Fentanyl Is Killing More Americans Than Every US War Since Korea — Combined
Fentanyl killed 74,000 Americans in 2024 — more than Korea, Vietnam, Gulf War, Afghanistan, and Iraq combined. The deadliest drug crisis in history, ignored by most of Washington.
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In 2024, fentanyl and synthetic opioids killed approximately 74,000 Americans. That is more than the total US combat deaths in the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, Afghanistan, and Iraq — combined.
It is the most lethal drug crisis in American history. And it has been happening for six years.
Where It Comes From
Virtually all illicit fentanyl in the United States originates from chemical precursors made in China, processed into finished drug in Mexican cartel labs, and transported across the southern border. The pipeline is well-documented. The political response has been fragmented.
Who Is Dying
The face of the fentanyl crisis is not who media coverage suggests. The largest demographic dying is white men aged 25-44, primarily in rural and suburban areas. But the death rate among Black Americans rose 44% between 2020 and 2024 — the fastest-growing segment of the crisis that almost no coverage addresses.
Why It Keeps Getting Worse
Fentanyl is 100 times more potent than morphine. A lethal dose is 2 milligrams — invisible to the naked eye. It is now in 84% of all street drug samples tested in major US cities, including drugs where users have no expectation of encountering it.
“This isn’t a drug problem anymore,” one ER physician told TrendEdge. “This is a mass casualty event happening in slow motion, one person at a time, in every ZIP code in America.”