COLUMNS
Why Don't Mexico's Cartels Use Vehicle Bombs?
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Jan 14, 2020 | 09:00 GMT
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Drug cartels in Mexico, wary of being labeled narcoterrorists, have avoided using vehicle bombs as a tactic in their competition with rivals, a wariness that will most likely extend into the future.
(Photo Spirit/Shutterstock)
Highlights
- Mexican cartels have the means, motive and opportunity to deploy car bombs, but two main constraints prevent them from doing so.
- The first is the indiscriminate nature of vehicle bombs and the destruction they cause, which would alienate the local populations essential to the cartels' ability to operate.
- The second is a desire to avoid winding up like the late Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar, who was tracked down and killed after being labeled a narcoterrorist.
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