Monday, 7 April 2014
The Mexican Drug Scene After the fall of El Chapo and the rout of Los Templarios
Rise in Street Crime? Changes in Drug Use?
Do we really
know who —or, if anyone— is running the Sinaloa cartel since the surprising
arrest of El Chapo Guzman on February 22? And can we know whether the "autodefensa"
surge in Michoacan is a citizen uprising headed by good and trustworth leaders who
decided they "don't want to take it any
more"— or whether it has been a clever maneuver to take-over a drug plaza
by a criminal group masquerading as heroes?
Clearly, there
is a continuing “manipulation and readjustment” at the leadership level of Mexico's
criminal chains, but there is not enough concrete intelligence to arrive at a definitive
conclusions about power-struggles in Sinaloa and Michoacán; even less is known about
plazas in Edomex, Jalisco and Guerrero. In these last few weeks before Easter
2014, many regions of Mexico might now be described using the same words that Javier
Valdez Cardenas used to describe "la Perla Tapatia". His new book (Con una Granada en La Boca) reports
the observations of an El Chapo lugarteniente following the death of his boss El
Nacho Coronel:
"Todos contra todos, es tierra
de nadie. La gente que hemos tenido acá, los parientes de Nacho Coronel, todo se
nos vino abajo. Los mataron, los detuvieron, y los otros, los mas recientes, se
nos han volteado. Y ahí están todos los cartels y organizaciones nuevas, disputándose
la plaza."
"Everyone against everyone,
it's a no man's land. The people that we had there, those linked to Nacho Coronel,
all have been taken down. They killed them, they captured them, and the others,
the most recent arrivals have thrown us aside. And all of the cartels are there
and the new organizations – all fighting for the plaza".
The fact
is, we do not know who is in charge of the Sinaloa cartel or who may be giving the
orders. Neither do we know who has the advantage and control in Michoacan. We know
that at least six groups are competing for the plaza in Edomex (http://www.proceso.com.mx/?p=367307)
— but can't be certain which is dominant.
However, there
have been developing trends indicating a shift in the drug market — in particular,
reports of major differences in the "product" that is shipped and consumed
both in the USA and within Mexico.
One report
describing this trend is a report by Nick Miroff in the Washington Post (http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/tracing-the-us-heroin-surge-back-south-of-the-border-as-mexican-cannabis-output-falls/2014/04/06/58dfc590-2123-4cc6-b664-1e5948960576_story.html?wprss=rss_homepage —and also at http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/tracing-the-us-heroin-surge-back-south-of-the-border-as-mexican-cannabis-output-falls/2014/04/06/58dfc590-2123-4cc6-b664-1e5948960576_story.html).
Miroff describes
an increasing heroin use, and perhaps a weaker marijuana market for Mexican
"mota" in the US. Perhaps this
is one consequence of El Chapo's take-down — Marijuana is a “stable cash-crop” and
“income staple” of the Sinaloa Cartel (primarily
shipped through the tunnels of Arizona from Nogales to Agua Prieta), and marijuana
supplies the payroll for much of El Chapo Guzman’s organization. Marijuana shipments
may have been disrupted —in response to the changing demand in the market (unlikely), to a new competition within the
US markets taking advantage of "legalization", or perhaps as a
result of confusion and uncertainty within the Sinaloa distribution network.
There is also
evidence a shifting consumer market within Mexico according to Proceso (#1953 —Manzanillo, más caliente
que nunca ). Proceso attributes
an increase in domestic consumption of synthetic drug to the plaza battles between
Los Templarios and the Cartel Nueva Generacion de Jalisco. This report reports that
the port city of Manzanillo has now "heated up" ever since the Cartel
de Jalisco Nuevo Generacion (CJNG) decided to focus the internal Mexican synthetic
drug market.
Any adjustments
at the "top of leadership level chain" and the long-term changes in the
distribution patterns and consumer tastes should become clearer over time. But what
is even more chaotic and difficult to control are the changes affecting the bottom
end of the drug underworld. The crime on the street will remain unpredictable,
chaotic and dangerous until the adjustments at the top reach a new equilibrium.
The chaos at the
street level and in the lower echelons of the drug trade is becoming more
evident and has been described in a few Spanish language reports. The payroll (la nomina) of several organizations has been
severely disrupted, and as a result the entry level apprentices and hangers-on — "los halcones”,“enforcer squadrons”, and
"goon enforcers" are not assured of a regular "sueldo" (bi-weekly payments) nor can expect "bonuses"
for jobs well executed. The result —rising trends in petty crime (robberies, car-jacking,
strong-armed extortion, and kidnapping. The widely publicized attack on a Noroeste
Director may be one example of this fall-out (e.g. http://www.noroeste.com.mx/publicaciones.php?id=939364
). Proceso edition #1953 also has a
report describing the rise in extortion, robbery, car theft and other street crimes
throughout Tamaulipas suggesting that it is the bottom feeders of the cartels who
have been left without a steady source of income (En Tamaulipas, violent recaída)
It will take time
to understand how things have resettled at the leadership level, but
in the short term I expect to see a significant increase in called routine
street crime and random violence.
Without a stable leadership who are firmly in control, thousands and thousands
of young hoodlums have no expectation of a regular salary. Many Mexican communities
can expect increases kidnapping, extortion and robbery. And I expect that this will
happen in the cities that have been previously been safe and described as "sanctuary
cities".
We must remember
that "capos" and high level operators employed "squadrons" of
lower-level thugs to "keep the lid-on" local communities and gave them
directives to sanction petty crime. And in some cases (Tamaulipas and Nuevo
Laredo), they used these lower-echelon thugs to create confusion and public
mayhem. Many who have have written about this, but one of the most detailed descriptions
is found in Javier Valdez's new book where one chapter focuses on a member of
one of these lower end "squadrons": Valdez describes the criminal
life of Juan, a low-level enforcer whose primary task was to "sanction"
anyone who perpetrated a crime on ordinary citizens in Culiacan. Juan describes
one assignment where he was ordered to hunt down, torture and kill three young guys
who kidnapped someone. Juan and three companions— all under 20 years old — carried
out their task with a brutal efficiency that included feeding one of the
kidnappers to a crocodile and dousing the partially eaten victim with cocaine. Valdez
asks Juan if he feels bad about this, but he reports that feels no remorse or moral
quandary. His only concern was whether he would be receive his regularly bi-weekly
payment in the coming week.
Unfortunately,
routine street crime is likely to increase over the next few months during this
period of leadership instability and it is ordinary citizen who will suffer the
consequences. And in the absence of "capos"
in clear control, there will be no-one to defend the ordinary man or woman — and
they never had confidence in the police. The fact is, the police are more
likely to join in and exploit them if they believe that there is no "chief
of the plaza" watching them.
April 7, 2014
Labels:
CIA,
Cocaine,
DEA,
El Chapo Guzman,
El Mayo,
La Familia de Michoacan,
Los Zetas,
Marijuana,
Sinaloa,
Templarios,
Violence
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