in the attacks, according to the Associated Press. 

Sandoval stated on Friday that attacks targeted patrol units and included over 260 drone-bomb incidents in 2023 alone.

"Our personnel have suffered wounds, and some of our troops have even died" in the attacks, Sandoval said.

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The Jalisco cartel, known for equipping drones with metal bomb casings, has turned the region into a warzone with IEDs, trenches, and armored vehicles. 

Sandoval told the AP that the army continues to encounter far more road-side bombs than drone-dropped ones.

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According to officials, the only other reported cartel bomb attacks took place back in August 2023.

The defense department told the AP during that time, a total of 42 soldiers, police and suspects were wounded by IEDs in the first seven and a half months of 2023, up from 16 in all of 2022.

The Mexican army is now adding anti-drone systems to combat these threats. 

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Mexico’s Navy also acknowledged on Friday that two military helicopter crew members died earlier this year when their chopper went down in the Pacific Ocean while chasing cocaine-smuggling boats.

Officials told the AP that the U.S. Navy had agreed to help in recovering the sunken helicopter and the crew members’ remains.

The Jalisco and Sinaloa cartels have also flooded major U.S. cities with meth and fentanyl and use violence to protect their turf, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said in a May report.

"The deadly reach of the Mexican Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels into U.S. communities is extended by the wholesale-level traffickers and street dealers bringing the cartels’ drugs to market, sometimes creating their own deadly drug mixtures," the DEA report says. "Together, the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels have caused the worst drug crisis in U.S. history."

In late April, 12 traffickers tied to the Jalisco cartel were sentenced to 4.5 to 40 years in federal prison after they were busted in Del Rio, Texas, in 2021 for coordinating a shipment of nearly 200 kilograms of liquid methamphetamine worth $9.9 million.

Last week, during an interview with Fox News host Jesse Watters on "Jesse Watters Primetime, former President Trump said strikes against Mexican drug cartels are "absolutely" still on the table as fentanyl and overdose deaths continue to plague the United States.

Fox News Digital's Chris Eberhart and Ashley Carnahan and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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