Pubdate: Thu, 05 Aug 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/townhall/ci_14227323 Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Authors: Diana Washington Valdez and Daniel Borunda, El Paso Times EXPERT SAYS VIOLENCE BY CARTELS MAY INTENSIFY More than 28,000 people have been killed in Mexico's drug wars. It could get bloodier. "The grenades, the car bombings in Mexico is just a preview of the worse to come. The collateral damage is nothing now in what can happen to the future," said Phil Jordan, former director of the federal anti-drug El Paso Intelligence Center, or EPIC. Grenades have been increasingly used in attacks in Juarez and other parts of Chihuahua. Last month, Mexican federal police and rescuers were ambushed with a car bomb on a downtown Juarez street. The Juarez drug cartel has been targeting federal police because the cartel claims the police are working for the rival Sinaloa cartel. The Juarez cartel, known as La Linea, has said it has more car bombs. The rival cartels and their allied gangs have been fighting for control of the plaza, or territory, and lucrative smuggling routes to the United States. Mexico's top intelligence chief said about 28,000 people have been killed in drug violence since a government crackdown began in 2006. In Juarez, about 1,700 people have been slain this year, and about 6,000 people have been killed since 2008 when a war erupted in the region between the Juarez and Sinaloa drug cartels. Guillermo Valdes, director of the Centro de Investigacion y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN), or National Security and Investigation Center, said at a news conference Tuesday that drug abuse also is on the rise in Mexico. CISEN, which provides information to various Mexican government agencies, is similar to the CIA and DEA's El Paso Intelligence Center. CISEN's death toll is higher than the national figure of 24,826 that the federal Attorney General's Office released in July. Jordan, an expert on Mexican drug trafficking, said all indications are that the violence will get worse unless the United States, Mexico and other nations form a coalition to battle cartels. "The grenades the other day and the car bombing is just another escalation that has no boundaries, but the escalation does have borders," Jordan said. "The cartels will not attack or use that type of tactic in the United States." Jordan said narcotrafficking organizations will avoid bombings, beheadings or other such overkill tactics in the United States because they draw too much attention. "They are not stupid to bring those techniques to the U.S. You don't want to create havoc on the customers," he said. Jordan said the Juarez drug cartel is not behind a text-message death threat that circulated in the Phoenix area that placed a million-dollar bounty on Maricopa Sheriff Joe Arpaio in the wake of the controversial Arizona illegal-immigration law. "The rumor that they are going kill the sheriff (Arpaio) in Arizona is false," Jordan said. "In my opinion, the cartels are not going to waste their time threatening sheriffs. E The cartels will not be wasting their bullets and their time getting law enforcement in the U.S. riled up." Jordan agreed with a quote from an unnamed FBI agent from El Paso on the bureau's website comparing the ruthlessness of Mexican drug cartels to al-Qaida. "Al-Qaida can only understand one thing, that's bullets," Jordan said. "The cartels are the same way right now because they have elevated the level of violence to car bombings and beheadings. These people will only react to General Patton-type force." CISEN also reported new statistics about drug use in Mexico. The agency reported that between 2002 and 2008, about 6 percent of Mexico residents between 12 and 65 years old said they had consumed cocaine, and that the number of people in the nation who used drugs doubled in that period. The intelligence agency also released the following statistics for the number of apprehensions of alleged drug cartel members: Gulf cartel and Zetas: 20,000. Pacific (Sinaloa or Guzman Loera) cartel: 18,000. Juarez (Carrillo Fuentes) cartel: 12,000. Beltran-Leyva cartel: 9,000. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D