How Counter-Narcotics Created the Cartels: Northern Mexico 1969–1989

March 14, 2026
counter-narcoticscartelsunintended consequencesstate complicity

The causal chain

The throughline from 1969 to 1989 follows a clear causal chain where each US-backed counter-narcotics intervention paradoxically strengthened and modernized the drug trade:

  1. Operation Intercept (1969): Nixon’s 20-day border shutdown pressured Mexico into bilateral enforcement cooperation, establishing the framework for joint operations.

  2. Early operations (Canador 1969–75, Trizo 1975–76): Served as laboratories for anti-drug methods in the Golden Triangle, where ~20,000 farmers produced the majority of US-bound drugs.

  3. Operation Condor (1977 onward): 10,000 soldiers and aerial herbicide spraying devastated the Sierra Madre but critically displaced traffickers from the mountains into cities, most importantly Guadalajara.

  4. The Guadalajara Cartel (c. 1980): Displaced Sinaloan traffickers consolidated under Félix Gallardo, creating the first modern cartel: centralized, corporate, with the Colombian cocaine pipeline and systematic DFS protection.

  5. The DFS: Mexico’s CIA-created secret police provided institutional protection throughout, functioning simultaneously as a Cold War intelligence asset and the cartel’s security apparatus. The US tolerated this for geopolitical reasons.

  6. The Camarena Affair (1985): Shattered the arrangement. DFS dissolved, unprecedented US enforcement powers, Félix Gallardo arrested in 1989.

  7. Fragmentation: The Guadalajara Cartel was divided into the Tijuana, Juárez, and Sinaloa cartels, creating the multi-polar landscape that defines Mexican trafficking today.

The central irony

US-backed counter-narcotics operations did not eliminate drug trafficking but reorganized and modernized it, pushing it from a rural cottage industry into urban corporate structures with deeper state penetration and ultimately greater capacity for violence.

Questions to explore