Pubdate: Thu, 29 Jan 2009
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2009 Los Angeles Times
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/bc7El3Yo
Website: http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Tracy Wilkinson, Reporting from Mexico City
Note: Cecilia Sanchez of The Times' Mexico City Bureau contributed to 
this report.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Mexico (Mexico)
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/find?255  Mexico Under Siege (Series)

Mexico Under Siege

MEXICO DRUG BOSSES MAY HAVE SET TRUCE

According to News Reports, Trafficking Chiefs in the State of Sinaloa 
Agreed Last Month to Curb Their Bloody Rivalry. Killings There Have 
Declined Sharply.

Have some of Mexico's most notorious drug bosses declared a truce?

After a record year of bloodshed, killings have dropped by two-thirds 
from the December level in the state of Sinaloa, the historic center 
of Mexican drug trafficking, according to tallies kept by local and 
national news media.

Those reports have fueled speculation that leaders of the two biggest 
Sinaloan drug gangs, which have been locked in a fight for 
territorial control, reached an agreement in December to hold fire, 
after finding that the battle was sapping time, energy and money 
better spent on the drug business.

A truce would be welcome in Sinaloa, where ambushes, shootouts and 
kidnappings have occurred day and night. More than 120 people were 
killed in the state in December, according to Mexican news media; 
January looks set to end with about 40 deaths.

Riodoce, a respected weekly newspaper based in Culiacan, the capital 
of Sinaloa, first reported the potential truce earlier this month. 
Mexico's foremost investigative magazine, Proceso, published a 
similar account this week.

U.S. law enforcement officials said there was no evidence of a truce, 
though they acknowledged that it was a plausible tactic to free the 
drug-running business of disruptions. Mexican authorities said they 
were analyzing the reports, and that it was premature to judge their veracity.

Several officials and experts cautioned that any cease-fire could be 
fleeting. Killing continues in most of Mexico; even in Sinaloa last 
week, a top drug-gang lieutenant and alleged money launderer, 
Lamberto Verdugo Calderon, was killed in a gun battle.

"It's the kind of thing we will never really know if it was decreed 
or not," Sinaloa state legislator Yudit del Rincon said from 
Culiacan. "They heated up the ground to the point they couldn't work, 
and they ended up being the most affected."

The report in Riodoce, written by Javier Valdez, a veteran journalist 
who covers the drug war, said a truce was broached Dec. 11 in a 
secret meeting at a fancy seafood restaurant in Culiacan. A grenade 
attack on an army post the day before had brought thousands of troops 
into the streets of the nearby Sinaloan city of Navolato.

A few days later, a second meeting brought together top-level 
representatives of the so-called Sinaloa cartel, run by Joaquin "El 
Chapo" Guzman, and the group commanded by the Beltran Leyva brothers, 
Riodoce reported. In this gathering, agreement was reached to halt 
gun battles and ambushes; contract killings already in the pipeline 
would be allowed to proceed; and the parties would review progress at 
the end of this week, according to Riodoce.

In addition to potential damage to their smuggling business, Guzman 
and other bosses were worried about lower-level henchmen branching 
out on their own, breaking the chain of command and making overtures 
to traffickers in Colombia and Argentina, Proceso reported.

Another motive behind any cessation of hostilities could be to ward 
off the army. President Felipe Calderon deployed 45,000 troops in 
several states, including Sinaloa, to fight traffickers and quell violence.

Riodoce reported that two of five army battalions stationed in 
Sinaloa were pulled out around the time of the alleged accord. A 
spokesman for the army in Mexico City declined to comment on the report.

This would not be the first time drug lords brokered an arrangement. 
In 2007, Guzman's Sinaloa organization agreed to split up territory 
with the rival Gulf cartel. The deal collapsed, and fighting between 
the two enemies was part of the driving force behind last year's bloody toll.

Luis Astorga, preeminent historian of narco-trafficking in Mexico and 
a native of Sinaloa, said that rather than a peace treaty, there 
might have been a business-motivated "reconciliation" between 
Guzman's forces and the followers of the Beltran Leyvas. The two 
factions were united as recently as last spring but divided bitterly 
and turned on each other. Given that history, any agreement now would 
be fragile. But Sinaloans are eager to believe in a real truce, Astorga said.

"Sinaloans are in love with the mythology of the narcos," he said.

"The weaknesses of the state are obvious to them, so rumors fly and 
they want to believe it.

"Logic, however, tells you: Wait and see."
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