🇲🇽🇺🇸 MORE CARTEL EXECUTIONS WITH AMERICAN WEAPONS Footage from Sinaloa shows a CJNG cartel member using a flamethrower against a rival from the "MF" Cartel.

🇲🇽🇺🇸 MORE CARTEL EXECUTIONS WITH AMERICAN WEAPONS Footage from Sinaloa shows a CJNG cartel member using a flamethrower against a rival from the "MF" Cartel.

 


The post from @DD_Geopolitics

 (dated February 22, 2026) shows extremely graphic footage from Sinaloa, Mexico, depicting a member of the CJNG (Jalisco New Generation Cartel) executing a rival from the "MF" faction (likely referring to a Mayo Zambada-aligned group or splinter in the ongoing Sinaloa Cartel infighting) by using a flamethrower.The weapon in the video is an FN SCAR 16S rifle (a Belgian-designed but U.S.-widely used assault rifle, especially by special forces) fitted with an American-made Exothermic Technologies Pulsefire UBF — an under-barrel flamethrower attachment designed as a civilian-legal (in many U.S. states) accessory.Key points from the post and surrounding context:The caption highlights "MORE CARTEL EXECUTIONS WITH AMERICAN WEAPONS" and notes both components as American-made (though the SCAR platform itself is FN Herstal origin, U.S. variants and accessories dominate the narrative here).

This video actually dates back to around mid-November 2025 (first surfaced online then), but it resurfaced and gained massive traction on February 22, 2026 — the same day credible reports emerged that Mexican military forces killed CJNG leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes ("El Mencho") during an operation in Tapalpa, Jalisco state.

El Mencho's death (confirmed by Mexico's Defense Ministry and multiple outlets like BBC, NPR, Reuters) has triggered immediate chaos: CJNG retaliatory arson (buses/buildings burned in places like Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara), panic in markets, armed groups moving, and escalated cartel violence — including re-sharing of brutal old videos like this one to signal ongoing strength or revenge.


The Pulsefire UBF is a commercial product (legal in most U.S. states), originally marketed for things like land clearing, but examples have appeared in cartel hands before, highlighting how U.S. civilian-market gear ends up trafficked south.The replies to the post range from horror at the brutality, sarcasm about "American manufacturing jobs," accusations of CIA involvement in cartels, to people hunting for uncensored versions. Overall, it's a stark illustration of how Mexico's cartel wars (especially CJNG vs. Sinaloa factions) have become even more vicious following major leadership losses.Warning: The video is among the most disturbing cartel executions circulated — it shows a bound man being deliberately set on fire at close range. It's NSFL (not safe for life/work).

 

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