Monday, February 23, 2015

AZMEX SPECIAL 21-2-15

AZMEX SPECIAL 21 FEB 2015


Note: Interesting article from the Guardian. With a good bit of literary license, but seems to be close in several topics. Maps & photos at link.

Comment: Your correspondent spent a few days in Sinaloa shortly after, rpt., after, el chapo was caught. The consensus on the future of the cartel and the drug trade then was much as reflected in the article.


Interesting also is el chapo's lawyers working, so far successfully, to keep him from being extradited to the U.S. Have heard that one of the Mexican govt. favorite tools is to threaten extradition if the subject doesn't play nice. The intent being to control and "tax" the trade. As always, the "taxes" will never make it to the national treasury.

A key point is made about the narco "juniors".

Also the focus on heroin and meth production which has led to dramatically increased consumption in AZ and elsewhere in the U.S. Chemicals necessary for processing continue to arrive from China, by the ton.
Another key point deals with seizures of pot on the way to the U.S. Multiple tons have been picked up just south of the AZ line recently.

For local interest: Nothing has changed. Given the corruption on both sides of the border, getting in the way can be a bad thing.

Thx



Life after El Chapo: kingpin's arrest spells new era in Mexican drug war
The capture last year of Joaquín Guzmán barely seems to have affected the Sinaloa cartel's core business, but behind the scenes trouble may be brewing

Jo Tuckman in Culiacán
Friday 20 February 2015 08.20 EST
Last modified on Friday 20 February 2015 20.05 EST

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/20/mexico-drugs-trade-el-chapo-arrest-joaquin-guzman-sinaloa-cartel

The fortune-teller smiled as she gazed out towards the distant peaks of the Sierra Madre Occidental mountain range.

"The mountains are glowing red and it will be a good harvest," she predicted. The forecast was not based on second sight, however, but on conversations with local farmers looking forward to a bumper crop of marijuana – and the cash bonanza it will bring.

This is Mexico's own golden triangle. Straddling the northern states of Sinaloa, Durango and Chihuahua, the Sierra has been a stronghold of the country's drug trade for as long as anyone can remember. Its deep
canyons and dense pine forests have harboured narcos and hidden plantations of marijuana and opium poppies for decades.

It's a world the fortune-teller knows well: over the years, she said she had often used her gift to help local people – locating a lost kilo of opium paste or comforting the girlfriends of slain traffickers.

The arrest of Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán on 22 February 2014 was hailed by the Mexican and US authorities as the one of the biggest blows to the drug trade in decades. But a year on, the core business of
Guzmán's Sinaloa cartel seems hardly affected. "As long as there are people who want the drugs this will never stop, whoever goes to prison," the seer said.

Overall, seizures of drugs from Mexico heading into the US remain much as they were before Guzmán's arrest. The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has reported only small changes in the way the cartel operates. And after a brief burst of triumphalism in the days after Guzmán's arrest, the Mexican government now rarely mentions the Sinaloa cartel at all.

Crops and robbers: Mexico's narco areas

"Chapo's capture has not produced any major changes here," said Ismael
Bojórquez, the director of the Sinaloa investigative weekly Ríodoce.
"The cartel structure continues to work just as before."

Not that everybody in Sinaloa accepts that view.

"Things are calm, yes, but it feels like the calm before the storm," said a local music producer who specialises in narcocorridos – accordion-driven ballads often commissioned by traffickers to glorify their exploits. Like the psychic – and others interviewed for this article – he was wary of being identified, because his work often brings him into contact with members of the criminal underworld.

Sinaloa's Coordinator of Public Security, who previously headed military operations in the state, insists that Chapo's capture has not had any major impact on security over the past year. "Things not only have not got worse," retired General Moisés Melo Garcia said, "but high impact crimes have been falling in Sinaloa, thanks to improved coordination between the federal and state forces."

But over the past year, unease in Sinaloa has been magnified by the lack of clarity over the cartel's reconfiguration since Guzmán's arrest.

For all his mythical status – forged by a dramatic prison escape in 2001 and the Sinaloa cartel's subsequent attempt to take over territories across the country from other cartels – Guzmán was not so much the boss of bosses as the highest profile figure in a triumvirate of veterans.

The other two were Juan José Esparragoza, known as El Azul ("the blue one"), who reportedly died in June and Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, who is still at large.

Many assumed El Chapo's arrest would prompt Zambada's seamless succession to power, but the 67-year-old narco has apparently come under intense pressure in recent months: several close collaborators, including one of his sons, have been arrested and he has reportedly come close to capture several times.

Even in the state capital Culiacán – once his undisputed home territory – El Mayo has appeared unable to respond to an incursion by a former protege of Chapo called Dámaso López, who is said to have made
inroads into street-level dealing in the city.

The record producer noted that López appeared to be backing his ambitions with an aggressive string of promotional narcocorridos with lyrics that are becoming increasingly bellicose.


A Mexican soldier runs in a marijuana field in Culiacán, Sinaloa state. Photograph: Alfredo Estrella/AFP/Getty Images

In Culiacán, some believe El Chapo could eventually be replaced by one of his sons, Ivan Archivaldo Guzmán, but others dismiss him as too inexperienced to take full control.

Analysts, law enforcement sources and cartel contacts agree generational change is contributing to the unease: traditionalists often point to the hotheaded and exhibitionist tendencies of such narco "juniors", whose inherited power and wealth contrast with the rags-to-riches struggles of their fathers.

And then there is the wild card of Rafael Caro Quintero. A founder of the now-defunct Guadalajara cartel, Quintero spent 28 years in jail for the 1985 murder of DEA agent Kiki Camarena, but was unexpectedly released in 2013 – to the disgust of the US government – and promptly disappeared. Today the ageing narco is said to be hiding out somewhere in the golden triangle, intent on reimposing old school narco order in Sinaloa.

"There is no logic to what is happening," the record producer said. "The sense I get is of an atmosphere of pending war."

Luís agrees. He spent 10 years as one of El Chapo's gunmen, loading drugs on to planes heading to the US as well as torturing and killing cartel members who stepped out of line.

Luis has retired and complains of nightmare flashbacks to his days as a killer, but he still keeps in contact with the few members of his old crowd who are still alive. They tell him all is not well in the cartel.

"Before all the cows went in one direction. Now there are too many cowboys," he said, sipping a beer and fiddling with a joint. "There will always be drugs moving, for as long as it is not legal, but I see a lot of weakness, a lot of internal disputes and mistreatment of the local population and that creates problems too."

Luis said that while the police were as accommodating as ever, new tactics being used by the federal government were causing problems.

Time was, he said, when soldiers would help cartel members load up drug shipments "for a beer and a woman". Now, however, he said army units were rotated so often that deals with corrupt commanders had to be constantly renegotiated.

Worse still, he added, the government was increasingly depending on special operations forces, which have proved stubbornly resistant to making any deals with the cartels. Naval special operations units, working closely with the DEA, have been responsible for almost all the key arrests in Sinaloa, including Chapo's.

María, a well-dressed middle-aged lady who spoke freely once assured of anonymity, also described considerable nervousness at the "peaceful end of the business". A close relative of María's trafficed cocaine independently, she said, but still depended on the cartel to keep order in the state.

People protest in support of arrested Mexican drug kingpin Joaquín Guzmán, chanting 'release him'. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

"The youngsters wanting to come in are more violent, they don't have what it takes," she said. "El Señor [El Mayo] is looking weak, but he is very astute and we are hoping that he has an ace up his sleeve."

Memories are still fresh of the all-out war that erupted in Sinaloa in 2008 following a violent split between Chapo and his one-time allies in the Beltrán Leyva family, leaving many in the area particularly attuned to signs of internal tension in the cartel. Their concerns are only reinforced by events elsewhere in Mexico: hardly a day goes by in the southern state of Guerrero without reports of atrocities committed in the turf wars between splinter groups of the once-mighty Beltrán Leyva cartel.

"The Sinaloa cartel is not a good thing, but it is better than the others," said one taxi driver in the city. "We don't want another war."

His immediate concern, however, was a lack of cash in Culiacán linked by many to El Chapo's capture.

A financial adviser at a bank in the city agreed: "The Sinaloan economy depends, in large part, on these guys. It's their cash and investments that provide the work," he said.

He added that El Chapo's arrest and tighter restrictions on cash transactions had led to a notable contraction in the past year, though he expected this to ease once the cartel had found new creative ways of laundering its money.

Agriculture and the tourism industry have long been favoured routes for laundering money, he said, but he expected new construction projects would become the preferred way to clean dirty money.

"In Sinaloa we are all betting on the good guys and the bad guys doing business," he said.

Javier Valdez, a reporter at Ríodoce, specialises in stories about the way daily life in Sinaloa has become increasingly invaded by narco economics and culture. "The narcos have domesticated us," Valdez said. "They are in our lives and we are ever more resigned to that destiny."

The government's failure to provide security or prosperity only adds to this sense of dependence on an underworld that relies on both barbaric violence and managerial agility to adapt to new market conditions.

The DEA's 2014 National Threat Assessment notes a steady rise in heroin seizures on the US south-west border that reached 2,200kg (4,850lb) in 2013 – more than four times the amount intercepted in 2008.

This appears to be a response to growing US demand, but could also reflect opium paste's portability compared with large bricks of marijuana. In Sinaloa growers in the Sierra Madre describe increased poppy production for just those reasons.

Local people with connections to the drug trade also describe a surge in the number of crystal meth labs. The DEA report notes that almost all the methamphetamine on sale in the US was produced in Mexico, with seizures on the border nearly tripling between 2009 and 2013 to reach about 11,500kg. The report also cites increasingly sophisticated techniques, which include dissolving the drug in solvents to smuggle it across the border disguised as flavoured drinks or hidden in windshield wiper reservoirs.

Meanwhile, marijuana seizures dropped suddenly in 2013. Some newspaper reports have ascribed this to the legalisation of the drug in some US states, but local producers say it has more to do with years of falling prices and greater vigilance by the army, which complicates the transport of large shipments.

All of which leads journalists such as the director of Ríodoce to conclude that the Sinaloa cartel is well on the way to completing its reformation for the post-Chapo era.

"It is a period of transition and there will always be bumps along the way," Bojórquez said. "But this is a business group with a worldwide reach and it is looking pretty strong."

Bojórquez speculates that the cartel's resilience may also also owe something to backroom negotiations with Mexican politicians, who he believes are desperate to find a way to close down the drug wars, which have killed about 100,000 people around Mexico.

At least one Sinaloan politician from the governing Institutional Revolutionary party appeared to agree. "The only way to do this is for the big boys to sit down with the big boys and make a deal," he said.

end

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