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How Drones Are Changing The Drug Wars
Zita Ballinger Fletcher · 2026-05-06 · via Forbes - Aerospace & Defense
TOPSHOT-COLOMBIA-ARMAMENT-ARMED FORCES-CONFLICT-DRONES

Colombia's army formed its first unmanned aircraft battalion in October 2025 in response to mounting attacks on police and military forces by drug trafficking groups using drones. (Photo by Raul ARBOLEDA / AFP) (Photo by RAUL ARBOLEDA/AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

On April 23, the Pentagon expanded its ability to project autonomous warfare on a large scale with the establishment of a new unmanned systems command headed by U.S. Southern Command. Called the SOUTHCOM Autonomous Warfare Command, or SAWC, it will wield all types of autonomous, semi-autonomous and unmanned systems across an area of operations spanning the land mass of Latin America south of Mexico, waters bordering Central and South America, and the Caribbean Sea.

This move follows the debut of the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group, or DAWG, established by the Pentagon in 2025, and is the latest step within a wholesale transformation of the U.S. military to adopt surveillance tools and weapons systems enhanced with artificial intelligence.

SOUTHCOM’s new initiative faces the challenge not only of putting new drone technology into action effectively, but doing so rapidly and in constant contact with opposition. The command currently forms the tip of the spear in one of the fiercest, but relatively unobserved, forms of geopolitical conflict – transnational criminal drug trafficking.

Drug Trafficking And Drones

Aerial view of La Roca maximum security prison in Ecuador in September 2024 after it was attacked with an explosive drone. (Photo by Enrique Ortiz / AFP) (Photo by ENRIQUE ORTIZ/AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

Drone technology has introduced new tools to a vast array of criminal organizations seeking to use them for malicious purposes, including for drug smuggling and to sneak contraband into prisons. Organized crime groups represent ruthless and well-financed illegal international businesses quick to use drone technology to achieve their aims, according to an October 2025 report by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.

This is particularly apparent in Central and South America, where criminal groups are using drones regularly to attack military and police forces. Violence has risen sharply in Colombia over the past few years, with drug traffickers deploying drones to monitor drug crops, ambush rival groups and attack military and police forces in a rising tide of bloodshed steadily assuming the nature of an anti-government siege.

A drone flies next to the Mexican national emblem during a demonstration by the Mexican Army's special anti-drone battalion in Naucalpan, Mexico, on February 17, 2026, as part of safety preparations for the 2026 World Cup. A drone equipped with explosives was used to attack a prosecutor's office in Tijuana last October. (Photo by Alfredo ESTRELLA / AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

It is not unprecedented for organized crime groups to effectively transform into insurgencies by using military tactics and technology against governments. What has altered the nature of criminal insurgency is the use of drones and autonomous systems for reconnaissance and lethal strikes.

Drones are now being used across Latin America to drop not only explosives but hazardous chemical payloads, to ambush law enforcement and military units, and to terrorize and coerce local civilians, according to a report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. These groups are now venturing into counter-drone warfare tactics, even deploying jammers to thwart government drones.

A New Approach To Operations

U.S. Marine Gen. Francis L. Donovan, commander of U.S. Southern Command, watches a demonstration of an unmanned system on April 29, 2026 during the Fleet Experimentation (FLEX) 2026 event hosted by U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Staff Sgt. Christopher Bermudez)

U.S. Southern Command

This is the arena where SOUTHCOM’s new autonomous warfare command is poised to operate, centralizing control of an array of unmanned systems for use across its wide-ranging area of operations.

“USSOUTHCOM intends to capitalize on next-generation capabilities like unmanned platforms and AI integration to enhance the efficacy of future operations to counter Designated Terrorist Organizations (DTOs), with our regional partners,” Gen. Francis L. Donovan, SOUTHCOM commander, told Forbes.

Donovan added that drug trafficking organizations pose a national security threat not only to the United States but to all nations in the Western Hemisphere.

“Their drugs generate hundreds of billions of dollars that fund campaigns of terror, violence, and corruption,” Donovan said. “Their illicit activities destabilize the region, and their poison kills thousands of Americans annually.”

Surveillance Drones For Sea Patrols

An unmanned surface vehicle sails off the coast of Key West, Florida, on April 24 during the annual Fleet Experimentation (FLEX) 2026 event hosted by U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command. The event focused on advanced robotic and autonomous systems to combat transnational organized crime. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jasmin L. Aquino)

U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command

Over the past year, surveillance drones have proved effective at helping intercept drug smugglers at sea. A VTOL, or vertical take-off and landing, drone assisted the U.S. Coast Guard in tracking drug smuggling vessels across open water using continuous autonomous surveillance.

Use of the drone resulted in a record-breaking seizure of illegal drug shipments totaling $362 million offloaded at Port Everglades, Florida last November in an event attended by Administrator Terrance Cole of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

The drone – Shield AI’s V-BAT – was photographed with law enforcement leaders and U.S. Coast Guard personnel following the major operational milestone.

Drug Enforcement Administration, Coast Guard and joint agency partner leadership attended a drug offload at Port Everglades in Florida in November 2025 following the interdiction of over $362 million in illicit narcotics. A VTOL drone used for the operation is showcased on deck. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Chief Warrant Officer Weldon James)

U.S. Coast Guard

A SOUTHCOM spokesperson confirmed to Forbes that the new command will expand the use of autonomous sensors at sea.

“Our naval component, NAVSOUTH, through its Fleet Exercise series, has demonstrated significant leadership in employing autonomous sensors such as Saildrones to enhance Maritime Domain Awareness across the region,” the spokesperson said.

“SOUTHCOM and NAVSOUTH have been at the forefront of integrating these innovative technologies, providing valuable operational insights and early successes.”

The spokesperson added that SOUTHCOM’s new autonomous warfare command will expand what NAVSOUTH has accomplished to the combatant command level.

Evolving Tactics And Training Partner Forces

U.S. Marines with Maritime Special Purpose Force, 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit descend via fast rope from a UH-1Y Venom tiltrotor helicopter in the Caribbean Sea in April 2026. U.S. forces are deployed to the Caribbean, a major drug trafficking hotspot, in support of SOUTHCOM. (U.S. Marine Corps photo)

U.S. Marine Corps

Drug trafficking organizations have already started changing the way they operate due to recent U.S. military actions, according to SOUTHCOM.

“As a result of Operation Southern Spear’s decisive operations, narco-terrorists are responding to our sustained pressure by attempting to shift their tactics, but the operation denies malign actors and their proxies any foothold in the Western Hemisphere,” the spokesperson said.

Drug trafficking organizations use illegal activities and violence to exert and establish control. SOUTHCOM will deny their ability to establish that control by disrupting their operations, the spokesperson explained.

“USSOUTHCOM imposes total systemic friction on drug cartels and terrorist networks using various tactics, including the use of autonomous systems.”

Part of this friction consists of joint U.S. training with regional partner forces to strengthen the authority of local governments and their ability to uphold their legal structures that are being undermined by criminal hierarchies.

SOUTHCOM has focused intensely over the past year on training partner forces across Latin America in the use of drone technology and in mounting well-coordinated tactical responses to violent threats that criminal insurgencies present.

U.S. Marines partner with Ecuadorian Marines in close quarters battle training during a joint exercise in Ecuador on April 29, 2026. U.S. military forces are deployed to the region to support SOUTHCOM in strengthening local authorities and disrupting illicit drug trafficking. (U.S. Marine Corps photo)

U.S. Marine Corps

On March 3, SOUTHCOM announced the start of joint military operations against drug trafficking organizations operating in Ecuador. The U.S. Navy also conducted joint exercises in the Pacific with Ecuador’s air force and navy last month.

While SOUTHCOM did not disclose which specific unmanned systems will be used by the command due to operational security, its stated commitment to adopt a wide variety of autonomous and semi-autonomous systems will place more urgent demands on operators to learn and practice the ins and outs of human-machine teaming.

Although it is often taken for granted that the evolution of drone warfare is occurring at its fastest tempo in Ukraine, the revolutionary impact of drones on military affairs can no longer be confined to such a narrow scope. Drones have upended the traditional notion of what constitutes a battlefield. The real proving ground for drone warfare might be less of a battlefield than a global contest of willpower between those trying to uphold laws and those trying to subvert them.