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Picture: 123RF/zabelin
Picture: 123RF/zabelin

Mexico City — The flow of high-calibre arms smuggled across the porous US border has alarmed Mexican officials and few weapons are as powerful as the US-made M82 semi-automatic rifle increasingly favoured by the powerful drug cartels.

The M82 can easily penetrate bulletproof vests, concrete walls and even tanks, says its manufacturer Barrett Firearms. It is also one of the weapons of choice for drug cartels, according to the Mexican government, which this week filed a lawsuit in the US district court in Massachusetts against the company and 10 other gun manufacturers.

Weapons such as the M82 are part of a “torrent” of illegal arms flowing south, Mexico alleges, partly due to the manufacturers’ negligent business practices that had encouraged illegal arms trafficking.

None of the manufacturers, including Barrett, responded to Reuters’ requests for comment.

First manufactured in the 1980s, the M82 rose to prominence during the first Gulf War when it was adopted by the US military. Now it's used by more than 70 security agencies across the world, according to Barrett.

In Mexico, the weapon has disrupted the balance of power between criminal groups and poorly equipped police forces, according to Romain Le Cour Grandmaison, programme director at the Mexico and Central America Office of Noria, a think-tank.

“If you have a Barrett, it means that any nonspecial forces such as the local police and the municipal police cannot fight you,” Grandmaison said.

“That leaves the military as the only ones able to battle the cartels.”

The M82 guns, often fitted with a scope to act as sniper's weapon, can fire 70 rounds per minute with a maximum range of 2,500m.

Between 2009 and 2020, authorities seized 358 M82 rifles, according to official figures cited by the Milenio newspaper. In 2019, a record 68 such weapons were captured.

The raw power of the rifle, which weighs about 14kg and is 1.5m long, was on show in mid-2020 during a military-style assassination attempt on Mexico City's police chief that was captured by surveillance cameras.

Gunmen who left behind at least one M82 rifle were seen spraying the armour-plated car of police chief Omar Garcia Harfuch with high-velocity rounds. He was badly wounded, while two bodyguards and an innocent bystander were killed. In 2016, members of the “Knights Templar” cartel in Michoacan state allegedly downed a helicopter with an M82 rifle, the Mexican lawsuit said.

The Barrett M82 was a “serious problem” for security forces because its armour-piercing bullets can knock out the motors of reconnaissance vehicles and endanger helicopters, said a Mexican official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The gun should not be in the hands of civilians, the official said.

“It's a weapon of war,” added the official.

For the cartels, the M82 has also become a status symbol.

Criminal gangs that wish to project power often post photos on social media of their members toting M82 guns and latest military gadgets, mimicking the style of special forces units.

“It's a very symbolic weapon in the narco world and for the narco aesthetic,” Grandmaison said.

“It shows you're on top of the game.”

Reuters

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