🚨🇲🇽 A Black Hawk helicopter reportedly landed at Hidalgo Hospital in Lagos de Moreno, Jalisco carrying 3 to 4 National Guard members wounded by cartel gunfire.
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) February 23, 2026
Mexico is in a full-blown war zone right now.pic.twitter.com/86VDCrK4zc https://t.co/4l20FOEzn2
Mario Nawfal's post from February 23, 2026, reports a dramatic escalation in Mexico's ongoing cartel violence:Key details from the post:A Black Hawk helicopter (likely from the Mexican military or National Guard) made an emergency landing at Hidalgo Hospital in Lagos de Moreno, Jalisco.
It carried 3 to 4 wounded National Guard members injured by cartel gunfire.
The video attached shows nighttime footage of the helicopter arriving, medical teams rushing in, and urgent activity around the landing zone.
Mario describes the situation as Mexico being in a "full-blown war zone" right now.Context and background:
This incident appears directly linked to the killing of Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes, the long-time leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), one of Mexico's most powerful and violent drug organizations. Mexican military forces killed him during a raid in Jalisco on February 22, 2026 (or very recently before the post). He died from wounds sustained in the operation while being airlifted.In retaliation and amid the power vacuum/chaos:CJNG members launched widespread attacks, including violence at Guadalajara International Airport, explosive assaults on National Guard bases (e.g., in San Juan de los Lagos), road blockades, and direct firefights.
Heavy Mexican military deployments occurred, including armored convoys and Black Hawk helicopters supporting operations in places like Puerto Vallarta.
The use of military helicopters for medical evacuations of injured troops highlights how intense and militarized the conflict has become — cartels are engaging security forces with high-powered weapons, sometimes even anti-aircraft capable arms (CJNG has a history of shooting down helicopters, like in 2015).
This marks a major turning point: El Mencho had a $15 million U.S. bounty, and his death is being seen as a significant blow to CJNG, but it's triggering immediate violent backlash across Jalisco and nearby areas. The situation remains highly volatile, with reports of ongoing clashes and the Mexican government deploying overwhelming force to regain control.If you'd like more details on any aspect (like the video content, related updates, or background on CJNG/El Mencho), let me know!
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