• 2026.05.08 (Fri)
  • All articles
  • LOGIN
  • JOIN
Global Economic Times
fashionrunwayshow2026
  • Synthesis
  • World
  • Business
  • Industry
  • ICT
  • Distribution Economy
  • Well+Being
  • Travel
  • Eco-News
  • Education
  • Korean Wave News
  • Opinion
  • Arts&Culture
  • Sports
  • People & Life
    • International Student Report
    • With Ambassador
  • Column
    • Cho Kijo Column
    • Cherry Garden Story
    • Ko Yong-chul Column
    • Kim Seul-Ong Column
    • Lee Yeon-sil Column
  • Photo News
  • New Book Guide
MENU
 
Home > World

Mexico on Edge: ‘King of Cocaine’ El Mencho Killed, Igniting Wave of Cartel Retaliation

Pedro Espinola Special Correspondent / Updated : 2026-02-27 09:10:46
  • -
  • +
  • Print

(C) The Times of India


GUADALAJARA, Mexico — Mexico has been plunged into a state of near-civil war following a high-stakes military operation that resulted in the death of Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, the notorious leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG). The demise of the man often called the "King of Cocaine" has triggered a violent backlash from cartel members, turning major cities into battlegrounds and raising urgent security concerns months before the FIFA World Cup.

The Operation in Tapalpa
On Sunday, February 22, the Mexican Ministry of Defense confirmed that El Mencho was fatally wounded during a precision military raid in Tapalpa, Jalisco. According to official reports, the cartel kingpin was being transported to Mexico City for emergency medical treatment when he succumbed to his injuries.

The operation was a bloodbath on both sides. Four cartel gunmen were killed on-site, and two others were apprehended. The military seized an arsenal of high-grade weaponry, including armored vehicles and rocket launchers. However, the victory came at a heavy cost: seven soldiers lost their lives, and a subsequent prison riot linked to the raid resulted in the deaths of a correctional officer and a federal prosecutor.

A Relentless Pursuit Ends
El Mencho, a former police officer turned warlord, had been the primary target of President Claudia Sheinbaum’s administration, which has faced mounting pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to dismantle the cartels. With a $15 million bounty on his head from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), El Mencho had long evaded capture by hiding in the rugged mountains of western Mexico.

His leadership transformed the CJNG into a paramilitary powerhouse. The group is infamous for its "ton-scale" cocaine trafficking—moving narcotics from Colombia through Ecuador via high-speed boats and semi-submersibles—and for its brazen 2020 assassination attempt on Mexico’s top security official in the heart of the capital.

Cities Ablaze: The Aftermath
The news of El Mencho’s death did not bring peace, but rather a firestorm of "narcobloqueos" (drug blockades). In Guadalajara, Mexico’s second-largest city, cartel operatives hijacked vehicles and set them ablaze to paralyze major thoroughfares.

In the coastal resort of Puerto Vallarta, social media footage showed thick plumes of black smoke rising over the skyline as terrified tourists and locals fled the vicinity of the airport. The tactical use of arson and road closures is a signature move by the CJNG to disrupt military movements and spread terror.

"The streets are empty; it has become a ghost town," reported an AP correspondent in Guadalajara. "People are barricaded in their homes as the smell of burning rubber fills the air."

Geopolitical and Sporting Implications
The timing of this instability is particularly critical. Guadalajara is slated to be a host city for the FIFA World Cup this summer. The current chaos raises significant questions about the safety of international fans and athletes.

In response to the escalating violence, the U.S. State Department issued an emergency alert, urging American citizens in the states of Jalisco, Michoacán, Guerrero, Tamaulipas, and Nuevo León to seek shelter and avoid all non-essential travel.

What Lies Ahead
While the elimination of El Mencho is a symbolic and strategic victory for the Mexican government, experts warn of a "hydra effect." The vacuum left by his death could lead to internal power struggles within the CJNG or embolden rival cartels like the Sinaloa Cartel to seize disputed territories.

As the smoke continues to rise over Jalisco, the Sheinbaum administration faces its toughest test yet: proving that it can not only take down a titan but also restore order to a nation caught in the crossfire of a vengeful insurgency.

[Copyright (c) Global Economic Times. All Rights Reserved.]

  • #Korea
  • #Seoul
  • #Hallyu
  • #USA
  • #Economy
  • #Busoness
  • #Global
  • #World
  • #Consumer
  • #Export
  • #Import
  • #Hanguel
  • #Travel
  • #Tour
  • #Food
Pedro Espinola Special Correspondent
Pedro Espinola Special Correspondent

Popular articles

  • $2 Million Per Ship: Iran’s "Hormuz Toll" Emerges as Chokepoint in Peace Talks

  • China’s CXMT Closes the Gap: Aiming for Mass Production of 12-Layer HBM by 2025

  • Middle East Ceasefire in Peril: Trump Shifts Stance on Lebanon After Call with Netanyahu

I like it
Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Kakaotalk
  • LINE
  • BAND
  • NAVER
  • https://www.globaleconomictimes.kr/article/1065571669685861 Copy URL copied.
Comments >

Comments 0

Weekly Hot Issue

  • South Korea’s KOSPI Surges to 7th in Global Market Cap, Overtaking Canada and UK
  • Global Pay Parity Demands Shaking Tech Giants: Samsung and SK Hynix Face Rising Labor Unrest in China
  • the 28th Overseas Koreans Literary Awards
  • Ambassador Hyuk-sang Sohn attended the "2026 Educational Community Sports Day" held at the Korean School of Paraguay on Friday, May 1.
  • Official Presentation of Credentials in Paraguay
  • U.S. World Cup "Host City Boom" Fizzles: Hotel Bookings Slump One Month Before Kickoff

Most Viewed

1
Korea and Vietnam Forge Strategic Partnership in Science, Technology, and Innovation
2
Iran Imposes Transit Fees on Strait of Hormuz Amid Escalating Maritime Tensions
3
80% of Enterprises Hit by 'AI Agent Anomalies': SailPoint Calls for Integrated Identity Governance
4
Kurly Abandons 'All-Paper' Packaging Strategy Amid Rising Cost Pressures
5
Tradition Meets the Public: Chungju’s Gugak Busking
광고문의
임시1
임시3
임시2

Hot Issue

Hyundai Motor Group Bets $700 Million on Mexico Amid Trade Policy Volatility

Honda Halts $15B Canada EV Plant Plans Amid Strategic Pivot to Hybrids

Digital Ghosts: The Rise of AI Ex-Partner Replicas and the Ethics of "Technological Mourning"

Kakao Hits Record Q1 Performance: Operating Profit Surges 66% as Focus Shifts to "Agentic AI"

Fashion Runway Show 2026

Global Economic Times
korocamia@naver.com
CEO : LEE YEON-SIL
Publisher : KO YONG-CHUL
Registration number : Seoul, A55681
Registration Date : 2024-10-24
Youth Protection Manager: KO YONG-CHUL
Singapore Headquarters
5A Woodlands Road #11-34 The Tennery. S'677728
Korean Branch
Phone : +82(0)10 4724 5264
#304, 6 Nonhyeon-ro 111-gil, Gangnam-gu, Seoul
Copyright © Global Economic Times All Rights Reserved
  • 에이펙2025
  • APEC2025가이드북TV
  • 반달곰 프로젝트
Search
Category
  • All articles
  • Synthesis
  • World
  • Business
  • Industry
  • ICT
  • Distribution Economy
  • Well+Being
  • Travel
  • Eco-News
  • Education
  • Korean Wave News
  • Opinion
  • Arts&Culture
  • Sports
  • People & Life 
    • 전체
    • International Student Report
    • With Ambassador
  • Column 
    • 전체
    • Cho Kijo Column
    • Cherry Garden Story
    • Ko Yong-chul Column
    • Kim Seul-Ong Column
    • Lee Yeon-sil Column
  • Photo News
  • New Book Guide
  • Multicultural News
  • Jobs & Workers