CONFLICTS/MEXICO DRUG WAR
ACTIVENorth America

MEXICO DRUG WAR

STARTED DECEMBER 11, 2006
DURATION: 19 YEARS, 4 MONTHS
4 PARTIES
SIDE A
🇲🇽
Mexico
Mexican Government (SEDENA + GN)
SIDE B
Sinaloa Cartel (internal civil war)
B
CJNG (Jalisco New Generation Cartel)
B
🇺🇸
United States
United States (DEA + NORTHCOM pressure)
ESTIMATED CASUALTIES
450,000+ homicides since 2006; 30,000-35,000 per year currently; 74,000 US fentanyl deaths 2023
TERRITORIAL CONTROL
Nationwide: Sinaloa controls northwest; CJNG controls west/center; territorial competition everywhere
LIVE UPDATES
Mar 17, 2026Sinaloa cartel infighting continues after El Mayo arrest; violence surges in Culiacán and Durango
CLASSIFIED
INTELLIGENCE BRIEFINGMEXICO DRUG WAR
WARDATALAB.AI // 2026-04-15
INTEL // NORTH AMERICA // ACTIVE
REF: MEXICO-DRUG-WAR
SITUATION OVERVIEW

Mexico's drug war is one of the most lethal conflicts in the Western Hemisphere — a decades-long struggle between the Mexican state and powerful criminal organizations that control drug trafficking, extortion, kidnapping, and increasingly legitimate businesses across Mexico and extending into the United States. With approximately 450,000 homicide victims since 2006 when President Felipe Calderón declared war on cartels and a current rate of 30,000+ murders annually, Mexico suffers more violent deaths than many active war zones.

The cartel landscape has evolved from the fragmented organizations of the 1990s to two dominant federations. The Sinaloa Cartel, founded by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman (imprisoned in US) and currently led in competing factions by his sons (Los Chapitos) and Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada's loyalists (arrested by DEA in dramatic July 2024 sting), controls northwest Mexico and most fentanyl manufacturing and distribution. The Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), led by Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes, controls Jalisco, Guanajuato, parts of Michoacan, and has expanded internationally.

The fentanyl crisis has transformed the conflict's strategic character. Fentanyl — produced from Chinese chemical precursors in cartel super-labs primarily in Sinaloa and Sonora — killed 74,000 Americans in 2023, more deaths than the Vietnam War. This has made cartel suppression a top US national security priority. The Trump administration in January 2025 designated the Sinaloa Cartel and CJNG as Foreign Terrorist Organizations and threatened tariffs on Mexico unless cooperation improved dramatically.

KEY EVENTS & TIMELINE
ACTIVE PHASEstarted December 1, 2006
Dec 2006President Calderón deploys military against cartels — drug war begins
2007-2012Extreme cartel violence; 60,000+ killed; Los Zetas, Sinaloa, CJNG rise
2013-2018Cartel fragmentation; Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán captured (2014, 2016)
2019-2023AMLO's "hugs not bullets" policy; violence continues; fentanyl crisis explodes
Jul 2024Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada arrested — Sinaloa cartel leadership crisis
Aug-Dec 2024Sinaloa cartel infighting erupts; Culiacán and Durango violence surges
2025CJNG expands territory; fentanyl production drives US pressure; 30,000+ homicides/year
2026Cartel fragmentation violence continues; military-grade weapons and drones used
Mar 2026Sinaloa infighting ongoing; violence in Culiacán, Durango; cartels use armored vehicles
STRATEGIC SIGNIFICANCE

The drug war threatens Mexico's democracy, $1.3 trillion economy, and its status as the US's largest trading partner ($800 billion/year in bilateral trade). Cartel infiltration of government at state and municipal level is endemic. Fentanyl's 74,000 US deaths in 2023 exceeds any military conflict since Vietnam; the Sinaloa Cartel and CJNG together generate an estimated $60-80 billion in annual revenue — larger than most national military budgets. This revenue funds cartel acquisition of military-grade weapons including .50 caliber sniper rifles, RPGs, anti-aircraft missiles, armored vehicles, and sophisticated surveillance equipment that outclasses Mexican security forces in many regions. Money laundering through real estate, restaurants, and front businesses has distorted entire regional economies.

FORCES & CAPABILITIES

Mexican military deploys 200,000 active army troops plus 35,000 marine infantry and 100,000 National Guard created in 2019. Military assets include UH-60 Black Hawk and Bell helicopters, aerial surveillance platforms, and special forces trained by US NORTHCOM. Sinaloa Cartel fields approximately 20,000-30,000 armed operators; CJNG approximately 15,000-20,000 across western Mexico. Cartel tactical capabilities include armored convoys, encrypted communications, sophisticated counter-surveillance, corrupt law enforcement warning networks, and improvised armored vehicles. The Sinaloa Cartel maintains professional hitmen paid $3,000-5,000 per month — well-paid enough to outcompete military recruitment.

CURRENT STATUS

ACTIVE. Sinaloa cartel infighting intensified after El Mayo Zambada's arrest in 2024. Violence surges in Culiacán, Durango, and Sinaloa state. The Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) expands territory. Fentanyl production and trafficking drives US pressure on Mexico. 30,000+ homicides annually. Cartels use drones, armored vehicles, and military-grade weapons.

WARDATALAB INTELLIGENCE PLATFORM — ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDLAST UPDATED: 2026-04-15
MILITARY ANALYSIS

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Head-to-head comparison of the parties' military capabilities — troops, hardware, budget, and power index.

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