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Wikipedia

Mexican Army

The Mexican Army (Spanish: Ejército Mexicano) is the combined land and air branch and is the largest part of the Mexican Armed Forces; it is also known as the National Defense Army.

Mexican Army
Ejército Mexicano
Mexican Army emblem
Founded1821
CountryMexico
TypeArmy and Air Force
RoleNational defense
Size198,000
Part ofSecretariat of National Defense
Mexican Armed Forces
Motto(s)Siempre Leales (Always Loyal)
ColorsBlue
Mascot(s)Golden eagle
Anniversaries19 February, Day of the Army.[1]
13 September, Día de los Niños Héroes.[2]
EquipmentSee: Equipment
EngagementsWar of Independence
Annexation of Central America
Spanish attempts to reconquer Mexico
Texas Revolution
Pastry War
Capture of Monterey
Mexican–American War
Caste War of Yucatán
Reform War
French Intervention
Mexican Revolution
Border War
Cristero War
World War II
Dirty War
Zapatista Uprising
1999 East Timorese crisis
Mexican Drug War
Commanders
Commander of the ArmyEufemio Alberto Ibarra Flores
Insignia
Guidon

The Army is under the authority of the Secretariat of National Defense or SEDENA and is headed by the Secretary of National Defence.

It was the first army to adopt (1908) and use (1910) a self-loading rifle, the Mondragón rifle. The Mexican Army has an active duty force of 198,000 with 76,000 men and women of military service age.

History

Antecedents

Pre-Columbian era: native warriors

 
Aztec warriors as shown in the 16th century Florentine Codex. Note that each warrior is brandishing a Maquahuitl.
 
This page from the Codex Mendoza shows the gradual improvements to equipment and tlahuiztli as a warrior progresses through the ranks from commoner to porter to warrior to captor, and later as a noble progressing in the warrior societies from the noble warrior to "Eagle warrior" to "Jaguar Warrior" to "Otomitl" to "Shorn One" and finally as "Tlacateccatl".
 
Tepoztōpīlli from the Armeria Real collection in Madrid

In the prehispanic era, there were many indigenous tribes and highly developed city-states in what is now known as central Mexico. The most advanced and powerful kingdoms were those of Tenochtitlan, Texcoco and Tlacopan, which comprised populations of the same ethnic origin and were politically linked by an alliance known as the Triple Alliance; colloquially these three states are known as the Aztec. They had a center for higher education called the Calmecac in Nahuatl, this was where the children of the Aztec priesthood and nobility receive rigorous religious and military training and conveyed the highest knowledge such as: doctrines, divine songs, the science of interpreting codices, calendar skills, memorization of texts, etc. In Aztec society, it was compulsory for all young males, nobles as well as commoners, to join part of the armed forces at the age of 15. Recruited by regional and clan groups (calpulli) the conscripts were organized in units of about 8,000 men (Xiquipilli). These were broken down into 400 strong sub-units. Aztec nobility (some of whom were the children of commoners who had distinguished themselves in battle) led their own serfs on campaign.[3]

Itzcoatl "Obsidian Serpent" (1381–1440), fourth king of Tenochtitlán, organized the army that defeated the Tepanec of Atzcapotzalco, freeing his people from their dominion. His reign began with the rise of what would become the largest empire in Mesoamerica. Then Moctezuma Ilhuicamina "The arrow to the sky" (1440–1469) came to extend the domain and the influence of the monarchy of Tenochtitlán. He began to organize trade to the outside regions of the Valley of Mexico. This was the Mexica ruler who organized the alliance with the lordships of Texcoco and Tlacopan to form the Triple Alliance.

The Aztec established the Flower Wars as a form of worship; these, unlike the wars of conquest, were aimed at obtaining prisoners for sacrifice to the sun. Combat orders were given by kings (or Lords) using drums or blowing into a sea snail shell that gave off a sound like a horn. Giving out signals using coats of arms was very common. For combat outside of cities, they would organize several groups, only one of which would be involved in action, while the others remained on the alert. When attacking enemy cities, they usually divided their forces into three equal-sized wings, which simultaneously assaulted different parts of the defences – this enabled the leaders to determine which division of warriors had distinguished themselves the most in combat.[4]

Military in the Spanish Colonial Era

During the 18th century the Spanish colonial forces in the greater Mexico region consisted of regular "Peninsular" regiments sent from Spain itself, augmented by locally recruited provincial and urban militia units of infantry, cavalry and artillery. A few regular infantry and dragoon regiments (e.g. the Regimiento de Mexico) were recruited within Mexico and permanently stationed there.[5] Mounted units of soldados de cuera (so called from the leather protective clothing that they wore)[6] patrolled frontier and desert regions.[7]

Independence

In the early morning of 16 September 1810, the Army of Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla initiated the independence movement. Hidalgo was followed by his loyal companions, among them Mariano Abasolo, and a small army equipped with swords, spears, slingshots and sticks. Captain General Ignacio Allende was the military brains of the insurgent army in the first phase of the War of Independence and secured several victories over the Spanish Royal Army. Their troops were about 5,000 strong and were later joined by squadrons of the Queen's Regiment where its members in turn contributed infantry battalions and cavalry squadrons to the insurrection cause.

 
Guanajuato. At center: the Alhóndiga de Granaditas

The Spaniards saw that it was important to defend the Alhóndiga de Granaditas public granary in Guanajuato, which maintained the flow of water, weapons, food and ammunition to the Spanish Royal Army. The insurgents entered Guanajuato and proceeded to lay siege to the Alhóndiga. The insurgents suffered heavy casualties until Juan Jose de los Reyes, the Pípila, fitted a slab of rock on his back to protect himself from enemy fire and crawled to the large wooden door of the Alhóndiga with a torch in hand to set it on fire. With this stunt, the insurgents managed to bring down the door and enter the building and overrun it. Hidalgo headed to Valladolid (now Morelia), which was captured with little opposition. While the Insurgent Army was, by then, over 60,000 strong, it was mostly formed of poorly armed men with arrows, sticks and tillage tools – it had a few guns, which had been taken from Spanish stocks.

In Aculco, the Royal Spanish forces under the command of Felix Maria Calleja, Count of Calderón, and Don Manuel de Flon (and comprising 200 infantrymen, 500 cavalry and 12 cannons) defeated the insurgents, who lost many men as well as the artillery they had obtained at Battle of Monte de las Cruces. On 29 November 1810, Hidalgo entered Guadalajara, the capital of Nueva Galicia, where he organized his government and the Insurgent Army; he also issued a decree abolishing slavery.

At Calderon Bridge (Puente de Calderón) near the city of Guadalajara Jalisco, insurgents held a hard-fought battle with the royalists. During the fierce fighting, one of the insurgents' ammunition wagons exploded, which led to their defeat. The insurgents lost all their artillery, much of their equipment and the lives of many men.

 
Constitutional decree for the freedom of the Mexican America
 
Army of the Three Guarantees enters Mexico city on 27 September 1821.

At the Wells of Baján (Norias de Baján) near Monclova, Coahuila, a former royalist named Ignacio Elizondo, who had joined the insurgent cause, betrayed them and seized Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, Ignacio Allende, Juan Aldama, José Mariano Jiménez and the rest of the entourage. They were brought to the city of Chihuahua where they were tried by a military court and executed by firing squad on 30 July 1811. Hidalgo's death resulted in a political vacuum for the insurgents until 1812. Meanwhile, the royalist military commander, General Félix María Calleja, continued to pursue rebel troops. The fighting evolved into guerrilla warfare.

The next major rebel leader was the priest José María Morelos y Pavón, who had formerly led the insurgent movement alongside Hidalgo. Morelos fortified the port of Acapulco and took the city of Chilpancingo. Along the way, Morelos, was joined by Leonardo Bravo, his son Nicholas and his brothers Max, Victor and Miguel Bravo.

Morelos conducted several campaigns in the south, managing to conquer much of the region as he gave orders to the insurgents to promote the writing of the first constitution for the new Mexican nation: the Constitution of Apatzingan, which was drafted in 1814. In 1815, Morelos was apprehended and executed by firing squad. His death concluded the second phase of the Mexican War for Independence. From 1815 to 1820, the independence movement became sluggish; it was briefly reinvigorated by Francisco Javier Mina and Pedro Moreno, who were both quickly apprehended and executed.

It was not until late 1820, when Agustín de Iturbide, one of the most bloodthirsty enemies of the insurgents, established relations with Vicente Guerrero and Guadalupe Victoria, two of the rebel leaders. Guerrero and Victoria supported Iturbide's plan for Mexican independence, El Plan de Iguala and Iturbide was appointed commander of the Ejército Trigarante, or The Army of the Three Guarantees. With this new alliance, they were able to enter Mexico City on 27 September 1821, which concluded the Mexican War for Independence.

Pastry War

 
French blockade in 1838

The Pastry War was the first French intervention in Mexico. Following the widespread civil disorder that plagued the early years of the Mexican republic, fighting in the streets destroyed a great deal of personal property. Foreigners whose property was damaged or destroyed by rioters or bandits were usually unable to obtain compensation from the government, and began to appeal to their own governments for help.

In 1838, a French pastry cook, Monsieur Remontel, claimed that his shop in the Tacubaya district of Mexico City had been ruined in 1828 by looting Mexican officers. He appealed to France's King Louis-Philippe (1773–1850). Coming to its citizen's aid, France demanded 600,000 pesos in damages. This amount was extremely high when compared to an average workman's daily pay, which was about one peso. In addition to this amount, Mexico had defaulted on millions of dollars worth of loans from France. Diplomat Baron Deffaudis gave Mexico an ultimatum to pay, or the French would demand satisfaction. When the payment was not forthcoming from president Anastasio Bustamante (1780–1853), the king sent a fleet under Rear Admiral Charles Baudin to declare a blockade of all Mexican ports from Yucatán to the Rio Grande, to bombard the Mexican fortress of San Juan de Ulúa, and to seize the port of Veracruz. Virtually the entire Mexican Navy was captured at Veracruz by December 1838. Mexico declared war on France.

With trade cut off, the Mexicans began smuggling imports into Corpus Christi, Texas, and then into Mexico. Fearing that France would blockade Texan ports as well, a battalion of men of the Republic of Texas force began patrolling Corpus Christi Bay to stop Mexican smugglers. One smuggling party abandoned their cargo of about a hundred barrels of flour on the beach at the mouth of the bay, thus giving Flour Bluff its name. The United States, ever watchful of its relations with Mexico, sent the schooner Woodbury to help the French in their blockade. Talks between the French Kingdom and the Texan nation occurred and France agreed not to offend the soil or waters of the Republic of Texas. With the diplomatic intervention of the United Kingdom, eventually President Bustamante promised to pay the 600,000 pesos and the French forces withdrew on 9 March 1839.

U.S. invasion

 
The U.S. occupation of Mexico City
 
General and President Antonio López de Santa Anna in 1852

U.S. territorial expansion under Manifest Destiny in the 19th century had reached the banks of the Rio Grande, which prompted Mexican president José Joaquín de Herrera to form an army of 6,000 men to defend the Mexican northern frontier from the expansion of the neighboring country. In 1845, Texas, a former Mexican territory that had broken away from Mexico by rebellion, was annexed into the United States. In response to this, the minister of Mexico in the U.S., Juan N. Almonte called for his Letters of Recognition and returned to Mexico; hostilities promptly ensued. On 25 April 1846, a Mexican force under colonel Anastasio Torrejon surprised and defeated a U.S. squadron at the Rancho de Carricitos in Matamoros in an event that would latter be known as the Thornton Skirmish; this was the pretext that U.S. president James K. Polk used to persuade the U.S. congress into declaring a state of war against Mexico on 13 May 1846. U.S. Army captain John C. Frémont, with about sixty well-armed men, had entered the California territory in December 1845 before the war had been official and was marching slowly to Oregon when he received word that war between Mexico and the U.S. was imminent; thus began a chapter of the war known as the Bear Flag Revolt.

On 20 September 1846, the U.S. launched an attack on Monterrey, which fell after 5 days. After this U.S. victory, hostilities were suspended for 7 weeks, allowing Mexican troops to leave the city with their flags displayed in full honors as U.S. soldiers regrouped and regained their losses. In August 1846, Commodore David Conner and his squadron of ships were in Veracruzian waters; he tried, unsuccessfully, to seize the Fort of Alvarado, which was defended by the Mexican Navy. The Americans were forced to relocate to Antón Lizardo. In confronting resistance and fortifications at the port of Veracruz, the U.S. Army and Marines implemented an intense bombardment of the city from 22–26 March 1847, causing about five hundred civilian deaths and significant damage to homes, buildings, and merchandise. General Winfield Scott and Commodore Matthew C. Perry capitalized on this civilian suffering: by refusing to allow the consulates of Spain and France to assist in civilian evacuation, they pressed Mexican Gen. Juan Morales to negotiate surrender.

U.S. commodore Matthew C. Perry, who had already captured the town of Frontera, in Tabasco, tried to seize San Juan Bautista (modern Villahermosa), but he was repelled three times by a Mexican garrison of just under three hundred men. U.S. troops were also sent to the California territories with the intention of seizing it. After squads of U.S. troops occupied the City of Los Angeles, Mexican authorities were forced to move to Sonora; but, by the end of September 1846, commander José María Flores was able to gather 500 Mexicans and managed to defeat the U.S. garrison at Los Angeles and then sent detachments to Santa Barbara and San Diego.

After putting up a fierce defense against the U.S. invasion, the Mexican positions along the state of Chihuahua began to fall. These forces had been organized by general José Antonio de Heredia and governor Ángel Trías Álvarez. The cavalry of the latter made several desperate charges against the U.S. that nearly achieved victory, but his inexperience in fighting was evident and, in the end, all the positions gained were lost.

French Intervention

 
Monument to General Ignacio Zaragoza, hero of the Battle of Puebla, Cinco de Mayo 1862.
 
Soldiers of the Mexican Republican Army c1862.

The French intervention was an invasion by an expeditionary force sent by the Second French Empire, supported in the beginning by the United Kingdom and the Kingdom of Spain. It followed President Benito Juárez's suspension of interest payments to foreign countries on 17 July 1861, which angered Mexico's major creditors: Spain, France and Britain.

Napoleon III of France was the instigator: His foreign policy was based on a commitment to free trade. For him, a friendly government in Mexico provided an opportunity to expand free trade by ensuring European access to important markets, and preventing monopoly by the United States. Napoleon also needed the silver that could be mined in Mexico to finance his empire. Napoleon built a coalition with Spain and Britain at a time the U.S. was engaged in a full-scale civil war. The U.S. protested, but could not intervene directly until its civil war was over in 1865.[8]

 
The Battle of Puebla, Cinco de Mayo 1862, an important victory for Mexican forces against the French.

The three powers signed the Treaty of London on 31 October, to unite their efforts to receive payments from Mexico. On 8 December, the Spanish fleet and troops from Spanish-controlled Cuba arrived at Mexico's main Gulf port, Veracruz. When the British and Spanish discovered that the French planned to invade Mexico, they withdrew.

The subsequent French invasion resulted in the Second Mexican Empire, which was supported by the Roman Catholic clergy, many conservative elements of the upper class, and some indigenous communities. The presidential terms of Benito Juárez (1858–71) were interrupted by the rule of the Habsburg monarchy in Mexico (1864–67). Conservatives, and many in the Mexican nobility, tried to revive the monarchical form of government (see: First Mexican Empire) when they helped to bring to Mexico an archduke from the Royal House of Austria, Maximilian Ferdinand, or Maximilian I of Mexico (who married Charlotte of Belgium, also known as Carlota of Mexico), with the military support of France. France had various interests in this Mexican affair, such as seeking reconciliation with Austria, which had been defeated during the Franco-Austrian War, counterbalancing the growing U.S. power by developing a powerful Catholic neighbouring empire, and exploiting the rich mines in the north-west of the country.

Mexican Republican forces

 
General Ramón Corona led extended opposition in Sinaloa against the French intervention.

In 1861, the Mexican Republican Army consisted of ten regular line battalions each of eight companies, and six line cavalry regiments, each of two squadrons. With six batteries of field artillery plus engineers, train and garrison units, the regular army numbered about 12,000 men. Auxiliary forces, comprising state militias and National Guards, provided a further 25 infantry battalions and 25 cavalry squadrons plus some garrison and artillery units. The National Guard of the Federal District of Mexico City amounted to six infantry battalions plus one each of cavalry and artillery. The newly raised corps of Rurales, created on 5 May 1861 as a mounted gendarmerie, numbered 2,200 and served as dispersed units of light cavalry against the French.[9]

While opposed by substantial forces of French regular troops plus Mexican Imperial forces and contingents of foreign volunteers,[10] the Republican Army remained in being as an effective force after the fall of Mexico City in 1863. By 1865 Liberal opposition was being led by a core of 50,000 regular Mexican troops and state National Guards, augmented by approximately 10,000 guerrillas.[11]

Díaz era

 
General and President Porfirio Díaz, another hero of the Battle of Puebla and president of Mexico in the late nineteenth century until the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution

Following the French withdrawal and the overthrow of the Imperial regime of Maximilian, the Mexican Republic was re-established in 1867. In 1876, Porfirio Diaz, a leading general of the anti-Maximilianist forces, became president. He was to retain power until 1910, with only one short break. During the early part of this period of extended rule, Diaz relied essentially on military power to remain in office. However he was able to develop other support bases and the army became a reliable non-political instrument for maintaining internal order.[12]

Diaz undertook a series of reforms intended to modernize the Mexican Army,[13] while at the same time terminating the historic pattern of local commanders attempting to seize power using irregulars or provincial forces.[14] The increasingly elderly[15] generals of the Federal Army were frequently transferred and kept loyal through opportunities for graft. By the early 1900s the large officer corps was benefiting from professional training along Prussian Army lines and improved career opportunities for cadets of middle-class origin.[12] Finally, an efficient mounted police force of rurales took over responsibility for public order,[16] and the army itself was reduced in size by about a third.[17]

A continuing weakness in the Mexican Army throughout the Diaz period was the low morale and motivation of the rank-and-file. They mostly consisted of Indian and mestizo conscripts, forced into service under the random leva system. Some were enlisted as a means of punishment or because of social discrimination, and a number of future revolutionary leaders received their initial military experience in the ranks of the Federal Army.[12]

By 1910, the army numbered about 25,000 men, largely conscripts of Indian origin officered by 4,000 white middle-class officers. While generally well equipped, the Federal Army under Diaz was too small in numbers to offer effective opposition to the revolutionary forces led by Francisco Madero.[18] During the long period of Porfirian stability, increased reliance had been placed on the new railway network to quickly move small numbers of troops to suppress regional unrest. When faced with widespread revolution during 1910-11 the railway lines proved too vulnerable, regular army strength too limited and state militias too disorganised to control the situation.[19]

Mexican Revolution 1910–1920

 
General Victoriano Huerta, who overthrew civilian President Francisco I. Madero in 1913
 
Revolutionary General Alvaro Obregón, later president of Mexico

The ouster of Porfirio Díaz saw Francisco I. Madero: a member of a rich landowning family, elected as President of Mexico. Madero kept the Federal Army intact, despite the fact that it had been outmaneuvered by the revolutionary forces that brought him to power. General Victoriano Huerta overthrew Madero in a bloody February 1913 coup. Forces opposed to the Huerta regime united against him, particularly the Constitutionalists in the north. These were led by a civilian, Venustiano Carranza as "First Chief," commanding forces led by a number of generals, but most prominently Alvaro Obregón and Pancho Villa. In the Morelos region, an intense guerrilla warfare was waged by forces led by Emiliano Zapata. The Federal Army supporting Huerta was defeated at the Battle of Zacatecas and finally disbanded in 1914[20] and a new Government army was created from Obregón's Constitutionalist forces. Zapata was assassinated in 1919; Villa was bought off and took up civilian life in northern Mexico, before being assassinated in 1923. During the post-military phase following 1920, a number of Constitutionalist leaders became presidents of Mexico: Alvaro Obregón (1920–1924), Plutarco Elías Calles (1924–28), Lázaro Cárdenas (1934–1940), and Manuel Avila Camacho (1940–1946). When Lázaro Cárdenas reorganized the political party founded by Plutarco Elías Calles, he created sectoral representation of groups in Mexico, one of which was the Mexican Army. In the subsequent reorganization of the party, which took place in 1946, the Institutional Revolutionary Party no longer had a separate sector for the army. No military man has been president of Mexico after 1946.

Contemporary era

 
General Lázaro Cárdenas, who as president of Mexico 1934–1940 brought the Mexican military under civilian control

Post-revolutionary period

 
Mexican soldiers on parade in Mexico's independence day parade in 2009, Mexico DF, carrying Mexican FX-05 Xiuhcoatl (Fire Serpent) assault rifles.

The ending of the Diaz regime saw a resurgence of numerous local forces led by revolutionary generals. In 1920, more than 80,000 Mexicans were under arms,[21] with only a minority forming part of regular forces obedient to a central authority. During the 1920s, the new government demobilised the revolutionary bands, reopened the Colegio Militar (Military Academy), established the Escuela Superior de Guerra (Staff College), and raised the salaries and improved the conditions of service of the rank and file of the regular army. In spite of an abortive generals' revolt in 1927, the result was a professional army obedient to the central government.[22]

During this period the army was reduced in numbers through the disbandment of twenty mounted cavalry regiments, ten infantry battalions and the majority of the specialist railroad units previously required. In 1937 a process of accelerated modernisation began with the creation of companies of light tanks, mechanised infantry and motorised anti-aircraft batteries.[23]

During the 1930s, the political role of the officer corps was reduced by the governing Revolutionary Party and a workers' militia was established, outnumbering the regular army by two to one. By the end of World War II, the Mexican Army had become a strictly professional force focused on national defense rather than political involvement.[24]

Mexican Drug War

Although violence between drug cartels has been occurring long before the war began, the government held a generally passive stance regarding cartel violence during the 1990s and the early years of the 21st century. That changed on 11 December 2006, when newly elected President Felipe Calderón sent 6,500 federal troops to the state of Michoacán to end drug violence there. This action is regarded as the first major retaliation made against the cartel violence, and is generally viewed as the starting point of the war between the government and the drug cartels.[25] As time progressed, Calderón continued to escalate his anti-drug campaign, in which there are now about 45,000 troops involved along with state and federal police forces.

In recent times, the Mexican military has largely participated in efforts against drug trafficking. The Operaciones contra el narcotrafico (Operations against drug trafficking), for example, describes its purpose in regards to "the performance of the Mexican Army and Air Force in the permanent campaign against the drug trafficking is sustained properly in the duties that the Executive of the Nation grants to the armed forces", for according to Article 89, Section VI of the Constitution of the Mexican United States, it is the duty of the President of the Republic of the United Mexican States, as Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, to ensure that the Mexican Armed Forces perform its mandate of national security within and outside the state borders.

Structure

 
Mexican Air Force cadets march during the Mexican Independence day military parade in Mexico City on 27 July 2012.

The Army is under the authority of the National Defense Secretariat or SEDENA and is headed by the Secretary of National Defence - simultaneously a member of the central government and (the sole) four-star general. His counterpart is the Secretary of the Navy, who is a member of the central government and the sole four-star admiral.

The National Defence Secretariat has three components: a national headquarters, territorial commands, and independent units. The Secretary of National Defence delegates overall command of the Army thru the office of Commander of the Army, a divisional general-ranked officer, who leads the service via a centralized command system and many general officers and is appointed and relieved by the Secretary. The Army uses a modified continental staff system in its headquarters. The Mexican Air Force is a separate service under the SEDENA. Recruitment of personnel happens from ages 18 through 21 if secondary education was finished, 22 if High school was completed. Recruitment after age 22 is impossible in the regular army; only auxiliary posts are available. As of 2009, starting salary for Mexican army recruits was $6,000 Mexican pesos (US$500) a month with a lifetime $10,000 peso (approximately US$833) monthly pension for widows of soldiers killed in action.[26]

The principal units of the Mexican army are ten infantry brigades and a number of independent regiments and infantry battalions. The main maneuver elements of the army are organized in three corps, each consisting of three to four infantry brigades (plus other units), all based in and around Mexico City and its metropolitan area. Distinct from the brigade formations, independent regiments and battalions are assigned to zonal garrisons (52 in total) in each of the country's 12 military regions. Infantry battalions, composed of approximately 300–350 troops, generally are deployed in each zone, and certain zones are assigned an additional motorized cavalry regiment or an artillery regiment.[27]

Regional command

 
Cadets of the Heroic Military Academy (Mexico) with a golden eagle (September 2004).
 
Every afternoon, a Mexican Army platoon lowers the monumental flag in Constitution Square or Zócalo

The territorial organization of the Mexican Army includes twelve Military Regions (Regiónes militares (RM)). Each RM is commanded by a senior officer in the rank of Divisional General of the General Staff (General de División Diplomado de Estado Mayor), a three-star general. Below the military regions are forty-eight Military Zones (Zónas militares (ZM)).[28] Each ZM is commanded by a senior officer in the rank of Brigade General of the General Staff (General de Brigada Diplomado de Estado Mayor), a two-star general. Operational needs determine how many zones are in each region, with corresponding increases and decreases in troop strength. Each commander of the Military Region is appointed and relieved by the Commander of the Army.

Usually on the secretary of defence's recommendation, the senior zone commander is also the commander of the military region containing the military zone. A military zone commander has jurisdiction over every unit operating in his territory, including the Rurales (Rural Defense Force) that occasionally have been a Federal political counterweight to the power of state governors. Zone commanders provide the national defence secretary with socio-political conditions intelligence about rural areas. Moreover, they traditionally have acted in co-ordination with the Secretariat of National Defense (SEDENA) on planning and resources deployment.

Territorial organization of the Mexican Army
Military zone HQ Notes
First Military Region (I Región militar)

HQ in Mexico City

Covers the capital Mexico City and the states of Estado de México, Hidalgo and Morelos.

1st Military Zone (1/a. Z.M.) Tacubaya, Mexico City
18th Military Zone (18/a. Z.M.) Pachuca, Hidalgo
22nd Military Zone (22/a. Z.M.) Santa María Rayón, Estado de México
24th Military Zone (24/a. Z.M.) Cuernavaca, Morelos
37th Military Zone (37/a. Z.M.) Santa Lucía, Estado de México
Second Military Region (II Región militar)

HQ in Mexicali, Baja California

Covers the states of Baja California, Baja California Sur and Sonora.

2nd Military Zone (2/a. Z.M.) Tijuana, Baja California
3rd Military Zone (3/a. Z.M.) La Paz, Baja California Sur
4th Military Zone (4/a. Z.M.) Hermosillo, Sonora
40th Military Zone (40/a. Z.M.) Guerrero Negro, Baja California Sur
45th Military Zone (45/a. Z.M.) Nogales, Sonora
Third Military Region (III Región militar)

HQ in Mazatlán, Sinaloa

Covers the states of Sinaloa and Durango.

9th Military Zone (9/a. Z.M.) Culiacán, Sinaloa
10th Military Zone (10/a. Z.M.) Durango, Durango
Fourth Military Region (IV Región militar)

HQ in Monterrey, Nuevo León

Covers the states of Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí and Tamaulipas.

7th Military Zone (7/a. Z.M.) Apodaca, Nuevo León
8th Military Zone (8/a. Z.M.) Reynosa, Tamaulipas
12th Military Zone (12/a. Z.M.) San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí
48th Military Zone (48/a. Z.M.) Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas
Fifth Military Region (V Región militar)

HQ in Guadalajara, Jalisco

Covers the states of Aguascalientes, Colima, Jalisco, Nayarit and Zacatecas.

11th Military Zone (11/a. Z.M.) Guadalupe, Zacatecas
13th Military Zone (13/a. Z.M.) Tepic, Nayarit
14th Military Zone (14/a. Z.M.) Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes
15th Military Zone (15/a. Z.M.) Zapopan, Jalisco
20th Military Zone (20/a. Z.M.) Colima, Colima
41st Military Zone (41/a. Z.M.) Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco
Sixth Military Region (VI Región militar)

HQ in Veracruz, Veracruz

Covers the states of Puebla, Tlaxcala and Veracruz.

19th Military Zone (19/a. Z.M.) Tuxpan, Veracruz
23rd Military Zone (23/a. Z.M.) Panotla, Tlaxcala
25th Military Zone (25/a. Z.M.) Puebla, Puebla
26th Military Zone (26/a. Z.M.) Lencero, Veracruz
29th Military Zone (29/a. Z.M.) Minatitlán, Veracruz
Seventh Military Region (VII Región militar)

HQ in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas

Covers the states of Chiapas and Tabasco.

30th Military Zone (30/a. Z.M.) Villahermosa, Tabasco
31st Military Zone (31/a. Z.M.) Rancho Nuevo, Chiapas
36th Military Zone (36/a. Z.M.) Tapachula, Chiapas
38th Military Zone (38/a. Z.M.) Tenosique, Tabasco
39th Military Zone (39/a. Z.M.) Ocosingo, Chiapas
Eighth Military Region (VIII Región militar)

HQ in Ixcotel, Oaxaca

Covers the state of Oaxaca.

28th Military Zone (28/a. Z.M.) Ixcotel, Oaxaca
44th Military Zone (44/a. Z.M.) Miahuatlán, Oaxaca
46th Military Zone (46/a. Z.M.) Ixtepec, Oaxaca
Ninth Military Region (IX Región militar)

HQ in Chilpancingo, Guerrero

Covers the state of Guerrero.

27th Military Zone (27/a. Z.M.) Pie de la Cuesta, Guerrero
35th Military Zone (35/a. Z.M.) Chilpancingo, Guerrero
Tenth Military Region (X Región militar)

HQ in Mérida, Yucatán

Covers the states of Campeche, Quintana Roo and Yucatán.

32nd Military Zone (32/a. Z.M.) Valladolid, Yucatán
33rd Military Zone (33/a. Z.M.) Campeche, Campeche
34th Military Zone (34/a. Z.M.) Chetumal, Quintana Roo
Eleventh Military Region (XI Región militar)

HQ in Torreón, Coahuila

Covers the states of Chihuahua and Coahuila.

5th Military Zone (5/a. Z.M.) Chihuahua, Chihuahua
6th Military Zone (6/a. Z.M.) Saltillo, Coahuila
42nd Military Zone (42/a. Z.M.) Hidalgo del Parral, Chihuahua
47th Military Zone (47/a. Z.M.) Piedras Negras, Coahuila
Twelfth Military Region (XII Región militar)

HQ in Irapuato, Guanajuato

Covers the states of Guanajuato, Michoacán and Querétaro.

16th Military Zone (16/a. Z.M.) Sarabia, Guanajuato
17th Military Zone (17/a. Z.M.) Querétaro, Querétaro
21st Military Zone (21/a. Z.M.) Morelia, Michoacán
43rd Military Zone (43/a. Z.M.) Apatzingán, Michoacán

The commanding officer of a military zone has as at the least an independent infantry battalion under his jurisdiction, but also takes operational control of units deployed to his MZ area of responsibility. Force strength varies greatly from a single infantry battalion in the 3rd Military Zone covering the relatively peaceful area of Baja California Sur[29] to over 10 infantry battalions, separate infantry companies and motorized cavalry regiments plus additional conventional and SF units on rotation in the 9th Military Zone covering the state of Sinaloa,[30] where government troops are fighting the eponymous drug cartel. The Mexican Air Force, which is an independent military service under the SEDENA, has its own territorial organization, separate from that of the Mexican Army. It has four air force regions: Northwest (Región Aérea del Noroeste, HQ in Hermosillo, Sonora), Northeast (Región Aérea del Noreste, HQ in Chihuahua, Chihuahua) Central (Región Aérea del Centro, HQ at Santa Lucía AFB, Estado de México) and the Southeast Air Force Region (Región Aérea del Sureste, HQ at Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas). Each new commanding officer of an air force region enters the appointment as a Wing General Pilot-Aviator of the Air Force Staff (General de Ala Piloto Aviador Diplomado de Estado Mayor Aéreo) - a two-star general and midway through his term he is promoted to a Division General Pilot-Aviator of the Air Force Staff (General de División Piloto Aviador Diplomado de Estado Mayor Aéreo) - a three-star general.[31] A similar territorial organization is also implemented in the Mexican Navy with Naval Regions and Naval Zones as counterparts to the army territorial organization.[32]

Tactical units

 
Mexican Paratroopers (March 2009).

Separate from the military regions and zones are an increasing number of brigades and some independent regiments and infantry battalions. These brigades are grouped into four corps:

  • 1st Army Corps (1er Cuerpo de Ejército (ICE)) - based in and around Mexico City and its metropolitan area. The corps consists of the 1st Armored Brigade, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Separate Infantry Brigades and the army's sole 1st Combat Engineer Brigade.[33] Additionally 3 armored brigades (2nd, 3rd and 4th) and 3 light infantry brigades (4th, 5th and 6th) separate from the 1st Army Corps, but based in the same area close to the capital complete the Mexican Army's maneuver formations.
  • Special Forces Corps (Cuerpo de Fuerzas Especiales) - HQ, training center and the bulk of special forces battalions are based in Temamatla in the State of Mexico. The corps has 3 SF brigades headquartered in Puebla, Puebla (1st), Tijuana, Baja California (2nd) and Ixtepec, Oaxaca (3rd) and the SF battalions are re-assigned between them as per operational requirements.
  • Military Police Corps (Cuerpo de Policía Militar) - the corps has previously been used to augment the internal security initiatives of the government in the combat against the drug cartels and military police brigades as well as individual personnel have been transferred in the past to the newly formed (and consequently defunct Federal Police, supplemented by its Gendarmerie Division, also defunct). New MP brigades were later formed to make up for the ones that were transferred. The administration of President Enrique Peña Nieto set the ambitious plan for the expansion of the Military Police from 3 to 12 MP brigades - one for each military region.[34] By the end of his term there were ten active military police brigades:
    • 1st Military Police Brigade (1/a. Brigada de Policía Militar) - Campo Militar 1-A, Mexico City
    • 2nd Military Police Brigade (2/a. Brigada de Policía Militar) - Air Base Nr. 1 - Santa Lucía, Tecámac, State of México[35]
    • 3/a. Brigada de Policía Militar - El Sauz, Sinaloa[36]
    • 4/a. Brigada de Policía Militar - General Escobedo, Nuevo León[37]
    • 5/a. Brigada de Policía Militar - San Miguel de los Jagüeyes, State of México[38]
    • 6/a. Brigada de Policía Militar - Puebla, Puebla[39]
    • 7/a. Brigada de Policía Militar - Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas[40]
    • 10/a. Brigada de Policía Militar - Isla Mujeres Quintana Roo[41]
    • 11/a. Brigada de Policía Militar - San Pedro de las Colonias Coahuila[42]
    • 12/a. Brigada de Policía Militar - Irapuato, Guanajuato[43][44]

Each MP brigade has three line military police battalions (sing.: Batallón de Policía Militar) and one special operations military police battalion (Batallón de Operaciones Especiales de Policía Militar, equipped with Plasan Sand Cat tactical armored cars) plus support units. Special Operations MP Bns carry the number of their parent brigade, line MP Bns are numbered in sequence, starting from 1st, 2nd and 3rd in the 1st MP Brigade, 4th, 5th and 6th in the 2nd MP Bde etc. up to 34th, 35th and 36th in the 12th Military Police Brigade, with battalion numbers 22nd - 27th retained for the non-active 8th and 9th MP Brigades. The MPC's involvement in the internal security policies is also present with the Federal Police's successor agency - the National Guard. In 2020 the NG had a strength of ca. 80 000 personnel.[45] and in 2021 this number has increased to 102 000 with a goal set at 150 000.[46] This rapid increase capitalizes heavily on the resources of the military. According to the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Transparencia 31 431 former Army and 6 337 former Navy military police personnel joined the National Guard. Its 8 training centers (Centros de Adiestramiento) are located in and rely on the resources of the army military police installations: two (one main and one NCO) training centers are located at the Campo Militar 37-C in San Miguel de los Jagüeyes, Municipality of Huehuetoca, State of México at the base of the 5th Military Police Brigade. The other six training centers are located at the military police bases in Sauz, Sinaloa (3rd MP Bde), San Pedro de las Colonias, Coahuila (11th MP Bde), Apodaca, Nuevo León (4th MP Bde), Puebla (6th MP Bde), Irapuato (12th MP Bde) and Isla Mujeres (10th MP Bde). The main reasoning behind the formation of the National Guard was to reduce the involvement of the military in the Mexican drug war, but the implementation has negated that to a great extend with the NG relying heavily on the military for staffing, training,[47] basing and operational control. On the latter point the NG's units are called Battalions Type B (sing.: Batallón Tipo B)[48] to distinguish them from the 'regular' infantry and MP battalions of the Mexican Army, all 85 Battalions Type B are based in army bases and are assigned to the 12 military regions of the Army.[49]

  • Presidential Guard Corps (Cuerpo de Guardias Presidenciales) - the special department of the President's Office, the Estado Mayor Presidencial used to command the Army, Air Force and Navy assets tasked with the security, land and air transport and the logistical requirements of the Office. As one of his first political initiatives upon entering the Presidency Andrés Manuel López Obrador has put to vote in the Mexican Senate the disbanding of the EMP. The vote passed and the department was dismantled at the end of 2018. At that time it included 6 026 servicemen and women from the three armed services, organised into:
    • Staff (Estado Mayor)
    • Presidential Guard Corps (Cuerpo de Guardias Presidenciales)
      • Headquarters (Cuartel General)
      • 6 presidential guard battalions (1/er. - 6/o. Batallón de Guardias Presidenciales)
      • 1st Transport Battalion (1/er. Batallón de Transportes)
      • 1st Supply Company (1/a. Compañía de Intendencia')
      • 24th Presidential Guard Marine Infantry Battalion (24/o. Batallón de Infantería de Marina de Guardias Presidenciales) - as the single Department of the Navy asset in the EMP and infantry-oriented, the 24/o. BIMGP was attached to the CGP.
      • 1st Mounted Cavalry Group (1.er Grupo de Caballería Montado)
        • Honor Guard Cavalry Squadron (Escuadrón de Caballería de Honores)
        • Horse Artillery Battery (Batería Hipómovil)
      • 1st Combat Engineer Company (1/a. Compañía de Ingenieros de Combate)
      • Honor Guard Artillery Battery (Batería de Artillería de Honores)
      • Music Band(Banda de Música)
    • General Coordination Department of the Presidential Transport Aircraft (Coordinación General de Transportes Aéreos Presidenciales) (a staff department, part of the Staff mentioned above)
      • Presidential Transport Air Group (Grupo Aéreo de Transportes Presidenciales) (since the disbanding of the EMP the Coordinación General has been closed down too and the GATP became the 6th Air Group of the Mexican Air Force)

After the closure of the EMP the servicemen and women have lost their special status of personnel distinct from the three services and were integrated back into the Army, Air Force and Navy. Government plans call for the transformation of the Presidential Guard Corps into two military police brigades.[50]

Distinct from the brigade formations are independent regiments (all regiments are battalion-sized) and battalions assigned to zonal garrisons. Groups are company-sized units. The different types of units of the Mexican Army follow a sequential listing starting from 1. onwards. They include the following:[51]

  • 110 infantry battalions (sing.: Batallón de infantería) (with more being planned for activation. 110 is the total quantity of infantry battalions assigned to military zones and assigned to brigades)
  • 24 separate infantry companies (sing.: Compañía de infantería no encuadrada)
  • 3 parachute rifle battalions (sing.: Batallón de fusileros paracaidistas - 1st Batallón is part of the Army, 2nd and 3rd formally belong to the Air Force)
  • 25 motorized cavalry regiments (sing.: Regimiento de caballería motorizado)
  • 9 armored reconnaissance regiments (sing.: Regimiento blindado de reconocimiento)
  • 8 mechanized regiments (sing.: Regimiento mecanizado)
  • 9 artillery regiments (sing.: Regimiento de artillería)
  • 8 mortar group of caliber 81-mm (sing.: Grupo de morteros de calibre 81-mm)
  • 6 recoil-less rifle groups of caliber 106-mm (sing.: Grupo de cañones sin retroceso de calibre 106-mm)
  • ? combat engineer battalions (sing.: Batallón de ingenieros de combate) (sources, which have reported previously small numbers of the quantity of combat engineer battalions in the Mexican Army are outdated, as official statements by the government report 8 combat engineer battalions deployed from the Mexican Army and Air Force deployed to the states of Baja California Sur, Chiapas, Ciudad de México, Estado de México, Guerrero, Jalisco,  Veracruz and Yucatán in the summer of 2021 to deal with the aftermath of torrential rains and hurricanes.[52])

Infantry battalions are small, each of approximately 400 troops, and are generally deployed in each zone. Certain zones are also assigned a light armored cavalry regiment, mechanized infantry regiment or one of the 24 field artillery regiments and 10 field artillery battalions. Smaller detachments are often detailed to patrol more inaccessible areas of the countryside, helping to maintain order and resolve disputes.

Other than the Special Forces and the Military Police Brigades, the Mexican Army includes the following combat brigades:

  • armored - four Armored Brigades (sing.: Brigada blindada), each composed of two armored reconnaissance regiments, two mechanized regiments and smaller support units. A ninth armored reconnaissance regiment under the Army HQ functions as the training unit.
    • 1st Armored Brigade (1/a. Brigada Blindada - Temamatla (Teotihuacán), State of Mexico (brigade patch shows the formation belongs to the 1st Army Corps (1/er. Cuerpo de ejército - ICE)[53])
    • 2nd Armored Brigade (2/a. Brigada Blindada) - Querétaro City, Querétaro (directly subordinated to Army HQ)
    • 3rd Armored Brigade (3/a. Brigada Blindada) - Puebla (city), Puebla (directly subordinated to Army HQ)
    • 4th Armored Brigade (4/a. Brigada Blindada) - Villagrán (Sarabia), Guanajuato (directly subordinated to Army HQ)
  • infantry - three separate infantry brigades under 1st Army Corps and three light infantry brigades directly under army HQ. Each brigade has three infantry battalions. The light brigades lack the organic artillery and engineer units of the separate brigades.
    • 1st Separate Infantry Brigade (1/a. Brigada de Infantería Independiente) - Colonia Santa Teresa, State of Mexico
    • 2nd Separate Infantry Brigade (2/a. Brigada de Infantería Independiente) - Campo Militar No.1 - Mexico City
    • 3rd Separate Infantry Brigade (3/a. Brigada de Infantería Independiente) - Campo Militar No.1 - Mexico City
    • 4th Light Infantry Brigade (4/a. Brigada de Infantería Ligera) - Irapuato, Guanajuato
    • 5th Light Infantry Brigade (5/a. Brigada de Infantería Ligera) - Ixcotel, Oaxaca
    • 6th Light Infantry Brigade (6/a. Brigada de Infantería Ligera) - Campo Militar No.1 - Mexico City
  • airborne
    • Parachute Rifle Brigade (Brigada de Fusileros Paracaidistas) - Campo Militar No.1 - Mexico City (directly subordinated to Army HQ)
  • engineers
    • 1st Combat Engineer Brigade (1/a. Brigada de Ingenieros de Combate) - Campo Militar No.1 - Mexico City (subordinated to the 1st Army Corps)

Special Forces Corps

The Army has a Special Forces Corps unified command with 3 Special Forces Brigades, a High Command GAFE group, a GAFE group assigned to the Airborne Brigade, 74 independent Special Forces Battalions and 36 Amphibious Special Forces Groups.

The Special Forces Brigades consist of nine SF battalions. The 1st Brigade has the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Battalions; the 2nd Brigade has the 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th Battalions; and the 3rd Brigade has the 4th and 9th Battalions and a Rapid Intervention Force group.

The High Command GAFE is a group with no more than 100 members and is specially trained in counter-terrorist tactics. They receive orders directly from the President of Mexico.

The Amphibious Special Forces Groups are trained in amphibious warfare, they give the army extended abilities in riverline and coastal operations in peacetime and in war.

Special Operations Forces

Name Headquarters Structure and purpose
Cuerpo de Fuerzas Especiales (Special Forces Corps) Classified
Grupo Aeromóvil de Fuerzas Especiales del Alto Mando (High Command Airmobil Group Special Forces) Classified
Grupos Anfibios de Fuerzas Especiales (Amphibious Special Forces Group) Classified

Estado Mayor Presidencial

 
Seal of the Estado Mayor Presidencial.

The Estado Mayor Presidencial (Presidential Guard) was a specific agency of the Mexican Army that is responsible for the safety and well being of the President in the practice of all of the activities of his office. On 24 March 1985 President Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado reformed the regulation of the presidential guard and published it in the Official Gazette of the Federation (Diario Oficial de la Federación) on 4 April 1986. In this version the responsibilities of this agency included assisting the President in obtaining general information, planning the President's activities under security and preventive measures for his safety. This regulation was in force during the administrations of Carlos Salinas de Gortari and Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Leon. On 16 January 2004 during the administration of President Vicente Fox Quesada a new regulation of the Presidential Guard was issued and published by the Official Gazette of the Federation on 23 January of that same year. This ordinance updated the structure, organization and operation of the Presidential guard as a technical military body and administrative unit of the Presidency to facilitate the implementation of the powers of his office.[54][55]

The EMP was dissolved in 2018 and its military arm, the Presidential Guards Corps, has had its command becoming a joint service formation, with its units coming under the collective responsibility of the Secretariats of National Defense, Security, and the Navy, its three Army infantry battalions now converted into military police battalions as part of now two military police brigades under the revived National Guard.

Paratrooper Corps

  • Brigada de Fusileros Paracaidistas (Parachute Rifle Brigade) is a three-battalion paratrooper unit created in 1969 within the Mexican Army but utilizing aircraft from the Air Force. Its headquarters is in Mexico City and its training takes place in the Centro de Adiestramiento de Paracaidismo (Airborne Training Center). A battalion can be deployed rapidly to any part of the country.

Ranks

Commissioned officer ranks

The rank insignia of commissioned officers.

Rank group General/flag officers Senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet
  Mexican Army[56]
                     
Secretario de la defensa nacional General de división General de brigada General brigadier Coronel Teniente coronel Mayor Capitán primero Capitán segundo Teniente Subteniente

Other ranks

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
  Mexican Army[56]
         
Sargento primero Sargento segundo Cabo Soldado de primera Soldado

Military industry

 
Mexican Army band playing.
 
A Mexican Army Mi-26 heavy transport helicopter.
 
Mexican army Humvee on 16 September 2007 parade

Since the start of the 21st century, the Army has been steadily modernising to become competitive with the armies of other American countries[57] and have also taken certain steps to decrease spending and dependency on foreign equipment in order to become more autonomous such as the domestic production of the FX-05 rifle designed in Mexico and the commitment to researching, designing and manufacturing domestic military systems such as military electronics and body armor.[58]

The Mexican military counts on three of the following departments to fulfill the general tasks of the Army and Air Force:[59]

  • Dirección General de Industria Militar (D.G.I.M.) – In charge of the designing, manufacturing and maintenance of vehicles and weapons, such as the assembly of the FX-05 assault rifle and the DN series armored vehicles. On 19 July 2009, SEDENA spent 488 million pesos ($37 million U.S.) to transfer technology to manufacture the G36V German made rifle. Although it is not known if this will be manufactured as a cheaper alternative to the FX-05 meant for the army or if it is to be manufactured for military police and other law enforcement agencies such as the Federal Police. The FX-05 is planned to become the new standard rifle for the armed forces replacing the Heckler & Koch G3, so it is not yet clear what the G-36 rifles will be used for.[60] As of 2011, D.G.I.M. is in charge of assembling the Oshkosh SandCat, the modified Mexican Army version of the Sandcat is named as the DN-XI and will be presented in the Mexican Independence Day parade in September 2012.[61][62]
  • Dirección General de Fábricas de Vestuario y Equipo (D.G.FA.V.E.) (General Directorate of Clothing and Equipment Manufacturing) – Since its creation, the department has grown from a simple clothing factory to an Industrial complex in charge of the supply and design of the Army/Air Force's uniform, shoes/boots, combat helmet and ballistic vest. Until the mid-2000s, the Mexican army's standard combat uniform color was olive green. The army then switched to all woodland camouflage and Desert Camouflage Uniform. In July 2008, the D.G.FA.V.E. announced plans for creating the country's first digital uniforms, which would consist of Woodland/jungle and Desert camouflage; these uniforms entered service in 2009.[63]
  • Granjas Militares (Military farms) – In charge of Agriculture; crop cultivation is a necessity to maintain the health and economy of the Army/Air Force. The Mexican Army has four established SEDENA farms:[64]

Equipment

 
New Mexican army uniform

Vehicles

 
Mexican Army ERC 90 F1 Lynx during the Independence day Parade.
 
VCR-TT 6X6 APC on Madero Street in downtown Mexico City after Independence Day celebrations
 
Mexican cavalry
Mexican Army vehicle inventory
Vehicle/System Type Versions Origin Quantity
Armored fighting vehicles
Panhard ERC 90 Reconnaissance vehicle ERC 90 F1 Lynx, Armed with 90mm F1 Cannon France 120 in active service

(105 to be upgraded) [2]

DN-V Bufalo Self-propelled artillery Armed with 75mm M8 Howitzer Mexico Unknown quantity in active service
DN Mortar Carrier Mortar carrier Armed with 81mm Mortar Mexico Unknown quantity in active service
M8 Greyhound Armoured car Small numbers modernized with a 20mm Cannon Installed. United States Less than 10 in active service, all modernized
DN-IV Caballo Reconnaissance vehicle Armed with 20mm Automatic Cannon Mexico Very few in active service
DN-3 Reconnaissance vehicle Armed with 25mm Automatic Cannon Mexico Very few in active service
DN-V Toro Reconnaissance vehicle Armed with 20mm Automatic Cannon Mexico 70 in active service
Max Mex-1 Armoured car Armed With 20mm Automatic Cannon United States
Mexico
Around 20–25 in active service
Sedena 8x8 Vehicle Infantry fighting vehicle Armed with possibly a 40mm Cannon, but Unknown type of Cannon Mexico 1 prototype in active service, possible in production.
Sedena-Henschel HWK -13 Infantry fighting vehicle HWK-13 (IFV) Armed with 20mm Automatic Cannon Mexico
Germany
In service, unknown quantity
Sedena-Henschel HWK-11 Armored personnel carrier HWK-11 (APC Version) Armed With one 7.62mm Machine Gun, All Modernized Mexico
Germany
52 in active service (including 12 delivered from Germany in 1964)
AMX-VCI Armored personnel carrier DNC-1: upgraded by SEDENA armed with 20mm Cannon France
Upgraded by Mexico
409 in active service
Panhard VCR[65] Armored personnel carrier VCR-TT, Armed with M2 Browning 12.7mm Machine Gun France 46 in active service
DNC-2 Armored personnel carrier Armed with one 7.62mm Machine Gun Mexico Unknown quantity in active service, still in production.
El Cimarron Armored personnel carrier Armed with M2 Browning 12.7mm Machine Gun Mexico Unknown quantity in active service, but in production
Véhicule Blindé Léger Scout car VBL MILAN France 1,231 in active service
Oshkosh Sand Cat[66] Light armored vehicle Sand Cat – 245 Sandcats were delivered and have Type IV level Armored protection[67] Israel
United States
245 in active service
DN-XI Light armored vehicle The DN-XI is a Mexican designed armored van based on a Ford truck chassis. 100 on order.[68] 1,000 to be acquired by 2018. Armed with M2 Browning 12.7mm Machine Gun or 40mm Automatic Grenade Launcher.[69] Mexico 1,000+ in active service still in production
DN-VI Reconnaissance vehicle Armed with one 7.62mm Machine Gun Mexico Unknown, but few in active service
Humvee[70] Military light utility vehicle/Armoured car HMMWV Armored Car Versions are armed with single M2 Browning 12.7mm Machine Gun or 40mm Automatic Grenade Launcher. United States 3,335 order in 2014 + 2,200 order more in 2016. 5,535 in active service (including light utility and armored car versions)
Infantry transport vehicles
Chevrolet Silverado Pickup truck GMT900 United States
Mexico
In service
Ford F-Series Pickup truck F-150 United States
Mexico
In service
Dodge Ram Pickup truck Variants of 4x4 and 6x6 United States In service
Yamaha Rhino Utility terrain vehicle Rhino Japan In service
Chevrolet Cheyenne Pickup truck GMT K2XX United States In service
Trucks
M520 Goer Heavy tactical truck M520 United States In service
Freightliner Trucks Truck M2 United States In service
M35 2-1/2 ton cargo truck Military truck M35 United States In service
DINA S.A. Trucks S-Series / D-Series Mexico In service
Mercedes Benz Truck L-Series Germany In service
Chevrolet Truck Kodiak United States In service
Freightliner Trucks Satellite communications truck Intelligence United States In service

Infantry weapons

 
FX-05 Xiuhcoatl (Fire Serpent) assault rifle
 
G3A3 battle rifle
 
MP5
 
P7M13
 
PSG1
Inventory
Name Caliber Type Origin
Heckler & Koch G3 7.62×51mm NATO Battle rifle. Made under license from Heckler & Koch, being replaced by the FX-05 Xiuhcoatl Rifle Germany
FX-05 Xiuhcoatl 5.56×45mm NATO Assault rifle, Carbine, short-carbine rifle and light machine gun depending on version, this rifle is the standard Mexican Army service rifle. Mexico
Heckler & Koch HK33 5.56×45mm NATO Assault rifle. Made under license from Heckler & Koch Germany
M4 carbine 5.56×45mm NATO Assault rifle and carbine rifle United States
Heckler & Koch MP5 9×19mm Parabellum Submachine gun. Made under license from Heckler & Koch Germany
FN P90 5.7×28mm Personal defence weapon[71] Belgium
Mendoza HM-3 9x19mm Parabellum and .380 ACP Submachine gun, made and designed in Mexico by Productos Mendoza. Mexico
M1911 .45 ACP Semi-automatic pistol United States
Mexico
Heckler & Koch P7 9×19mm Parabellum Semi-automatic pistol. Made under license from Heckler & Koch Germany
Sig Sauer P226 9x19mm Parabellum Semi-automatic pistol Switzerland
Beretta 92FS 9×19mm Parabellum Semi-automatic pistol Italy
FN Five-seveN 5.7×28mm Semi-automatic pistol Belgium
HK PSG1 Morelos Bicentenario 7.62×51mm NATO Sniper rifle. Made under license from Heckler & Koch Germany
Barrett M82 .50 BMG Anti-material rifle United States
M249 5.56x45mm NATO Light machine gun United States
FN Minimi 5.56×45mm NATO Light machine gun Belgium
Heckler & Koch HK21 7.62×51mm NATO General-purpose machine gun. Made under license from Heckler & Koch Germany
Rheinmetall MG 3 7.62×51mm NATO General-purpose machine gun. Made under license from Rheinmetall Germany
M2 Browning machine gun .50 BMG Heavy machine gun United States
M-134 minigun 7.62×51mm NATO Rotary machinegun United States
Mk 19 40×53mm Automatic grenade launcher United States
Milkor MGL 40×46mm Grenade launcher South Africa
M203 grenade launcher 40×46mm Grenade launcher United States
Heckler & Koch AG-C/GLM 40×46mm Grenade launcher Germany
M67 grenade 64mm Hand grenade United States
Mondragón F-08 7×57mm Mauser Semi-automatic rifle used for ceremonial occasions, now being retired Mexico
Winchester Model 54 7.62×51mm Bolt-action rifle used for ceremonial occasions United States
CornerShot Weapon accessory Israel
United States
Remington 870 12 gauge Gauge pump-action shotgun used by Army police United States

Artillery

Name Type Versions Origin Status
Self-propelled artillery
SDN Humvee Tank destroyer mounted on Humvee chassis 106mm Mexico In service
Artillery
M101 Howitzer Towed howitzer 105mm United States In service
OTO Melara Mod 56 Howitzer Towed howitzer 105mm Italy In service
M90 Norinco Towed howitzer 105mm People's Republic of China In service
M-56 Towed Howitzer 105mm Serbia In service
M198 Howitzer Towed howitzer 155mm United States In service
TRF1 Towed howitzer 155mm France In service
M114 Towed howitzer 155mm United States In service
M8 Howitzer Howitzer 75mm United States
Mexico
In service
Mortier 120mm Rayé Tracté Modèle F1 Heavy mortar 120mm France In service
K6 Heavy mortar 120mm Israel In service
M30 mortar Heavy mortar 106mm United States In service
M29 mortar Medium mortar 81mm United States In service
M1 mortar Medium mortar 81mm United States In service
Mortero 81 Medium mortar 81mm Mexico In service
Brandt 60 mm LR Gun-mortar Light mortar 60mm France In service
M2 mortar Light mortar 60mm United States In service
M19 Light mortar 60mm United States In service
Mortero 60 Light mortar 60mm Mexico In service
Bofors L70 Anti aircraft autocannon 40mm Sweden In service
Oerlikon 35mm twin cannon Anti aircraft autocannon 35mm Switzerland In service
2A45 Sprut Anti-tank gun 125mm Russian Federation In service

Anti-armor weapons

 
RPG-29 Rocket propelled grenade
 
MILAN
Name Type Versions Origin Information
Anti-tank weapons
Carl Gustaf 8.4cm recoilless rifle Multi-role recoilless rifle 84mm Sweden In service
RPG-7 Anti-tank rocket Depends on Warhead Russia In service
SMAW Anti-tank rocket 105mm United States In service
RPG-29[72] Anti-tank rocket 105mm Russia
Mexico
Locally produced in Mexico by Sedena, in service
Anti-armor recoilless rifles
M40 106 mm recoilless rifle Recoilless rifle 106mm United States Mounted on Humvees, in service
Anti-tank guided missiles
MILAN Anti-tank guided missile France Mounted on VBL vehicles, in service

See also

Further reading

Colonial era

  • Archer, Christon I. The Army in Bourbon Mexico, 1760–1810. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1977.
  • Archer, Christon I. "The Officer Corps in New Spain: the Martial Career, 1759–1821." Jahrbuch für Geschicte von Staat, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft Lateinamerikas 19 (1982).
  • McAlister, Lyle. The "Fuero Militar" in New Spain, 1764–1800. Gainesville: University of Florida Press 1957.

Post-Independence

  • Camp, Roderic Ai. Generals in the Palacio: The Military in Modern Mexico. New York: Oxford University Press 1992.
  • Díaz Díaz, Fernando. Caudillos y caciques: Antonio López de Santa Anna y Juan Alvarez. Mexico City: El Colegio de México 1972.
  • Fowler, Will. Military Political Identity and Reformism in Independent Mexico: An Analysis of the Memorias de Guerra (1821–1855). London: Institute of Latin American Studies 1996.
  • Lieuwen, Edwin. Mexican Militarism: The Political Rise and Fall of the Revolutionary Army. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1968.

Neufeld, Stephen B. The Blood Contingent: The Military and the Making of Modern Mexico, 1876–1911. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 2017.

  • Ronfeldt, David, editor. The Modern Mexican Military: A Reassessment. La Jolla: Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies, University of California San Diego 1984.
  • Serrano, Mónica. "The Armed Branch of the State: Civil-Military Relations in Mexico," Journal of Latin American Studies 27 (1995)
  • Vanderwood, Paul. Disorder and Progress: Bandits, Police, and Mexican Development. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press 1981.
  • Wager, J. Stephen. The Mexican Military: Approaches to the 21st Century: Coping with a New World Order. Carlisle PA: Strategic Studies Institute: U.S. Army War College 1994.

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External links

  • Photos of the Mexican Army, National Marine and Air Force
  • Secretaria de la Defensa Nacional – Fabrica de armas y equipos
  • Latin American Light Weapons National Inventories
  • Military Territorial Division
  • Mexican Army Oshkosh Sandcat

mexican, army, spanish, ejército, mexicano, combined, land, branch, largest, part, mexican, armed, forces, also, known, national, defense, army, ejército, mexicano, emblemfounded1821countrymexicotypearmy, forcerolenational, defensesize198, 000part, ofsecretari. The Mexican Army Spanish Ejercito Mexicano is the combined land and air branch and is the largest part of the Mexican Armed Forces it is also known as the National Defense Army Mexican ArmyEjercito MexicanoMexican Army emblemFounded1821CountryMexicoTypeArmy and Air ForceRoleNational defenseSize198 000Part ofSecretariat of National DefenseMexican Armed ForcesMotto s Siempre Leales Always Loyal ColorsBlueMascot s Golden eagleAnniversaries19 February Day of the Army 1 13 September Dia de los Ninos Heroes 2 EquipmentSee EquipmentEngagementsWar of Independence Annexation of Central America Spanish attempts to reconquer Mexico Texas Revolution Pastry War Capture of Monterey Mexican American War Caste War of Yucatan Reform War French Intervention Mexican Revolution Border War Cristero War World War II Dirty War Zapatista Uprising 1999 East Timorese crisis Mexican Drug WarCommandersCommander of the ArmyEufemio Alberto Ibarra FloresInsigniaGuidon The Army is under the authority of the Secretariat of National Defense or SEDENA and is headed by the Secretary of National Defence It was the first army to adopt 1908 and use 1910 a self loading rifle the Mondragon rifle The Mexican Army has an active duty force of 198 000 with 76 000 men and women of military service age Contents 1 History 1 1 Antecedents 1 1 1 Pre Columbian era native warriors 1 1 2 Military in the Spanish Colonial Era 1 2 Independence 1 3 Pastry War 1 4 U S invasion 1 5 French Intervention 1 5 1 Mexican Republican forces 1 6 Diaz era 1 7 Mexican Revolution 1910 1920 1 8 Contemporary era 1 8 1 Post revolutionary period 1 8 2 Mexican Drug War 2 Structure 2 1 Regional command 2 2 Tactical units 2 3 Special Forces Corps 2 3 1 Special Operations Forces 2 4 Estado Mayor Presidencial 2 5 Paratrooper Corps 3 Ranks 3 1 Commissioned officer ranks 3 2 Other ranks 4 Military industry 5 Equipment 5 1 Vehicles 5 2 Infantry weapons 5 3 Artillery 5 4 Anti armor weapons 6 See also 7 Further reading 7 1 Colonial era 7 2 Post Independence 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditAntecedents Edit Pre Columbian era native warriors Edit Main articles Aztec warfare and Mayan warfare Aztec warriors as shown in the 16th century Florentine Codex Note that each warrior is brandishing a Maquahuitl This page from the Codex Mendoza shows the gradual improvements to equipment and tlahuiztli as a warrior progresses through the ranks from commoner to porter to warrior to captor and later as a noble progressing in the warrior societies from the noble warrior to Eagle warrior to Jaguar Warrior to Otomitl to Shorn One and finally as Tlacateccatl Tepoztōpilli from the Armeria Real collection in Madrid In the prehispanic era there were many indigenous tribes and highly developed city states in what is now known as central Mexico The most advanced and powerful kingdoms were those of Tenochtitlan Texcoco and Tlacopan which comprised populations of the same ethnic origin and were politically linked by an alliance known as the Triple Alliance colloquially these three states are known as the Aztec They had a center for higher education called the Calmecac in Nahuatl this was where the children of the Aztec priesthood and nobility receive rigorous religious and military training and conveyed the highest knowledge such as doctrines divine songs the science of interpreting codices calendar skills memorization of texts etc In Aztec society it was compulsory for all young males nobles as well as commoners to join part of the armed forces at the age of 15 Recruited by regional and clan groups calpulli the conscripts were organized in units of about 8 000 men Xiquipilli These were broken down into 400 strong sub units Aztec nobility some of whom were the children of commoners who had distinguished themselves in battle led their own serfs on campaign 3 Itzcoatl Obsidian Serpent 1381 1440 fourth king of Tenochtitlan organized the army that defeated the Tepanec of Atzcapotzalco freeing his people from their dominion His reign began with the rise of what would become the largest empire in Mesoamerica Then Moctezuma Ilhuicamina The arrow to the sky 1440 1469 came to extend the domain and the influence of the monarchy of Tenochtitlan He began to organize trade to the outside regions of the Valley of Mexico This was the Mexica ruler who organized the alliance with the lordships of Texcoco and Tlacopan to form the Triple Alliance The Aztec established the Flower Wars as a form of worship these unlike the wars of conquest were aimed at obtaining prisoners for sacrifice to the sun Combat orders were given by kings or Lords using drums or blowing into a sea snail shell that gave off a sound like a horn Giving out signals using coats of arms was very common For combat outside of cities they would organize several groups only one of which would be involved in action while the others remained on the alert When attacking enemy cities they usually divided their forces into three equal sized wings which simultaneously assaulted different parts of the defences this enabled the leaders to determine which division of warriors had distinguished themselves the most in combat 4 Military in the Spanish Colonial Era Edit Main article Military of New Spain See also Spanish conquest of the Aztec empire Spanish conquest of Yucatan Spanish conquest of Chiapas and Chichimeca war During the 18th century the Spanish colonial forces in the greater Mexico region consisted of regular Peninsular regiments sent from Spain itself augmented by locally recruited provincial and urban militia units of infantry cavalry and artillery A few regular infantry and dragoon regiments e g the Regimiento de Mexico were recruited within Mexico and permanently stationed there 5 Mounted units of soldados de cuera so called from the leather protective clothing that they wore 6 patrolled frontier and desert regions 7 Independence Edit Main article Mexican War of Independence In the early morning of 16 September 1810 the Army of Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla initiated the independence movement Hidalgo was followed by his loyal companions among them Mariano Abasolo and a small army equipped with swords spears slingshots and sticks Captain General Ignacio Allende was the military brains of the insurgent army in the first phase of the War of Independence and secured several victories over the Spanish Royal Army Their troops were about 5 000 strong and were later joined by squadrons of the Queen s Regiment where its members in turn contributed infantry battalions and cavalry squadrons to the insurrection cause Guanajuato At center the Alhondiga de Granaditas The Spaniards saw that it was important to defend the Alhondiga de Granaditas public granary in Guanajuato which maintained the flow of water weapons food and ammunition to the Spanish Royal Army The insurgents entered Guanajuato and proceeded to lay siege to the Alhondiga The insurgents suffered heavy casualties until Juan Jose de los Reyes the Pipila fitted a slab of rock on his back to protect himself from enemy fire and crawled to the large wooden door of the Alhondiga with a torch in hand to set it on fire With this stunt the insurgents managed to bring down the door and enter the building and overrun it Hidalgo headed to Valladolid now Morelia which was captured with little opposition While the Insurgent Army was by then over 60 000 strong it was mostly formed of poorly armed men with arrows sticks and tillage tools it had a few guns which had been taken from Spanish stocks In Aculco the Royal Spanish forces under the command of Felix Maria Calleja Count of Calderon and Don Manuel de Flon and comprising 200 infantrymen 500 cavalry and 12 cannons defeated the insurgents who lost many men as well as the artillery they had obtained at Battle of Monte de las Cruces On 29 November 1810 Hidalgo entered Guadalajara the capital of Nueva Galicia where he organized his government and the Insurgent Army he also issued a decree abolishing slavery At Calderon Bridge Puente de Calderon near the city of Guadalajara Jalisco insurgents held a hard fought battle with the royalists During the fierce fighting one of the insurgents ammunition wagons exploded which led to their defeat The insurgents lost all their artillery much of their equipment and the lives of many men Constitutional decree for the freedom of the Mexican America Army of the Three Guarantees enters Mexico city on 27 September 1821 At the Wells of Bajan Norias de Bajan near Monclova Coahuila a former royalist named Ignacio Elizondo who had joined the insurgent cause betrayed them and seized Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla Ignacio Allende Juan Aldama Jose Mariano Jimenez and the rest of the entourage They were brought to the city of Chihuahua where they were tried by a military court and executed by firing squad on 30 July 1811 Hidalgo s death resulted in a political vacuum for the insurgents until 1812 Meanwhile the royalist military commander General Felix Maria Calleja continued to pursue rebel troops The fighting evolved into guerrilla warfare The next major rebel leader was the priest Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon who had formerly led the insurgent movement alongside Hidalgo Morelos fortified the port of Acapulco and took the city of Chilpancingo Along the way Morelos was joined by Leonardo Bravo his son Nicholas and his brothers Max Victor and Miguel Bravo Morelos conducted several campaigns in the south managing to conquer much of the region as he gave orders to the insurgents to promote the writing of the first constitution for the new Mexican nation the Constitution of Apatzingan which was drafted in 1814 In 1815 Morelos was apprehended and executed by firing squad His death concluded the second phase of the Mexican War for Independence From 1815 to 1820 the independence movement became sluggish it was briefly reinvigorated by Francisco Javier Mina and Pedro Moreno who were both quickly apprehended and executed It was not until late 1820 when Agustin de Iturbide one of the most bloodthirsty enemies of the insurgents established relations with Vicente Guerrero and Guadalupe Victoria two of the rebel leaders Guerrero and Victoria supported Iturbide s plan for Mexican independence El Plan de Iguala and Iturbide was appointed commander of the Ejercito Trigarante or The Army of the Three Guarantees With this new alliance they were able to enter Mexico City on 27 September 1821 which concluded the Mexican War for Independence Pastry War Edit Main article Pastry War French blockade in 1838 The Pastry War was the first French intervention in Mexico Following the widespread civil disorder that plagued the early years of the Mexican republic fighting in the streets destroyed a great deal of personal property Foreigners whose property was damaged or destroyed by rioters or bandits were usually unable to obtain compensation from the government and began to appeal to their own governments for help In 1838 a French pastry cook Monsieur Remontel claimed that his shop in the Tacubaya district of Mexico City had been ruined in 1828 by looting Mexican officers He appealed to France s King Louis Philippe 1773 1850 Coming to its citizen s aid France demanded 600 000 pesos in damages This amount was extremely high when compared to an average workman s daily pay which was about one peso In addition to this amount Mexico had defaulted on millions of dollars worth of loans from France Diplomat Baron Deffaudis gave Mexico an ultimatum to pay or the French would demand satisfaction When the payment was not forthcoming from president Anastasio Bustamante 1780 1853 the king sent a fleet under Rear Admiral Charles Baudin to declare a blockade of all Mexican ports from Yucatan to the Rio Grande to bombard the Mexican fortress of San Juan de Ulua and to seize the port of Veracruz Virtually the entire Mexican Navy was captured at Veracruz by December 1838 Mexico declared war on France With trade cut off the Mexicans began smuggling imports into Corpus Christi Texas and then into Mexico Fearing that France would blockade Texan ports as well a battalion of men of the Republic of Texas force began patrolling Corpus Christi Bay to stop Mexican smugglers One smuggling party abandoned their cargo of about a hundred barrels of flour on the beach at the mouth of the bay thus giving Flour Bluff its name The United States ever watchful of its relations with Mexico sent the schooner Woodbury to help the French in their blockade Talks between the French Kingdom and the Texan nation occurred and France agreed not to offend the soil or waters of the Republic of Texas With the diplomatic intervention of the United Kingdom eventually President Bustamante promised to pay the 600 000 pesos and the French forces withdrew on 9 March 1839 U S invasion Edit Main article Mexican American War Battle of Monterrey The U S occupation of Mexico City General and President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna in 1852 U S territorial expansion under Manifest Destiny in the 19th century had reached the banks of the Rio Grande which prompted Mexican president Jose Joaquin de Herrera to form an army of 6 000 men to defend the Mexican northern frontier from the expansion of the neighboring country In 1845 Texas a former Mexican territory that had broken away from Mexico by rebellion was annexed into the United States In response to this the minister of Mexico in the U S Juan N Almonte called for his Letters of Recognition and returned to Mexico hostilities promptly ensued On 25 April 1846 a Mexican force under colonel Anastasio Torrejon surprised and defeated a U S squadron at the Rancho de Carricitos in Matamoros in an event that would latter be known as the Thornton Skirmish this was the pretext that U S president James K Polk used to persuade the U S congress into declaring a state of war against Mexico on 13 May 1846 U S Army captain John C Fremont with about sixty well armed men had entered the California territory in December 1845 before the war had been official and was marching slowly to Oregon when he received word that war between Mexico and the U S was imminent thus began a chapter of the war known as the Bear Flag Revolt On 20 September 1846 the U S launched an attack on Monterrey which fell after 5 days After this U S victory hostilities were suspended for 7 weeks allowing Mexican troops to leave the city with their flags displayed in full honors as U S soldiers regrouped and regained their losses In August 1846 Commodore David Conner and his squadron of ships were in Veracruzian waters he tried unsuccessfully to seize the Fort of Alvarado which was defended by the Mexican Navy The Americans were forced to relocate to Anton Lizardo In confronting resistance and fortifications at the port of Veracruz the U S Army and Marines implemented an intense bombardment of the city from 22 26 March 1847 causing about five hundred civilian deaths and significant damage to homes buildings and merchandise General Winfield Scott and Commodore Matthew C Perry capitalized on this civilian suffering by refusing to allow the consulates of Spain and France to assist in civilian evacuation they pressed Mexican Gen Juan Morales to negotiate surrender U S commodore Matthew C Perry who had already captured the town of Frontera in Tabasco tried to seize San Juan Bautista modern Villahermosa but he was repelled three times by a Mexican garrison of just under three hundred men U S troops were also sent to the California territories with the intention of seizing it After squads of U S troops occupied the City of Los Angeles Mexican authorities were forced to move to Sonora but by the end of September 1846 commander Jose Maria Flores was able to gather 500 Mexicans and managed to defeat the U S garrison at Los Angeles and then sent detachments to Santa Barbara and San Diego After putting up a fierce defense against the U S invasion the Mexican positions along the state of Chihuahua began to fall These forces had been organized by general Jose Antonio de Heredia and governor Angel Trias Alvarez The cavalry of the latter made several desperate charges against the U S that nearly achieved victory but his inexperience in fighting was evident and in the end all the positions gained were lost French Intervention Edit Main article Second French intervention in Mexico Monument to General Ignacio Zaragoza hero of the Battle of Puebla Cinco de Mayo 1862 Soldiers of the Mexican Republican Army c1862 The French intervention was an invasion by an expeditionary force sent by the Second French Empire supported in the beginning by the United Kingdom and the Kingdom of Spain It followed President Benito Juarez s suspension of interest payments to foreign countries on 17 July 1861 which angered Mexico s major creditors Spain France and Britain Napoleon III of France was the instigator His foreign policy was based on a commitment to free trade For him a friendly government in Mexico provided an opportunity to expand free trade by ensuring European access to important markets and preventing monopoly by the United States Napoleon also needed the silver that could be mined in Mexico to finance his empire Napoleon built a coalition with Spain and Britain at a time the U S was engaged in a full scale civil war The U S protested but could not intervene directly until its civil war was over in 1865 8 The Battle of Puebla Cinco de Mayo 1862 an important victory for Mexican forces against the French The three powers signed the Treaty of London on 31 October to unite their efforts to receive payments from Mexico On 8 December the Spanish fleet and troops from Spanish controlled Cuba arrived at Mexico s main Gulf port Veracruz When the British and Spanish discovered that the French planned to invade Mexico they withdrew The subsequent French invasion resulted in the Second Mexican Empire which was supported by the Roman Catholic clergy many conservative elements of the upper class and some indigenous communities The presidential terms of Benito Juarez 1858 71 were interrupted by the rule of the Habsburg monarchy in Mexico 1864 67 Conservatives and many in the Mexican nobility tried to revive the monarchical form of government see First Mexican Empire when they helped to bring to Mexico an archduke from the Royal House of Austria Maximilian Ferdinand or Maximilian I of Mexico who married Charlotte of Belgium also known as Carlota of Mexico with the military support of France France had various interests in this Mexican affair such as seeking reconciliation with Austria which had been defeated during the Franco Austrian War counterbalancing the growing U S power by developing a powerful Catholic neighbouring empire and exploiting the rich mines in the north west of the country Mexican Republican forces Edit General Ramon Corona led extended opposition in Sinaloa against the French intervention In 1861 the Mexican Republican Army consisted of ten regular line battalions each of eight companies and six line cavalry regiments each of two squadrons With six batteries of field artillery plus engineers train and garrison units the regular army numbered about 12 000 men Auxiliary forces comprising state militias and National Guards provided a further 25 infantry battalions and 25 cavalry squadrons plus some garrison and artillery units The National Guard of the Federal District of Mexico City amounted to six infantry battalions plus one each of cavalry and artillery The newly raised corps of Rurales created on 5 May 1861 as a mounted gendarmerie numbered 2 200 and served as dispersed units of light cavalry against the French 9 While opposed by substantial forces of French regular troops plus Mexican Imperial forces and contingents of foreign volunteers 10 the Republican Army remained in being as an effective force after the fall of Mexico City in 1863 By 1865 Liberal opposition was being led by a core of 50 000 regular Mexican troops and state National Guards augmented by approximately 10 000 guerrillas 11 Diaz era Edit Main article Federal Army General and President Porfirio Diaz another hero of the Battle of Puebla and president of Mexico in the late nineteenth century until the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution Following the French withdrawal and the overthrow of the Imperial regime of Maximilian the Mexican Republic was re established in 1867 In 1876 Porfirio Diaz a leading general of the anti Maximilianist forces became president He was to retain power until 1910 with only one short break During the early part of this period of extended rule Diaz relied essentially on military power to remain in office However he was able to develop other support bases and the army became a reliable non political instrument for maintaining internal order 12 Diaz undertook a series of reforms intended to modernize the Mexican Army 13 while at the same time terminating the historic pattern of local commanders attempting to seize power using irregulars or provincial forces 14 The increasingly elderly 15 generals of the Federal Army were frequently transferred and kept loyal through opportunities for graft By the early 1900s the large officer corps was benefiting from professional training along Prussian Army lines and improved career opportunities for cadets of middle class origin 12 Finally an efficient mounted police force of rurales took over responsibility for public order 16 and the army itself was reduced in size by about a third 17 A continuing weakness in the Mexican Army throughout the Diaz period was the low morale and motivation of the rank and file They mostly consisted of Indian and mestizo conscripts forced into service under the random leva system Some were enlisted as a means of punishment or because of social discrimination and a number of future revolutionary leaders received their initial military experience in the ranks of the Federal Army 12 By 1910 the army numbered about 25 000 men largely conscripts of Indian origin officered by 4 000 white middle class officers While generally well equipped the Federal Army under Diaz was too small in numbers to offer effective opposition to the revolutionary forces led by Francisco Madero 18 During the long period of Porfirian stability increased reliance had been placed on the new railway network to quickly move small numbers of troops to suppress regional unrest When faced with widespread revolution during 1910 11 the railway lines proved too vulnerable regular army strength too limited and state militias too disorganised to control the situation 19 Mexican Revolution 1910 1920 Edit Main article Mexican Revolution General Victoriano Huerta who overthrew civilian President Francisco I Madero in 1913 Revolutionary General Alvaro Obregon later president of Mexico The ouster of Porfirio Diaz saw Francisco I Madero a member of a rich landowning family elected as President of Mexico Madero kept the Federal Army intact despite the fact that it had been outmaneuvered by the revolutionary forces that brought him to power General Victoriano Huerta overthrew Madero in a bloody February 1913 coup Forces opposed to the Huerta regime united against him particularly the Constitutionalists in the north These were led by a civilian Venustiano Carranza as First Chief commanding forces led by a number of generals but most prominently Alvaro Obregon and Pancho Villa In the Morelos region an intense guerrilla warfare was waged by forces led by Emiliano Zapata The Federal Army supporting Huerta was defeated at the Battle of Zacatecas and finally disbanded in 1914 20 and a new Government army was created from Obregon s Constitutionalist forces Zapata was assassinated in 1919 Villa was bought off and took up civilian life in northern Mexico before being assassinated in 1923 During the post military phase following 1920 a number of Constitutionalist leaders became presidents of Mexico Alvaro Obregon 1920 1924 Plutarco Elias Calles 1924 28 Lazaro Cardenas 1934 1940 and Manuel Avila Camacho 1940 1946 When Lazaro Cardenas reorganized the political party founded by Plutarco Elias Calles he created sectoral representation of groups in Mexico one of which was the Mexican Army In the subsequent reorganization of the party which took place in 1946 the Institutional Revolutionary Party no longer had a separate sector for the army No military man has been president of Mexico after 1946 Contemporary era Edit General Lazaro Cardenas who as president of Mexico 1934 1940 brought the Mexican military under civilian control Post revolutionary period Edit Mexican soldiers on parade in Mexico s independence day parade in 2009 Mexico DF carrying Mexican FX 05 Xiuhcoatl Fire Serpent assault rifles The ending of the Diaz regime saw a resurgence of numerous local forces led by revolutionary generals In 1920 more than 80 000 Mexicans were under arms 21 with only a minority forming part of regular forces obedient to a central authority During the 1920s the new government demobilised the revolutionary bands reopened the Colegio Militar Military Academy established the Escuela Superior de Guerra Staff College and raised the salaries and improved the conditions of service of the rank and file of the regular army In spite of an abortive generals revolt in 1927 the result was a professional army obedient to the central government 22 During this period the army was reduced in numbers through the disbandment of twenty mounted cavalry regiments ten infantry battalions and the majority of the specialist railroad units previously required In 1937 a process of accelerated modernisation began with the creation of companies of light tanks mechanised infantry and motorised anti aircraft batteries 23 During the 1930s the political role of the officer corps was reduced by the governing Revolutionary Party and a workers militia was established outnumbering the regular army by two to one By the end of World War II the Mexican Army had become a strictly professional force focused on national defense rather than political involvement 24 Mexican Drug War Edit Main article Mexican Drug War Although violence between drug cartels has been occurring long before the war began the government held a generally passive stance regarding cartel violence during the 1990s and the early years of the 21st century That changed on 11 December 2006 when newly elected President Felipe Calderon sent 6 500 federal troops to the state of Michoacan to end drug violence there This action is regarded as the first major retaliation made against the cartel violence and is generally viewed as the starting point of the war between the government and the drug cartels 25 As time progressed Calderon continued to escalate his anti drug campaign in which there are now about 45 000 troops involved along with state and federal police forces In recent times the Mexican military has largely participated in efforts against drug trafficking The Operaciones contra el narcotrafico Operations against drug trafficking for example describes its purpose in regards to the performance of the Mexican Army and Air Force in the permanent campaign against the drug trafficking is sustained properly in the duties that the Executive of the Nation grants to the armed forces for according to Article 89 Section VI of the Constitution of the Mexican United States it is the duty of the President of the Republic of the United Mexican States as Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces to ensure that the Mexican Armed Forces perform its mandate of national security within and outside the state borders Structure Edit Mexican Air Force cadets march during the Mexican Independence day military parade in Mexico City on 27 July 2012 The Army is under the authority of the National Defense Secretariat or SEDENA and is headed by the Secretary of National Defence simultaneously a member of the central government and the sole four star general His counterpart is the Secretary of the Navy who is a member of the central government and the sole four star admiral The National Defence Secretariat has three components a national headquarters territorial commands and independent units The Secretary of National Defence delegates overall command of the Army thru the office of Commander of the Army a divisional general ranked officer who leads the service via a centralized command system and many general officers and is appointed and relieved by the Secretary The Army uses a modified continental staff system in its headquarters The Mexican Air Force is a separate service under the SEDENA Recruitment of personnel happens from ages 18 through 21 if secondary education was finished 22 if High school was completed Recruitment after age 22 is impossible in the regular army only auxiliary posts are available As of 2009 starting salary for Mexican army recruits was 6 000 Mexican pesos US 500 a month with a lifetime 10 000 peso approximately US 833 monthly pension for widows of soldiers killed in action 26 The principal units of the Mexican army are ten infantry brigades and a number of independent regiments and infantry battalions The main maneuver elements of the army are organized in three corps each consisting of three to four infantry brigades plus other units all based in and around Mexico City and its metropolitan area Distinct from the brigade formations independent regiments and battalions are assigned to zonal garrisons 52 in total in each of the country s 12 military regions Infantry battalions composed of approximately 300 350 troops generally are deployed in each zone and certain zones are assigned an additional motorized cavalry regiment or an artillery regiment 27 Regional command Edit Cadets of the Heroic Military Academy Mexico with a golden eagle September 2004 Every afternoon a Mexican Army platoon lowers the monumental flag in Constitution Square or Zocalo The territorial organization of the Mexican Army includes twelve Military Regions Regiones militares RM Each RM is commanded by a senior officer in the rank of Divisional General of the General Staff General de Division Diplomado de Estado Mayor a three star general Below the military regions are forty eight Military Zones Zonas militares ZM 28 Each ZM is commanded by a senior officer in the rank of Brigade General of the General Staff General de Brigada Diplomado de Estado Mayor a two star general Operational needs determine how many zones are in each region with corresponding increases and decreases in troop strength Each commander of the Military Region is appointed and relieved by the Commander of the Army Usually on the secretary of defence s recommendation the senior zone commander is also the commander of the military region containing the military zone A military zone commander has jurisdiction over every unit operating in his territory including the Rurales Rural Defense Force that occasionally have been a Federal political counterweight to the power of state governors Zone commanders provide the national defence secretary with socio political conditions intelligence about rural areas Moreover they traditionally have acted in co ordination with the Secretariat of National Defense SEDENA on planning and resources deployment Territorial organization of the Mexican Army Military zone HQ NotesFirst Military Region I Region militar HQ in Mexico CityCovers the capital Mexico City and the states of Estado de Mexico Hidalgo and Morelos 1st Military Zone 1 a Z M Tacubaya Mexico City18th Military Zone 18 a Z M Pachuca Hidalgo22nd Military Zone 22 a Z M Santa Maria Rayon Estado de Mexico24th Military Zone 24 a Z M Cuernavaca Morelos37th Military Zone 37 a Z M Santa Lucia Estado de MexicoSecond Military Region II Region militar HQ in Mexicali Baja CaliforniaCovers the states of Baja California Baja California Sur and Sonora 2nd Military Zone 2 a Z M Tijuana Baja California3rd Military Zone 3 a Z M La Paz Baja California Sur4th Military Zone 4 a Z M Hermosillo Sonora40th Military Zone 40 a Z M Guerrero Negro Baja California Sur45th Military Zone 45 a Z M Nogales SonoraThird Military Region III Region militar HQ in Mazatlan SinaloaCovers the states of Sinaloa and Durango 9th Military Zone 9 a Z M Culiacan Sinaloa10th Military Zone 10 a Z M Durango DurangoFourth Military Region IV Region militar HQ in Monterrey Nuevo LeonCovers the states of Nuevo Leon San Luis Potosi and Tamaulipas 7th Military Zone 7 a Z M Apodaca Nuevo Leon8th Military Zone 8 a Z M Reynosa Tamaulipas12th Military Zone 12 a Z M San Luis Potosi San Luis Potosi48th Military Zone 48 a Z M Ciudad Victoria TamaulipasFifth Military Region V Region militar HQ in Guadalajara JaliscoCovers the states of Aguascalientes Colima Jalisco Nayarit and Zacatecas 11th Military Zone 11 a Z M Guadalupe Zacatecas13th Military Zone 13 a Z M Tepic Nayarit14th Military Zone 14 a Z M Aguascalientes Aguascalientes15th Military Zone 15 a Z M Zapopan Jalisco20th Military Zone 20 a Z M Colima Colima41st Military Zone 41 a Z M Puerto Vallarta JaliscoSixth Military Region VI Region militar HQ in Veracruz VeracruzCovers the states of Puebla Tlaxcala and Veracruz 19th Military Zone 19 a Z M Tuxpan Veracruz23rd Military Zone 23 a Z M Panotla Tlaxcala25th Military Zone 25 a Z M Puebla Puebla26th Military Zone 26 a Z M Lencero Veracruz29th Military Zone 29 a Z M Minatitlan VeracruzSeventh Military Region VII Region militar HQ in Tuxtla Gutierrez ChiapasCovers the states of Chiapas and Tabasco 30th Military Zone 30 a Z M Villahermosa Tabasco31st Military Zone 31 a Z M Rancho Nuevo Chiapas36th Military Zone 36 a Z M Tapachula Chiapas38th Military Zone 38 a Z M Tenosique Tabasco39th Military Zone 39 a Z M Ocosingo ChiapasEighth Military Region VIII Region militar HQ in Ixcotel OaxacaCovers the state of Oaxaca 28th Military Zone 28 a Z M Ixcotel Oaxaca44th Military Zone 44 a Z M Miahuatlan Oaxaca46th Military Zone 46 a Z M Ixtepec OaxacaNinth Military Region IX Region militar HQ in Chilpancingo GuerreroCovers the state of Guerrero 27th Military Zone 27 a Z M Pie de la Cuesta Guerrero35th Military Zone 35 a Z M Chilpancingo GuerreroTenth Military Region X Region militar HQ in Merida YucatanCovers the states of Campeche Quintana Roo and Yucatan 32nd Military Zone 32 a Z M Valladolid Yucatan33rd Military Zone 33 a Z M Campeche Campeche34th Military Zone 34 a Z M Chetumal Quintana RooEleventh Military Region XI Region militar HQ in Torreon CoahuilaCovers the states of Chihuahua and Coahuila 5th Military Zone 5 a Z M Chihuahua Chihuahua6th Military Zone 6 a Z M Saltillo Coahuila42nd Military Zone 42 a Z M Hidalgo del Parral Chihuahua47th Military Zone 47 a Z M Piedras Negras CoahuilaTwelfth Military Region XII Region militar HQ in Irapuato GuanajuatoCovers the states of Guanajuato Michoacan and Queretaro 16th Military Zone 16 a Z M Sarabia Guanajuato17th Military Zone 17 a Z M Queretaro Queretaro21st Military Zone 21 a Z M Morelia Michoacan43rd Military Zone 43 a Z M Apatzingan MichoacanThe commanding officer of a military zone has as at the least an independent infantry battalion under his jurisdiction but also takes operational control of units deployed to his MZ area of responsibility Force strength varies greatly from a single infantry battalion in the 3rd Military Zone covering the relatively peaceful area of Baja California Sur 29 to over 10 infantry battalions separate infantry companies and motorized cavalry regiments plus additional conventional and SF units on rotation in the 9th Military Zone covering the state of Sinaloa 30 where government troops are fighting the eponymous drug cartel The Mexican Air Force which is an independent military service under the SEDENA has its own territorial organization separate from that of the Mexican Army It has four air force regions Northwest Region Aerea del Noroeste HQ in Hermosillo Sonora Northeast Region Aerea del Noreste HQ in Chihuahua Chihuahua Central Region Aerea del Centro HQ at Santa Lucia AFB Estado de Mexico and the Southeast Air Force Region Region Aerea del Sureste HQ at Tuxtla Gutierrez Chiapas Each new commanding officer of an air force region enters the appointment as a Wing General Pilot Aviator of the Air Force Staff General de Ala Piloto Aviador Diplomado de Estado Mayor Aereo a two star general and midway through his term he is promoted to a Division General Pilot Aviator of the Air Force Staff General de Division Piloto Aviador Diplomado de Estado Mayor Aereo a three star general 31 A similar territorial organization is also implemented in the Mexican Navy with Naval Regions and Naval Zones as counterparts to the army territorial organization 32 Tactical units Edit Mexican Paratroopers March 2009 Separate from the military regions and zones are an increasing number of brigades and some independent regiments and infantry battalions These brigades are grouped into four corps 1st Army Corps 1er Cuerpo de Ejercito ICE based in and around Mexico City and its metropolitan area The corps consists of the 1st Armored Brigade the 1st 2nd and 3rd Separate Infantry Brigades and the army s sole 1st Combat Engineer Brigade 33 Additionally 3 armored brigades 2nd 3rd and 4th and 3 light infantry brigades 4th 5th and 6th separate from the 1st Army Corps but based in the same area close to the capital complete the Mexican Army s maneuver formations Special Forces Corps Cuerpo de Fuerzas Especiales HQ training center and the bulk of special forces battalions are based in Temamatla in the State of Mexico The corps has 3 SF brigades headquartered in Puebla Puebla 1st Tijuana Baja California 2nd and Ixtepec Oaxaca 3rd and the SF battalions are re assigned between them as per operational requirements Military Police Corps Cuerpo de Policia Militar the corps has previously been used to augment the internal security initiatives of the government in the combat against the drug cartels and military police brigades as well as individual personnel have been transferred in the past to the newly formed and consequently defunct Federal Police supplemented by its Gendarmerie Division also defunct New MP brigades were later formed to make up for the ones that were transferred The administration of President Enrique Pena Nieto set the ambitious plan for the expansion of the Military Police from 3 to 12 MP brigades one for each military region 34 By the end of his term there were ten active military police brigades 1st Military Police Brigade 1 a Brigada de Policia Militar Campo Militar 1 A Mexico City 2nd Military Police Brigade 2 a Brigada de Policia Militar Air Base Nr 1 Santa Lucia Tecamac State of Mexico 35 3 a Brigada de Policia Militar El Sauz Sinaloa 36 4 a Brigada de Policia Militar General Escobedo Nuevo Leon 37 5 a Brigada de Policia Militar San Miguel de los Jagueyes State of Mexico 38 6 a Brigada de Policia Militar Puebla Puebla 39 7 a Brigada de Policia Militar Tuxtla Gutierrez Chiapas 40 10 a Brigada de Policia Militar Isla Mujeres Quintana Roo 41 11 a Brigada de Policia Militar San Pedro de las Colonias Coahuila 42 12 a Brigada de Policia Militar Irapuato Guanajuato 43 44 Each MP brigade has three line military police battalions sing Batallon de Policia Militar and one special operations military police battalion Batallon de Operaciones Especiales de Policia Militar equipped with Plasan Sand Cat tactical armored cars plus support units Special Operations MP Bns carry the number of their parent brigade line MP Bns are numbered in sequence starting from 1st 2nd and 3rd in the 1st MP Brigade 4th 5th and 6th in the 2nd MP Bde etc up to 34th 35th and 36th in the 12th Military Police Brigade with battalion numbers 22nd 27th retained for the non active 8th and 9th MP Brigades The MPC s involvement in the internal security policies is also present with the Federal Police s successor agency the National Guard In 2020 the NG had a strength of ca 80 000 personnel 45 and in 2021 this number has increased to 102 000 with a goal set at 150 000 46 This rapid increase capitalizes heavily on the resources of the military According to the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Transparencia 31 431 former Army and 6 337 former Navy military police personnel joined the National Guard Its 8 training centers Centros de Adiestramiento are located in and rely on the resources of the army military police installations two one main and one NCO training centers are located at the Campo Militar 37 C in San Miguel de los Jagueyes Municipality of Huehuetoca State of Mexico at the base of the 5th Military Police Brigade The other six training centers are located at the military police bases in Sauz Sinaloa 3rd MP Bde San Pedro de las Colonias Coahuila 11th MP Bde Apodaca Nuevo Leon 4th MP Bde Puebla 6th MP Bde Irapuato 12th MP Bde and Isla Mujeres 10th MP Bde The main reasoning behind the formation of the National Guard was to reduce the involvement of the military in the Mexican drug war but the implementation has negated that to a great extend with the NG relying heavily on the military for staffing training 47 basing and operational control On the latter point the NG s units are called Battalions Type B sing Batallon Tipo B 48 to distinguish them from the regular infantry and MP battalions of the Mexican Army all 85 Battalions Type B are based in army bases and are assigned to the 12 military regions of the Army 49 Presidential Guard Corps Cuerpo de Guardias Presidenciales the special department of the President s Office the Estado Mayor Presidencial used to command the Army Air Force and Navy assets tasked with the security land and air transport and the logistical requirements of the Office As one of his first political initiatives upon entering the Presidency Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has put to vote in the Mexican Senate the disbanding of the EMP The vote passed and the department was dismantled at the end of 2018 At that time it included 6 026 servicemen and women from the three armed services organised into Staff Estado Mayor Presidential Guard Corps Cuerpo de Guardias Presidenciales Headquarters Cuartel General 6 presidential guard battalions 1 er 6 o Batallon de Guardias Presidenciales 1st Transport Battalion 1 er Batallon de Transportes 1st Supply Company 1 a Compania de Intendencia 24th Presidential Guard Marine Infantry Battalion 24 o Batallon de Infanteria de Marina de Guardias Presidenciales as the single Department of the Navy asset in the EMP and infantry oriented the 24 o BIMGP was attached to the CGP 1st Mounted Cavalry Group 1 er Grupo de Caballeria Montado Honor Guard Cavalry Squadron Escuadron de Caballeria de Honores Horse Artillery Battery Bateria Hipomovil 1st Combat Engineer Company 1 a Compania de Ingenieros de Combate Honor Guard Artillery Battery Bateria de Artilleria de Honores Music Band Banda de Musica General Coordination Department of the Presidential Transport Aircraft Coordinacion General de Transportes Aereos Presidenciales a staff department part of the Staff mentioned above Presidential Transport Air Group Grupo Aereo de Transportes Presidenciales since the disbanding of the EMP the Coordinacion General has been closed down too and the GATP became the 6th Air Group of the Mexican Air Force After the closure of the EMP the servicemen and women have lost their special status of personnel distinct from the three services and were integrated back into the Army Air Force and Navy Government plans call for the transformation of the Presidential Guard Corps into two military police brigades 50 Distinct from the brigade formations are independent regiments all regiments are battalion sized and battalions assigned to zonal garrisons Groups are company sized units The different types of units of the Mexican Army follow a sequential listing starting from 1 onwards They include the following 51 110 infantry battalions sing Batallon de infanteria with more being planned for activation 110 is the total quantity of infantry battalions assigned to military zones and assigned to brigades 24 separate infantry companies sing Compania de infanteria no encuadrada 3 parachute rifle battalions sing Batallon de fusileros paracaidistas 1st Batallon is part of the Army 2nd and 3rd formally belong to the Air Force 25 motorized cavalry regiments sing Regimiento de caballeria motorizado 9 armored reconnaissance regiments sing Regimiento blindado de reconocimiento 8 mechanized regiments sing Regimiento mecanizado 9 artillery regiments sing Regimiento de artilleria 8 mortar group of caliber 81 mm sing Grupo de morteros de calibre 81 mm 6 recoil less rifle groups of caliber 106 mm sing Grupo de canones sin retroceso de calibre 106 mm combat engineer battalions sing Batallon de ingenieros de combate sources which have reported previously small numbers of the quantity of combat engineer battalions in the Mexican Army are outdated as official statements by the government report 8 combat engineer battalions deployed from the Mexican Army and Air Force deployed to the states of Baja California Sur Chiapas Ciudad de Mexico Estado de Mexico Guerrero Jalisco Veracruz and Yucatan in the summer of 2021 to deal with the aftermath of torrential rains and hurricanes 52 Infantry battalions are small each of approximately 400 troops and are generally deployed in each zone Certain zones are also assigned a light armored cavalry regiment mechanized infantry regiment or one of the 24 field artillery regiments and 10 field artillery battalions Smaller detachments are often detailed to patrol more inaccessible areas of the countryside helping to maintain order and resolve disputes Other than the Special Forces and the Military Police Brigades the Mexican Army includes the following combat brigades armored four Armored Brigades sing Brigada blindada each composed of two armored reconnaissance regiments two mechanized regiments and smaller support units A ninth armored reconnaissance regiment under the Army HQ functions as the training unit 1st Armored Brigade 1 a Brigada Blindada Temamatla Teotihuacan State of Mexico brigade patch shows the formation belongs to the 1st Army Corps 1 er Cuerpo de ejercito ICE 53 2nd Armored Brigade 2 a Brigada Blindada Queretaro City Queretaro directly subordinated to Army HQ 3rd Armored Brigade 3 a Brigada Blindada Puebla city Puebla directly subordinated to Army HQ 4th Armored Brigade 4 a Brigada Blindada Villagran Sarabia Guanajuato directly subordinated to Army HQ infantry three separate infantry brigades under 1st Army Corps and three light infantry brigades directly under army HQ Each brigade has three infantry battalions The light brigades lack the organic artillery and engineer units of the separate brigades 1st Separate Infantry Brigade 1 a Brigada de Infanteria Independiente Colonia Santa Teresa State of Mexico 2nd Separate Infantry Brigade 2 a Brigada de Infanteria Independiente Campo Militar No 1 Mexico City 3rd Separate Infantry Brigade 3 a Brigada de Infanteria Independiente Campo Militar No 1 Mexico City 4th Light Infantry Brigade 4 a Brigada de Infanteria Ligera Irapuato Guanajuato 5th Light Infantry Brigade 5 a Brigada de Infanteria Ligera Ixcotel Oaxaca 6th Light Infantry Brigade 6 a Brigada de Infanteria Ligera Campo Militar No 1 Mexico City airborne Parachute Rifle Brigade Brigada de Fusileros Paracaidistas Campo Militar No 1 Mexico City directly subordinated to Army HQ engineers 1st Combat Engineer Brigade 1 a Brigada de Ingenieros de Combate Campo Militar No 1 Mexico City subordinated to the 1st Army Corps Special Forces Corps Edit The Army has a Special Forces Corps unified command with 3 Special Forces Brigades a High Command GAFE group a GAFE group assigned to the Airborne Brigade 74 independent Special Forces Battalions and 36 Amphibious Special Forces Groups The Special Forces Brigades consist of nine SF battalions The 1st Brigade has the 1st 2nd and 3rd Battalions the 2nd Brigade has the 5th 6th 7th and 8th Battalions and the 3rd Brigade has the 4th and 9th Battalions and a Rapid Intervention Force group The High Command GAFE is a group with no more than 100 members and is specially trained in counter terrorist tactics They receive orders directly from the President of Mexico The Amphibious Special Forces Groups are trained in amphibious warfare they give the army extended abilities in riverline and coastal operations in peacetime and in war Special Operations Forces Edit Name Headquarters Structure and purposeCuerpo de Fuerzas Especiales Special Forces Corps ClassifiedGrupo Aeromovil de Fuerzas Especiales del Alto Mando High Command Airmobil Group Special Forces ClassifiedGrupos Anfibios de Fuerzas Especiales Amphibious Special Forces Group ClassifiedEstado Mayor Presidencial Edit Seal of the Estado Mayor Presidencial The Estado Mayor Presidencial Presidential Guard was a specific agency of the Mexican Army that is responsible for the safety and well being of the President in the practice of all of the activities of his office On 24 March 1985 President Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado reformed the regulation of the presidential guard and published it in the Official Gazette of the Federation Diario Oficial de la Federacion on 4 April 1986 In this version the responsibilities of this agency included assisting the President in obtaining general information planning the President s activities under security and preventive measures for his safety This regulation was in force during the administrations of Carlos Salinas de Gortari and Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Leon On 16 January 2004 during the administration of President Vicente Fox Quesada a new regulation of the Presidential Guard was issued and published by the Official Gazette of the Federation on 23 January of that same year This ordinance updated the structure organization and operation of the Presidential guard as a technical military body and administrative unit of the Presidency to facilitate the implementation of the powers of his office 54 55 The EMP was dissolved in 2018 and its military arm the Presidential Guards Corps has had its command becoming a joint service formation with its units coming under the collective responsibility of the Secretariats of National Defense Security and the Navy its three Army infantry battalions now converted into military police battalions as part of now two military police brigades under the revived National Guard Paratrooper Corps Edit Brigada de Fusileros Paracaidistas Parachute Rifle Brigade is a three battalion paratrooper unit created in 1969 within the Mexican Army but utilizing aircraft from the Air Force Its headquarters is in Mexico City and its training takes place in the Centro de Adiestramiento de Paracaidismo Airborne Training Center A battalion can be deployed rapidly to any part of the country Ranks EditMain article Military ranks of Mexico Commissioned officer ranks Edit The rank insignia of commissioned officers Rank group General flag officers Senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet Mexican Army 56 vte Secretario de la defensa nacional General de division General de brigada General brigadier Coronel Teniente coronel Mayor Capitan primero Capitan segundo Teniente SubtenienteOther ranks Edit The rank insignia of non commissioned officers and enlisted personnel Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted Mexican Army 56 vte Sargento primero Sargento segundo Cabo Soldado de primera SoldadoMilitary industry Edit Mexican Army band playing A Mexican Army Mi 26 heavy transport helicopter Mexican army Humvee on 16 September 2007 parade Since the start of the 21st century the Army has been steadily modernising to become competitive with the armies of other American countries 57 and have also taken certain steps to decrease spending and dependency on foreign equipment in order to become more autonomous such as the domestic production of the FX 05 rifle designed in Mexico and the commitment to researching designing and manufacturing domestic military systems such as military electronics and body armor 58 The Mexican military counts on three of the following departments to fulfill the general tasks of the Army and Air Force 59 Direccion General de Industria Militar D G I M In charge of the designing manufacturing and maintenance of vehicles and weapons such as the assembly of the FX 05 assault rifle and the DN series armored vehicles On 19 July 2009 SEDENA spent 488 million pesos 37 million U S to transfer technology to manufacture the G36V German made rifle Although it is not known if this will be manufactured as a cheaper alternative to the FX 05 meant for the army or if it is to be manufactured for military police and other law enforcement agencies such as the Federal Police The FX 05 is planned to become the new standard rifle for the armed forces replacing the Heckler amp Koch G3 so it is not yet clear what the G 36 rifles will be used for 60 As of 2011 D G I M is in charge of assembling the Oshkosh SandCat the modified Mexican Army version of the Sandcat is named as the DN XI and will be presented in the Mexican Independence Day parade in September 2012 61 62 Direccion General de Fabricas de Vestuario y Equipo D G FA V E General Directorate of Clothing and Equipment Manufacturing Since its creation the department has grown from a simple clothing factory to an Industrial complex in charge of the supply and design of the Army Air Force s uniform shoes boots combat helmet and ballistic vest Until the mid 2000s the Mexican army s standard combat uniform color was olive green The army then switched to all woodland camouflage and Desert Camouflage Uniform In July 2008 the D G FA V E announced plans for creating the country s first digital uniforms which would consist of Woodland jungle and Desert camouflage these uniforms entered service in 2009 63 Granjas Militares Military farms In charge of Agriculture crop cultivation is a necessity to maintain the health and economy of the Army Air Force The Mexican Army has four established SEDENA farms 64 Granja SEDENA number 1 San Juan del Rio Queretaro Granja SEDENA number 2 Ixtepec Oaxaca Granja SEDENA number 3 Sarabia Guanajuato Granja SEDENA number 4 La Fuente Aguascalientes Equipment Edit New Mexican army uniform Vehicles Edit Mexican Army ERC 90 F1 Lynx during the Independence day Parade VCR TT 6X6 APC on Madero Street in downtown Mexico City after Independence Day celebrations Mexican cavalry Mexican Army vehicle inventory Vehicle System Type Versions Origin QuantityArmored fighting vehiclesPanhard ERC 90 Reconnaissance vehicle ERC 90 F1 Lynx Armed with 90mm F1 Cannon France 120 in active service 105 to be upgraded 2 DN V Bufalo Self propelled artillery Armed with 75mm M8 Howitzer Mexico Unknown quantity in active serviceDN Mortar Carrier Mortar carrier Armed with 81mm Mortar Mexico Unknown quantity in active serviceM8 Greyhound Armoured car Small numbers modernized with a 20mm Cannon Installed United States Less than 10 in active service all modernizedDN IV Caballo Reconnaissance vehicle Armed with 20mm Automatic Cannon Mexico Very few in active serviceDN 3 Reconnaissance vehicle Armed with 25mm Automatic Cannon Mexico Very few in active serviceDN V Toro Reconnaissance vehicle Armed with 20mm Automatic Cannon Mexico 70 in active serviceMax Mex 1 Armoured car Armed With 20mm Automatic Cannon United StatesMexico Around 20 25 in active serviceSedena 8x8 Vehicle Infantry fighting vehicle Armed with possibly a 40mm Cannon but Unknown type of Cannon Mexico 1 prototype in active service possible in production Sedena Henschel HWK 13 Infantry fighting vehicle HWK 13 IFV Armed with 20mm Automatic Cannon MexicoGermany In service unknown quantitySedena Henschel HWK 11 Armored personnel carrier HWK 11 APC Version Armed With one 7 62mm Machine Gun All Modernized MexicoGermany 52 in active service including 12 delivered from Germany in 1964 AMX VCI Armored personnel carrier DNC 1 upgraded by SEDENA armed with 20mm Cannon FranceUpgraded by Mexico 409 in active servicePanhard VCR 65 Armored personnel carrier VCR TT Armed with M2 Browning 12 7mm Machine Gun France 46 in active serviceDNC 2 Armored personnel carrier Armed with one 7 62mm Machine Gun Mexico Unknown quantity in active service still in production El Cimarron Armored personnel carrier Armed with M2 Browning 12 7mm Machine Gun Mexico Unknown quantity in active service but in productionVehicule Blinde Leger Scout car VBL MILAN France 1 231 in active serviceOshkosh Sand Cat 66 Light armored vehicle Sand Cat 245 Sandcats were delivered and have Type IV level Armored protection 67 IsraelUnited States 245 in active serviceDN XI Light armored vehicle The DN XI is a Mexican designed armored van based on a Ford truck chassis 100 on order 68 1 000 to be acquired by 2018 Armed with M2 Browning 12 7mm Machine Gun or 40mm Automatic Grenade Launcher 69 Mexico 1 000 in active service still in productionDN VI Reconnaissance vehicle Armed with one 7 62mm Machine Gun Mexico Unknown but few in active serviceHumvee 70 Military light utility vehicle Armoured car HMMWV Armored Car Versions are armed with single M2 Browning 12 7mm Machine Gun or 40mm Automatic Grenade Launcher United States 3 335 order in 2014 2 200 order more in 2016 5 535 in active service including light utility and armored car versions Infantry transport vehiclesChevrolet Silverado Pickup truck GMT900 United StatesMexico In serviceFord F Series Pickup truck F 150 United StatesMexico In serviceDodge Ram Pickup truck Variants of 4x4 and 6x6 United States In serviceYamaha Rhino Utility terrain vehicle Rhino Japan In serviceChevrolet Cheyenne Pickup truck GMT K2XX United States In serviceTrucksM520 Goer Heavy tactical truck M520 United States In serviceFreightliner Trucks Truck M2 United States In serviceM35 2 1 2 ton cargo truck Military truck M35 United States In serviceDINA S A Trucks S Series D Series Mexico In serviceMercedes Benz Truck L Series Germany In serviceChevrolet Truck Kodiak United States In serviceFreightliner Trucks Satellite communications truck Intelligence United States In serviceInfantry weapons Edit FX 05 Xiuhcoatl Fire Serpent assault rifle G3A3 battle rifle MP5 P7M13 PSG1 Inventory Name Caliber Type OriginHeckler amp Koch G3 7 62 51mm NATO Battle rifle Made under license from Heckler amp Koch being replaced by the FX 05 Xiuhcoatl Rifle GermanyFX 05 Xiuhcoatl 5 56 45mm NATO Assault rifle Carbine short carbine rifle and light machine gun depending on version this rifle is the standard Mexican Army service rifle MexicoHeckler amp Koch HK33 5 56 45mm NATO Assault rifle Made under license from Heckler amp Koch GermanyM4 carbine 5 56 45mm NATO Assault rifle and carbine rifle United StatesHeckler amp Koch MP5 9 19mm Parabellum Submachine gun Made under license from Heckler amp Koch GermanyFN P90 5 7 28mm Personal defence weapon 71 BelgiumMendoza HM 3 9x19mm Parabellum and 380 ACP Submachine gun made and designed in Mexico by Productos Mendoza MexicoM1911 45 ACP Semi automatic pistol United StatesMexicoHeckler amp Koch P7 9 19mm Parabellum Semi automatic pistol Made under license from Heckler amp Koch GermanySig Sauer P226 9x19mm Parabellum Semi automatic pistol SwitzerlandBeretta 92FS 9 19mm Parabellum Semi automatic pistol ItalyFN Five seveN 5 7 28mm Semi automatic pistol BelgiumHK PSG1 Morelos Bicentenario 7 62 51mm NATO Sniper rifle Made under license from Heckler amp Koch GermanyBarrett M82 50 BMG Anti material rifle United StatesM249 5 56x45mm NATO Light machine gun United StatesFN Minimi 5 56 45mm NATO Light machine gun BelgiumHeckler amp Koch HK21 7 62 51mm NATO General purpose machine gun Made under license from Heckler amp Koch GermanyRheinmetall MG 3 7 62 51mm NATO General purpose machine gun Made under license from Rheinmetall GermanyM2 Browning machine gun 50 BMG Heavy machine gun United StatesM 134 minigun 7 62 51mm NATO Rotary machinegun United StatesMk 19 40 53mm Automatic grenade launcher United StatesMilkor MGL 40 46mm Grenade launcher South AfricaM203 grenade launcher 40 46mm Grenade launcher United StatesHeckler amp Koch AG C GLM 40 46mm Grenade launcher GermanyM67 grenade 64mm Hand grenade United StatesMondragon F 08 7 57mm Mauser Semi automatic rifle used for ceremonial occasions now being retired MexicoWinchester Model 54 7 62 51mm Bolt action rifle used for ceremonial occasions United StatesCornerShot Weapon accessory IsraelUnited StatesRemington 870 12 gauge Gauge pump action shotgun used by Army police United StatesArtillery Edit Name Type Versions Origin StatusSelf propelled artillerySDN Humvee Tank destroyer mounted on Humvee chassis 106mm Mexico In serviceArtilleryM101 Howitzer Towed howitzer 105mm United States In serviceOTO Melara Mod 56 Howitzer Towed howitzer 105mm Italy In serviceM90 Norinco Towed howitzer 105mm People s Republic of China In serviceM 56 Towed Howitzer 105mm Serbia In serviceM198 Howitzer Towed howitzer 155mm United States In serviceTRF1 Towed howitzer 155mm France In serviceM114 Towed howitzer 155mm United States In serviceM8 Howitzer Howitzer 75mm United StatesMexico In serviceMortier 120mm Raye Tracte Modele F1 Heavy mortar 120mm France In serviceK6 Heavy mortar 120mm Israel In serviceM30 mortar Heavy mortar 106mm United States In serviceM29 mortar Medium mortar 81mm United States In serviceM1 mortar Medium mortar 81mm United States In serviceMortero 81 Medium mortar 81mm Mexico In serviceBrandt 60 mm LR Gun mortar Light mortar 60mm France In serviceM2 mortar Light mortar 60mm United States In serviceM19 Light mortar 60mm United States In serviceMortero 60 Light mortar 60mm Mexico In serviceBofors L70 Anti aircraft autocannon 40mm Sweden In serviceOerlikon 35mm twin cannon Anti aircraft autocannon 35mm Switzerland In service2A45 Sprut Anti tank gun 125mm Russian Federation In serviceAnti armor weapons Edit RPG 29 Rocket propelled grenade MILAN Name Type Versions Origin InformationAnti tank weaponsCarl Gustaf 8 4cm recoilless rifle Multi role recoilless rifle 84mm Sweden In serviceRPG 7 Anti tank rocket Depends on Warhead Russia In serviceSMAW Anti tank rocket 105mm United States In serviceRPG 29 72 Anti tank rocket 105mm RussiaMexico Locally produced in Mexico by Sedena in serviceAnti armor recoilless riflesM40 106 mm recoilless rifle Recoilless rifle 106mm United States Mounted on Humvees in serviceAnti tank guided missilesMILAN Anti tank guided missile France Mounted on VBL vehicles in serviceSee also EditMexican Navy Mexican Air ForceFurther reading EditColonial era Edit Archer Christon I The Army in Bourbon Mexico 1760 1810 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1977 Archer Christon I The Officer Corps in New Spain the Martial Career 1759 1821 Jahrbuch fur Geschicte von Staat Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft Lateinamerikas 19 1982 McAlister Lyle The Fuero Militar in New Spain 1764 1800 Gainesville University of Florida Press 1957 Post Independence Edit Camp Roderic Ai Generals in the Palacio The Military in Modern Mexico New York Oxford University Press 1992 Diaz Diaz Fernando Caudillos y caciques Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna y Juan Alvarez Mexico City El Colegio de Mexico 1972 Fowler Will Military Political Identity and Reformism in Independent Mexico An Analysis of the Memorias de Guerra 1821 1855 London Institute of Latin American Studies 1996 Lieuwen Edwin Mexican Militarism The Political Rise and Fall of the Revolutionary Army Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1968 Neufeld Stephen B The Blood Contingent The Military and the Making of Modern Mexico 1876 1911 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2017 Ronfeldt David editor The Modern Mexican Military A Reassessment La Jolla Center for U S Mexican Studies University of California San Diego 1984 Serrano Monica The Armed Branch of the State Civil Military Relations in Mexico Journal of Latin American Studies 27 1995 Vanderwood Paul Disorder and Progress Bandits Police and Mexican Development Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1981 Wager J Stephen The Mexican Military Approaches to the 21st Century Coping with a New World Order Carlisle PA Strategic Studies Institute U S Army War College 1994 References Edit 19 de febrero Dia del Ejercito Mexicano Archived 1 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Sola Bertha Dia de los Ninos Heroes Archived 21 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish esmas com Pohl John M D 1991 Aztec Mixtec and Zapotec Armies p 9 ISBN 1 85532 159 9 Los Origenes in Spanish Secretaria De La Defensa Nacional Archived from the original on 13 May 2007 Retrieved 25 May 2009 Bueno Jose Maria 1983 Tropas Virreynales 1 Nueva Espana Yucatan Y Luisiana pp 62 63 ISBN 84 398 0086 X Chartrand Rene 2011 The Spanish Army in North America 1700 1793 p 11 ISBN 978 1 84908 597 7 Bueno Jose Maria 1983 Tropas Virreynales 1 Nueva Espana Yucatan Y Luisiana pp 35 amp 38 ISBN 84 398 0086 X Michele Cunningham Mexico and the Foreign Policy of Napoleon III 2001 Rene Chartrand page 9 The Mexican Adventure 1861 67 ISBN 1 85532 430 X Chartrand Rene 1994 The Mexican Adventure 1861 67 pp 18 and 23 ISBN 1 85532 430 X Rene Chartrand page 11 The Mexican Adventure 1861 67 ISBN 1 85532 430 X a b c Knight Alan 1986 The Mexican Revolution Volume 1 p 18 ISBN 0 8032 7770 9 Meyer Michael C 2000 The Oxford History of Mexico pp 409 410 ISBN 0 19 511228 8 John Keegan pages 470 471 World Armies ISBN 0 333 17236 1 By 1910 the average Federal army general was aged in his 70s Meyer Michael C 2000 The Oxford History of Mexico pp 405 406 ISBN 0 19 511228 8 Knight Alan 1986 The Mexican Revolution Volume 1 p 17 ISBN 0 8032 7770 9 P Jowett amp A de Quesada pages 27 28 The Mexican Revolution 1910 20 ISBN 1 84176 989 4 Knight Alan 1986 The Mexican Revolution Volume 1 pp 18 19 ISBN 0 8032 7770 9 Meyer Michael C 2000 The Oxford History of Mexico pp 450 451 ISBN 0 19 511228 8 English Adrian J 1984 Armed Forces of Latin America p 308 ISBN 0 7106 0321 5 English Adrian J 1984 Armed Forces of Latin America p 309 ISBN 0 7106 0321 5 English Adrian J 1984 Armed Forces of Latin America pp 308 309 ISBN 0 7106 0321 5 John Keegan page 471 World Armies ISBN 0 333 17236 1 Mexican government sends 6 500 to state scarred by drug violence International Herald Tribune 11 December 2002 Archived from the original on 7 March 2009 Retrieved 30 January 2010 Mexican Military Gets an Upgrade in Pay and Combat Support Mexico News Travel Culture Economy Archived from the original on 7 March 2011 Retrieved 16 March 2011 Mexico PDF Archived PDF from the original on 7 August 2010 Retrieved 10 July 2010 Mexican military zones Official government portal a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link 3 Zona Militar WhoWasInCommand 9 Zona Militar WhoWasInCommand Mexican Air Force Regions Official government portal a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Naval Commands Directory Official government portal a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Lista de Batallones de Infanteria en Mexico Pagina 2 Defensa com 9 August 2018 Lanzagranadas para la Policia Militar del Ejercito mexicano Noticias Defensa Mexico Defensa com in Spanish Retrieved 11 August 2021 La Jornada Policia Militar aprende derechos humanos sera Guardia Nacional 28 April 2019 Pena Nieto inaugura la Base Militar el Sauz 28 November 2018 Llega nuevo mando castrense a la Cuarta Region Militar Gobierno del Estado de Nuevo Leon Sedena cumple el sueno de una nina Realizan nuevos nombramientos en la 25 Zona Militar Noticias de Hoy Puebla Contraparte Periodismo en Equilibrio Nombran a coordinador de la Guardia Nacional Diversas intervenciones Inauguracion de la 10 a Brigada de Policia Militar y Unidad Habitacional y Campus Cancun de la Universidad de QR Presidencia de la Republica EPN Gobierno gob mx Inauguracion de las instalaciones de la 11 A brigada de Policia Militar December 2017 Inauguran Brigada de Policia Militar y unidad habitacional en Irapuato Gto 10 July 2018 Pena Nieto inaugura las instalaciones de la 12ª Brigada de Policia Militar Presidente inaugura instalaciones de la Guardia Nacional reafirma confianza en Fuerzas Armadas para pacificar al pais AMLO in Spanish Retrieved 11 August 2021 Guardia Nacional tendra ocho Centros de Adiestramiento Excelsior in Spanish 8 July 2021 Retrieved 11 August 2021 La Guardia Nacional formaliza su incorporacion a la Sedena ADNPolitico in Spanish 16 October 2020 Retrieved 11 August 2021 Asi estaran conformados los batallones de la Guardia Nacional Excelsior in Spanish 1 March 2019 Retrieved 11 August 2021 Barragan Almudena 17 June 2021 La Guardia Nacional el Frankenstein de la seguridad en Mexico que aspira a formar parte del Ejercito EL PAIS in Mexican Spanish Retrieved 11 August 2021 Jorge Alejandro Medellin 19 de agosto de 2018 19 August 2018 Proyectan convertir al Cuerpo de Guardias Presidenciales de Mexico en Policia Militar noticia defensa com Noticias Defensa Mexico Defensa com Retrieved 20 November 2021 Quieren los padres revisar cuarteles mas alla de Iguala www milenio com in Mexican Spanish Retrieved 11 August 2021 El Ejercito Mexicano cuenta con 8 Batallones de Ingenieros de Combate para aplicar el Plan DN III E Secretaria de la Defensa Nacional Gobierno gob mx John Pike 1 January 1970 Mexican Army First Army Corps Primer Cuerpo del Ejercito ICE Globalsecurity org Retrieved 20 November 2021 Estado Mayor Presidencial Presidencia gob mx Archived from the original on 16 July 2010 Retrieved 10 July 2010 Mexico Presidencia de la Republica Estado Mayor Presidencial Presidencia gob mx Archived from the original on 27 March 2010 Retrieved 10 July 2010 a b Secretary of National Defense 27 June 2019 Manual grafico para el uso de Uniformes Divisas y Equipo del Ejercito y F A M Graphic manual for the use of Uniforms Badges and Equipment of the Army and Air Force PDF in Spanish Retrieved 22 May 2021 La Jornada Equipo y materiales del Ejercito obsoletos advierte el general Galvan Archived from the original on 24 December 2014 Retrieved 24 December 2014 Secretaria de la Defensa Nacional Sedena gob mx Archived from the original on 21 December 2010 Retrieved 10 July 2010 Secretaria de la Defensa Nacional Sedena gob mx Archived from the original on 15 July 2010 Retrieved 10 July 2010 Alistan compra de 4 Black Hawk para PF El Universal Mexico El Universal 18 July 2009 Archived from the original on 26 August 2009 Retrieved 10 July 2010 Oshkosh Defence delivered multi role vehicle Sandcat to the Mexican Army 0602111 February 2011 army military defense industry news Military army defense industry news year 2011 Armyrecognition com Retrieved 20 November 2021 Foro Modelismo Ver tema Novedades en el Ejercito Mexicano Pase de Revista 2012 Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 13 September 2012 Cambia Ejercito uniformes El Manana Nacional Archived 4 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Secretaria de la Defensa Nacional sedena gob mx Archived from the original on 15 July 2010 Retrieved 14 August 2010 1 Archived 25 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Nuevos Vehiculos Oshkosh Sandcat TPV para el Ejercito Pagina 3 Archived from the original on 8 February 2011 Retrieved 5 February 2011 United Nations Official Document www un org Archived from the original on 9 July 2014 Mexico starts production of first 100 indigenous 4x4 armoured vehicles DN XI Archived 29 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine Armyrecognition com 19 December 2012 Mexico Army funds increase of indigenous MRAP production line Archived 5 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Dmilt com 9 September 2013 grupo reforma Elnorte com 6 April 2010 Retrieved 10 July 2010 Aumentan Vigilancia Durante Desfile Militar El Siglo de Torreon in Spanish 17 October 2008 Archived from the original on 7 March 2012 Retrieved 28 July 2010 RPG 29 Vampir Vampire Archived from the original on 20 March 2015 Retrieved 17 February 2015 External links EditPhotos of the Mexican Army National Marine and Air Force Secretaria de la Defensa Nacional Fabrica de armas y equipos Inventario 2006 Mexican Army Photos Latin American Light Weapons National Inventories Military Territorial Division Mexican Army Oshkosh Sandcat Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mexican Army amp oldid 1142119244, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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