Pubdate: Sun, 10 Jun 2007 Source: Austin American-Statesman (TX) Copyright: 2007 Austin American-Statesman Contact: http://www.statesman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/32 Author: Jeremy Schwartz, Mexico City Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mexico INSIDE MEXICO'S DRUG CARTEL UNDERWORLD MEXICO CITY - Journalist Ricardo Ravelo has been covering drug trafficking for more than a decade for Proceso, Mexico's leading weekly news magazine. He is the author of several books on the drug trade. His latest, "Herencia Maldita" ("Cursed Inheritance"), published in May, provides a detailed look at the roots of the current drug war, which has left more than 1,000 dead so far this year. Ravelo dedicates the book to murdered journalists. As many as 30 have been slain since 2000, making Mexico the second-deadliest country for journalists, after Iraq. Excerpts from an interview with Ravelo: American-Statesman: The fight over drug trafficking has generally been described as a battle between the Gulf Cartel (headquartered along the Texas border) and the Sinaloa Cartel. Ravelo: The war for the market in Mexico is actually being disputed by seven cartels, which have established alliances in recent years. The strongest groups are from the state of Sinaloa and the Gulf. What these two groups want to do is impose their hegemony throughout the country, from the harvest and the production to the trafficking and, of course, the market. Why has the fight gotten so violent in recent years? The Gulf Cartel began to recruit soldiers, many of whom had deserted the armed forces, and this paramilitary ingredient has created ever more violence, as opposed to previous years when the rules of the drug game were very clear and were respected. The incorporation of the state police as a wall of protection is also a cause of violence. Many of the executions we've seen, especially in the last two years, have been targeted at police. . . . It's now clear that the police don't just protect, but they also commit executions and kidnap people. What do you think of President Felipe Calderon's strategy of sending in the military to confront the cartels? What we're seeing in Mexico is a faithful copy of what happened in Colombia during the 1980s and 1990s when there was a struggle to eliminate the cartels of Cali and Medellin. Even though this was accomplished, what's also certain is that by mobilizing the army, the extraditions (of drug bosses to the United States) and all the deaths in Colombia, the fight against drug traffickers was a failure because Colombia currently has more drugs and more trafficking activity than it did in that era. If I could give an image, it would be that the Mexican government is spraying with a shotgun instead of shooting with precision. The strategy is focused on the streets . . . but not against money laundering or arms trafficking. How long will the violence continue? Until the cartels realize it is bad for business? At some point will come the stage of negotiation . . . perhaps when the government takes back the control it lost during the last presidential term (of Vicente Fox). . . . But there is an even worse element, that in some towns and villages the government can't even collect taxes because the narcos have taken over everything: They control the fields, the businesses, they have the political power, they impose mayors. For the government, that's a very dangerous symptom of how far drug trafficking has permeated in some places. In your book, you call El Chapo (Joaquin Guzman, leader of the Sinaloa Cartel) the "pampered one." Why? He escaped from the Puente Grande prison in the last presidential term in a truly spectacular move, and they haven't been able to stop him since. He's been free to build piece by piece what is now known as the Sinaloa Cartel. On three occasions, he was on the verge of being arrested, which gives me the impression that he is someone (the government) doesn't want to stop. It's not possible that one man is defying the entire military and police apparatus. . . . It's becoming clear that the police are basically divided: 50 percent working for the narcos and another 50 percent giving a very incomplete battle, in which police in some states complain they are only given six bullets a day to fight the cartels. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin