Pubdate: Sat, 25 Jun 2011
Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
Copyright: 2011 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper
Contact:  http://www.chron.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198
Author: Ricardo Ainslie, Houston Chronicle
Note: Ainslie teaches at the University of Texas at Austin and is 
author of the forthcoming "The Savior of Juarez: Mexico at the Time 
of the Great Drug War" (University of Texas Press). He has spent the 
last two years exploring the impact of the violence on Ciudad Juarez, 
as well as interviewing Mexican policymakers, including several 
current and former members of President Felipe Calderon's security 
cabinet.  Last year, Ainslie was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for 
his work on Mexico's war against the drug cartels.

MEXICO WINNING CARTEL WAR

The Mexican government, finally, is gaining the upper hand in a drug 
war that has turned much of the border region and parts of interior 
Mexico into war zones.  President Felipe Calderon's campaign against 
the cartels is now three-and-a-half years old and the death toll is 
nearing 40,000. After a series of visits to Ciudad Juarez, the war's 
epicenter, and interviews with federal law enforcement and 
intelligence officials in Mexico City, I see convincing evidence that 
the government has dramatically weakened the drug cartels, an 
essential step if the country is to restore peace.

The strategy of "disarticulating" the cartels has been largely 
successful. The command-and-control structure of the cartels has been 
decimated and the cartels are severely fractured.  Twenty-one of the 
37 individuals on Mexico's most wanted list have either been 
apprehended or killed. Of the five original cartels, two of them, the 
Juarez Cartel and the Tijuana Cartel, are mere shadows of their once 
powerful selves.  The Gulf Cartel has split into two warring 
factions.  Last week, Mexican federal police captured Jose de Jesus 
Mendez Vargas (better known as El Chango, or The Monkey), the leader 
of La Familia, one of the country's most powerful criminal gangs.  La 
Familia's brutality against its rivals led Calderon to launch his 
crackdown on organized crime.  The Sinaloa Cartel, under the 
leadership of the mythic "El Chapo" Guzman Loera, has always operated 
more as a federation of closely allied organizations with Guzman as 
the figurehead. The Beltran Leyva organization broke off from "El 
Chapo" in 2008 and has been at war with him ever since.  Ignacio 
"Nacho" Coronel, a powerful leader within the Sinaloa Cartel, was 
killed last year and his successor, Martin Beltran Coronel, has been 
arrested. And there is evidence of ruptures between groups in 
Durango, the heart of Guzman's territory.  The cartels have been 
eviscerated by a combination of federal operations and internecine conflict.

A factor making it increasingly difficult for the cartels to operate 
is that they are being hunted by a variety of Mexican military and 
law enforcement agencies.  The Mexican army and marines operate 
independently. The Mexican federal police force has quintupled in 
size to 33,000 officers (and U.S. sources describe their cooperation 
with American law enforcement as unprecedented). Finally, there is 
the smaller Agencia Federal de Investigacion. Each of these entities 
is pursuing the cartels, sometimes collaboratively, sometimes 
independently, and each has taken down important cartel capos.

Another important variable is that it has also become much more 
difficult and costly for cartels to ensure control and protection. 
Prior to 2000, in PRI-controlled, pre-democracy Mexico, what was 
decreed at the top levels of government was enforced all the way down 
to the poorest municipalities. That made corruption 
efficient.  Well-placed bribes at the top controlled everything up 
and down the line.

Today's playing field is much more complex, given that there are so 
many actors. For example, even though the Beltran Leyva cartel was 
paying the head of the organized crime unit in the Mexican Attorney 
General's Office $450,000 a month to provide information about 
investigations and operations, Mexican army special forces arrested 
Alfredo Beltran Leyva in January 2008. His brother, Arturo Beltran 
Leyva was subsequently killed in December 2009 by the Mexican 
marines.  There are simply too many players tracking down the cartels 
and the latter can't pay everyone off. Mexico's fledgling 
democratization has also increased the cartels' cost of doing 
business.  Once a country where a single party controlled everything, 
today Mexico's three most influential political parties control 
governorships and municipalities, making it more cumbersome and 
expensive for the cartels to control local and regional institutions.

Together, the decimation of the cartels, the strengthening of federal 
law enforcement institutions, and Mexico's increasing democratization 
bode well for Mexico's future.  However, for the present, taking down 
cartel operatives and unprecedented seizures of cash, weapons and 
drugs have had no appreciable impact on the one metric that matters 
most to the Mexican public: the level of violence.  The vast majority 
of deaths are due to gang-on-gang disputes related to the local 
retail drug business. This violence is more akin to the Bloods and 
the Crips killing one another off in the streets of South Central 
than it is a cartel war per se. The fracturing of the cartels has 
also resulted in a proliferation of criminal bands engaging in 
ordinary street crime, including the lucrative kidnapping and 
extortion business.  This crime is taking an enormous toll on 
citizens, which is why Calderon's popularity is sagging, 
notwithstanding his government's success against the cartels.

Today, Mexico is actually fighting two different wars: the war 
against the cartels, which is under the purview of federal 
authorities, and an explosion of ordinary street crime, much of which 
is under the purview of state and local police forces.  The Mexican 
government is clearly winning the cartel war; it is local crime that 
has become the country's biggest challenge.  Even as it succeeds in 
dismantling national and transnational drug trafficking networks, 
Mexico will continue to have a significant crime problem until state 
and local law enforcement are strengthened, judicial reforms are 
implemented and the social conditions that are breeding grounds for 
criminality improve.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.