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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | Opinions | December 2009 

Mexican Drug War Success Hangs on Targeting Overlords
email this pageprint this pageemail usPatrick Corcoran - mexidata.info
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December 28, 2009


Eliminating another bunch of kingpins would surely cause more bloodshed in the near term, but as long as the most famous capos operate with utter impunity, organized crime will remain a grave problem in Mexico.
On Dec. 16, Arturo Beltrán Leyva was killed in a shootout with Mexican marines in Cuernavaca, Mexico, a mid-sized southern city best known as a weekend getaway for wealthy Mexico City denizens. Beltrán Leyva is the first top-level drug trafficker to be killed or captured in Mexico since 2003, when Osiel Cárdenas was arrested by Mexican police.

Insofar as an alleged criminal, largely responsible for the violence plaguing the nation over the past three years, is no longer out and about, Beltrán Leyva's elimination is good news for Mexico and President Felipe Calderón.

But beyond its value as a public relations score – Mexicans finishing up their evening soap operas were alerted to the news within a couple hours of its occurrence, with TV networks running vivid footage of the firefight, Beltrán Leyva’s death is cause for worry, not celebration. Beltrán Leyva was just one of a constellation of capos operating in Mexico, and his death is unlikely to lessen the threat posed by organized crime. As ever, a dozen would-be kingpins are eager to take Beltrán Leyva's place, and his death will have no measurable impact on the flow of cocaine, marijuana, and methamphetamine northward to the United States.

Furthermore, as much as Mexican society cheered a killer’s comeuppance, if history provides any guide, Beltrán Leyva’s death will only spark more violence. His underlings and competitors are going to be gunning for his market share, while his comrades will be looking for vengeance. Such was the case in Tamaulipas after Cárdenas’s arrest; Juárez following the death of Amado Carrillo; Tijuana thanks to the disintegration of the Arellano Félix leadership; and on and on goes the list.

That longtime pattern of retribution tragically reemerged on Dec. 20, when the family of Melquisedet Angulo, the lone marine killed in the Cuernavaca operation, became a target; hours after laying Angulo to rest, his mother and three other family members were murdered while inside of their home in the east coast state of Tabasco.

The same day, gunmen fired upon a handful of municipal and state officials meeting in a restaurant in Piedras Negras, Coahuila (including the mayor of Eagle Pass, Texas, which is right across the border), though no one was hurt. Elsewhere, the Secretary of Tourism in Beltrán Leyva's home state of Sinaloa was murdered along with his driver while riding around the state’s capital. It's not clear if the latter two attacks had anything to do with Beltrán Leyva's death, but at the very least they are a reminder that the worst symptoms of the drug trade go well beyond the existence of one bad guy.

Whether or not there is a broader silver lining to the wave of violence that seems to be in the offing depends a great deal on what happens next. If Calderón and company want this event to be remembered as an important step toward a safer Mexico, rather than the detonator of a new descent into dystopia, they must replicate the successes of the operation.

People often talk about the need for a pact between Mexico’s government and drug-traffickers, such as the one that supposedly held for most of the 1980s and the 90s. Only under such conditions, it is argued, will there be any peace in Mexico's drug trade. Unfortunately, if such an explicit pact ever did exist, it seems impossible to recover today as the industry is far more fragmented than it was two decades ago.

Instead, Calderón (and his successors) needs to aim for a tacit understanding with drug traffickers: arresting those who attack the state and lead multinational operations will be the first priority for the government. Those who keep their operations smaller and less violent have a better chance of avoiding attention and capture.

Such an understanding is impossible as long as people like Beltrán Leyva are caught only once every five years or so. But if Calderón can take down Beltrán Leyva’s counterparts in other organizations, if he can assert Mexico’s ability to dismantle whichever organization poses the biggest threat at any given time, then he encourages Beltrán Leyva’s heirs to adopt a more cautious, defensive modus operandi.

Eliminating another bunch of kingpins would surely cause more bloodshed in the near term (especially if no effort is made to attack their underlying logistical and financial networks at the same time), but as long as the most famous capos operate with utter impunity, organized crime will remain a grave problem in Mexico.

Patrick Corcoran (corcoran25(at)hotmail.com) is a writer who resides in Torreón, Coahuila. He blogs at Gancho.



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