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According to the report, Mexico's Army gave the deadly Sinaloa Cartel one of its biggest defeats in recent months after 19 suspected cartel members were killed in an overnight ambush.
The report said that the Mexican military personnel were attacked on October 21 by more than 30 people a few miles outside Sinaloa's state capital Culiacan.
In the ensuing ambush, many suspected cartel members also managed to flee. But the Mexican authorities managed to nab one local Cartel leader identified as Edwin Antonio. The latest win for the Mexican army comes at the heels of newly-elected President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo's new security strategy which continues to face public scrutiny.
Mexico is famous for drug cartels. Mexico's military (not police) but the actual military takes care of business. Their marines are brutal towards the cartels as they should be.
It's interesting how we often hear about what's happening in Mexico, especially the conflicts involving cartel leaders. But I wonder about their counterparts responsible for distributing drugs in the U.S. We rarely hear anything about them—only about the street-level individuals, often from minority communities, who handle small amounts of drugs. There's little coverage of those controlling the larger-scale distribution are they protected or are part of the DEA, CIA, or others? - said one viewer
Watch the report coverage via the YouTube kink.
The report said that the Mexican military personnel were attacked on October 21 by more than 30 people a few miles outside Sinaloa's state capital Culiacan.
In the ensuing ambush, many suspected cartel members also managed to flee. But the Mexican authorities managed to nab one local Cartel leader identified as Edwin Antonio. The latest win for the Mexican army comes at the heels of newly-elected President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo's new security strategy which continues to face public scrutiny.
Mexico is famous for drug cartels. Mexico's military (not police) but the actual military takes care of business. Their marines are brutal towards the cartels as they should be.
It's interesting how we often hear about what's happening in Mexico, especially the conflicts involving cartel leaders. But I wonder about their counterparts responsible for distributing drugs in the U.S. We rarely hear anything about them—only about the street-level individuals, often from minority communities, who handle small amounts of drugs. There's little coverage of those controlling the larger-scale distribution are they protected or are part of the DEA, CIA, or others? - said one viewer
Watch the report coverage via the YouTube kink.