Home World Colombia deploys armed drones in escalating fight against drug gangs

Colombia deploys armed drones in escalating fight against drug gangs

Police officers stand in formation behind a drone that used to increase the security in Jamundi, Valle del Cauca province, Colombia, on June 13, 2024.

Police officers stand in formation behind a drone that will be used to increase the security in Jamundi, Valle del Cauca province, Colombia, on June 13, 2024. JOAQUIN SARMIENTO/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption

JOAQUIN SARMIENTO/AFP via Getty Images

BOGOTÁ, Colombia – Inside a cavernous hangar next to Bogotá’s international airport, military officers are testing a new weapon: a Colombian-made drone that can carry up to 18 pounds of explosives.

“It’s a tactical drone that’s easy for troops to carry but one that also has a lot of firepower,” says Colombian Air Force Col. Andrés Talavera, who is overseeing the test flight.

The drone is the latest salvo in the government’s battle against guerrillas and drug-traffickers. But although unmanned aerial vehicles have become vital weapons in conflicts from Ukraine to the Middle East, Colombia is a late comer to drone warfare.

Sponsor Message

Colombia’s conflict has been going on since the 1960s but the violence had been decreasing in recent years. That was due to a 2016 peace treaty that disarmed the country’s largest guerrilla army as well as ceasefires with smaller criminal groups.

But over the past year, those ceasefires have collapsed.

Now, says Army Gen. Juan Carlos Correa, the criminals are using drones to monitor their drug crops and cocaine laboratories, target rival smugglers, and ambush police and army troops. Over the past two years, these groups have successfully attacked security forces about 200 times with explosive-laden drones.

“In one single day they launched 17 attacks,” Correa told NPR.

The technology is inexpensive and widely available. The drug traffickers buy commercial drones online for a thousand dollars or so, then attach homemade explosives to them.

Air Force Gen. Andrés Guzmán, who heads CIAC, the state-run company producing Colombia’s military drones, says that because the new technology is so cheap, it has provided a huge boost for criminal groups.

“The conflict will always be a David vs. Goliath situation but a drone can be the perfect solution for these groups when they are confronting the military, which has a lot more technology,” he told NPR.

Sponsor Message

But as often happens with unconventional weapons, civilians are ending up in harm’s way. Drones jury-rigged by criminals have damaged homes and and killed children.

“The grenades are hand-made by them,” Gen. Correa said. “The targeting system is not very precise. There was a 10-year-old kid who was killed by one of these grenades in the middle of a town.”

Still, the criminals are improving their aim. Over the past two years, about 60 army troops have been wounded in drone attacks while four have been killed. The latest was 20-year-old Edison Guerrero, an army solider who was killed in May while on patrol near the Venezuelan border.

Guerrero’s death was another blow to his family, which had been uprooted and forced to move by the fighting. Reached on the phone, Noralba Rodríguez, the soldier’s grieving sister, told NPR: “This war doesn’t make any sense.”

To defend themselves, soldiers will often start firing wildly at incoming drones. But that rarely works because the devices are so small and maneuverable. Col. Talavera said that the only effective defense is an anti-drone system made up of radars and jammers that block the frequency of enemy drones.

But it’s expensive. Col. Talavera said the electronics to take down a $2,000 drone can cost up to $15,000. What’s more, the drones drug gangs are buying from online retailers are improving at a much faster clip than the military’s technology to combat them.

Laura Bonilla, deputy director of the Peace and Reconciliation Foundation, a Bogotá think tank, says excessive government red tape for purchasing and flying drones has hamstrung the military.

“There is too much bureaucracy. So, it’s really difficult for the armed forces to reach the same capacity” as drug trafficking groups, she said. “The criminals don’t need any permits.”

To keep from falling farther behind – and from having to rely on foreign suppliers – the Colombian government has been manufacturing its own drones. But it’s slow-going. While cash-rich drug traffickers can buy dozens of drones with a few clicks on a computer, Colombia’s military is turning out just eight of its latest models of drone per month.

Sponsor Message

When it comes to Colombia’s drone war, Bonilla says, “the criminals have the strategic advantage.”

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Must Read

Horse-drawn carriages and a royal salute for Trump’s unprecedented second state visit

President Trump reviews the guard of honor during his state visit on September 17, 2025 in Windsor, England. Jonathan Brady/WPA Pool/Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Jonathan Brady/WPA Pool/Getty Images WINDSOR, England / LONDON – President Trump and first lady Melania Trump arrived at Windsor Castle on Wednesday for a state visit the British government

Israel’s Ground Invasion of Gaza City

A convoy of Israeli tanks is deployed at Israel's border with the Gaza Strip on September 16, 2025. Israel launched its ground assault on Gaza City before dawn on September 16. Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images Israel says a new phase of the war in Gaza

Ed Sheeran talks about his new album ‘Play’

Ed Sheeran performs during his Tiny Desk concert. YouTube Ed Sheeran sets his sights well beyond the U.S. pop charts with Play, his eighth studio album. Drawing on Indian and Persian influences, the new record released this month marks a shift from the darker, more subdued projects that reflected a dark chapter in his life.

The U.S. said it would burn $9.7 million of birth control. Its fate is still unclear

A view of a warehouse of Kuehne+Nagel in Geel, Belgium, which houses U.S.-funded contraceptives worth nearly $10 million. The U.S. State Department has stated that the stocks would be sent to France to be destroyed. Marta Fiorin/Reuters hide caption toggle caption Marta Fiorin/Reuters For months, $9.7 million worth of birth control meant for women in

A U.N. inquiry accuses Israel of genocide in Gaza, joining a rising chorus

Palestinians run for cover during a Sept. 5 Israeli airstrike on a high-rise building in Gaza City after the Israeli army issued a warning. Yousef Al Zanoun/AP hide caption toggle caption Yousef Al Zanoun/AP GENEVA — A team of independent experts commissioned by the United Nations' Human Rights Council has concluded that Israel is committing