The deadly violence sparked by the military killing of an infamous cartel leader has now spread widely across Mexico, as American citizens near the border were warned to shelter in place.
At least 20 of Mexico’s 31 states have seen violent clashes in the wake of the death of the country’s most wanted man, Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).
Cervantes — better known as “El Mencho” — died in custody Sunday, shortly after Mexican special forces captured him in Tapalpa, Jalisco state.
The notorious drug kingpin was seriously injured in a firefight between military commandos and his bodyguards and died from his injuries en route to Mexico City.
Cartel members responded to his death by declaring war on the Mexican government of socialist Claudia Sheinbaum, shutting down Jalisco’s state capital, Guadalajara — the country’s second-largest city — as they engaged in running gun battles with authorities.
Can we call that an insurrection? I think so.
Apparently, the US provided some intelligence to Mexico that helped the success of the operation.
The cartels are very powerful in Mexico, and well-armed with some weapons that are military-grade, such as rocket launchers.
Ace has a long piece on the subject, in which – among other things – he quotes this:
A Senator from Mexico went on Fox News and exposed it all
* The President of Mexico works for the Cartels
* She was funded by money from the cartels
* It’s not just the President, there are an entire group of Mexico politicians labeled the “arco politicians”
* Mexico is a “Narco state”
* Mexicans are afraid of the alliance between the Mexican government and the cartels
* The Morena (political party) is financed by the cartels, that’s how they get elected
* Once they get elected the deal is for the Mexican government to then protect the cartels
* The President of Mexico Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo doesn’t want this information getting out
* Mexicans and the Politicians who are no paid off by the cartels want Donald Trump to help with the cartelsThe Mexico Senator exposing all this says she is now being threatened with prison for speaking out “The President has threatened me to proceed against me with criminal prosecution to get me out of the Senate and get me in jail just because I told you in this space in Fox News”
Here’s the Mexican senator on Fox, about five months ago:
As the newscaster says, Sheinbaum sometimes seems to be working against the cartels and sometimes refuses to do so. There’s also this:
JUST IN: Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said she doesn’t want to use force against the cartels because it would violate their human rights.
“Returning to the war against the narco is not an option. First, because it is outside the framework of the law.”
But that’s actually not “just in.” In fact, Sheinbaum said that back in November. So, what’s going on now? I can’t say I know, but there’s this:
The political risks are particularly sensitive for Sheinbaum, whose leftist MORENA party’s rise to power in 2018 was in large part fueled by Mexicans’ anger over the drug war that has left tens of thousands of people dead or missing.
Her predecessor, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, prioritized alleviating poverty and other root causes of violence through social programs, embracing a slogan of “hugs not bullets.” But critics say that his approach allowed crime groups like the CJNG to entrench their territorial holdings and expand into a dizzying array of industries, from the extortion of avocado producers to complex fuel smuggling schemes.
While Sheinbaum has mostly followed Lopez Obrador’s political map, with the killing of El Mencho she has definitively broken from her predecessor’s security policy, said Jeronimo Mohar, CEO of Aleph, a risk analytics company. …
Still, on Monday, Trump again heaped pressure on Sheinbaum, writing in a social media post: “Mexico must step up their effort on Cartels and Drugs!”
Sheinbaum may have succumbed to US pressure on Cervantes, thinking it could be limited to that and it would get Trump off her back. But now she faces a big decision on how much more cooperation to offer.
