méxico · dawnpaley.ca <http://t.co/TZzLZ6pnFf>



How did the Merida Initiative impact violence in Mexico? http://
tmblr.co/ZAfRCxnowOIt  <http://t.co/aW7Sj2VCXo>

Here's a link to the INEGI homicides chart, 1994-2010: http://bit.ly/10xFUAE
  <http://t.co/ryoyBAfMh8>


http://upsidedownworld.org/main/mexico-archives-79/4336-narcoland-the-mexican-drug-lords-and-their-godfathers-book-review

Narcoland: The Mexican Drug Lords and Their Godfathers - Book Review[image:
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Written
by Dawn Paley    Thursday, 20 June 2013 09:08

**

*Reviewed*: *Narcoland: The Mexican Drug Lords And Their
Godfathers*<http://www.amazon.com/Narcoland-Mexican-Lords-Their-Godfathers/dp/1781680736>
*, by *Anabel Hernández,* *Verso. Forthcoming: September 2013. (Epub
edition).

If there is a sacred cow grazing in the fertile pasture of Mexican writing
about the drug war, *Los Señores del Narco* is it. Written by investigative
journalist Anabel Hernández and published in Mexico in 2010, it will come
out this fall in English as *Narcoland* with Verso.

Backed up by secret files obtained by the author, high-level interviews
conducted over a five-year period, and access to deeply involved
informants, Hernández sets out a version of the drug war that has become an
increasingly popular interpretation of the events that have transformed
Mexico over the past years.

After former president Felipe Calderón declared a war on drug traffickers
in December 2006, the army and federal police were deployed throughout the
country on the premise of combatting narcotrafficking. Over the same six
years, the murder rate
spiked<http://www.inegi.org.mx/inegi/contenidos/espanol/prensa/Boletines/Boletin/Comunicados/Especiales/2012/agosto/comunica29.pdf>,
and at least 120,000 people were murdered, as well as over 27,000
disappeared. Since 2007, the US and Mexico have tightened security
cooperation, and Washington stepped up anti-drug funding to Mexico through
the Mérida Initiative.

**

Dense, sprawling and detailed, *Narcoland* is a worthwhile read, though the
narrow, sometimes moralistic bent of Hernández' analysis can result in an
oversimplification of the actors – and victims – of this war. Her version
of events implicates high-level officials in acts of corruption and
complicity that have favored one particular drug trafficking organization:
the Sinaloa cartel, run by Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán Loera.

"During its so-called war on drugs, the Calderón government dealt some
much-publicized blows to members of the Sinaloa cartel, in an attempt to
distract public attention away from the many clues to its complicity with
that organization," writes Hernández. Regardless, she writes, the
government only went after mid-level players and "never struck at the heart
of the cartel: its top leaders and its core business." *Narcoland*explains
how to this day, the Mexico City airport remains the "main artery" of the
Sinaloa Cartel's trafficking activities, with the government failing to act
on intelligence that the group is operating from there.

There’s no doubt that Hernández is a brave journalist, one who names names
even when the players are powerful political, police and military figures.
There are plenty of goodies in *Narcoland*, details of interest for anyone
seeking to better understand what has taken place over the last six or
seven years in Mexico.

For example, Hernández looks at the role of Banamex, a Mexican bank, and
its role in money laundering. She examines how anti-kidnapping police were
in fact coordinating kidnappings and ransom payments. And she meticulously
tracks how many of today’s cartel members were once police and military
officers.

The book opens by re-examining El Chapo's escape from Puente Grande prison
in January 2001, discarding rumors that he escaped from the jail in a
laundry cart.

Instead, she writes, "Dressed in a [Federal Preventative Police - PFP]
Uniform, his face concealed by a regulation police helmet and mask, Joaquín
Guzmán walked out of prison surrounded by a group of PFP officers." Here,
with the exception of taking a tone that sometimes drifts towards
moralizing, she convincingly demonstrates a network of complicity among
prison officials and police in the escape.

Hernández also reveals the underside of the killing of journalist Manuel
Buendía in 1984, connecting his death to information he had about the CIA’s
role in drug trafficking.

According to a DEA report cited by Hernández, Buendía got information that
"Guatemalan guerrillas were training at a ranch owned by Rafael
Caro-Quintero in Vera Cruz [sic] state. The operations/training at the camp
were conducted by the American CIA, using the [DFS - Mexican Directorate of
Federal Security] as a cover, in the event any questions were
raised…
"[1]<http://upsidedownworld.org/main/mexico-archives-79/4336-narcoland-the-mexican-drug-lords-and-their-godfathers-book-review#_ftn1>

Lawrence Victor Harrison, alias *Torre Blanca*, was a US citizen who worked
as a short wave radio technician for various drug barons through the late
1980s and the 1990s. Harrison told investigators "…DFS representatives
oversaw the training camp and allowed traffickers to move drugs through
Mexico to the United States." When Mexican police attempted to enter the
ranch, 19 officers were killed.

Being privy to this and other information linking the CIA to drugs and arms
trafficking turned out to be deadly. Forty days after going to the DFS head
for advice on how to proceed, writes Hernández, Buendía was killed by the
security officers from the same organization he had sought advice from, as
was his source. A third individual "who had given Buendía information about
CIA arms smuggling allegedly suffered a bomb attack while traveling in
Costa Rica," according to the DEA report. According to Hernandez, this
report "confirms that it was the CIA that really operated the drugs
smuggling and the secret landing strips that were used."

*Narcoland* generally maintains that the US Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) is an upstanding organization, which sometimes enters into
relationships with questionable figures, primarily Genaro Garcia Luna, the
head of Public Security during Felipe Calderón’s term. In fact, the author
credits a DEA agent with confirming her "growing conviction" that it was
crucial to investigate and report on the activities of El Chapo and the
drug trade in Mexico.

In spite of such insights, there are a handful of cringe-worthy
proclamations in *Narcoland*, which take away from an otherwise
carefully-investigated and written examination of the Calderón government's
drug war.

Here's one example, with reference to narco leader Ismael “El Mayo”
Zambada: "He boasts of having at least five other sets of wives and
children, otherwise he could hardly call himself a narco." Hernández claims
Guzmán is "obsessed" with sex and that his appetite for junk food is
"insatiable," that Los Zetas are "drug traffickers, kidnappers, and evil
through and through," and that Edgar Valdez Villareal, alias *La Barbie*,
was a "born killer." She also compares Zeta founder Heriberto Lazcano
Lazcano to the Roman Emperor Nero.

One section of the book, entitled "Inside a drug baron's head," is heavy on
conjectures about kingpins' "weakness for drugs and drink" and their
alleged fetishization of higher education.

These extrapolations about drug traffickers create a framework where
instead of coming out of particular social and political circumstances, the
men involved in high level trafficking are no longer considered regular
men, but evil monsters. This draws readers away from an analysis of the
conflict based on documents and interviews, and towards a soap opera
version of events rooted in conceptions of good vs. evil. This dichotomy
serves to obscure how enforced poverty and the lack of education and work
opportunities are crucial factors in explaining the swelling ranks of men
and women willing to carry out criminal activity. These structural factors
have been exaggerated by free market policies, bank bailouts and austerity
programs, in particular since the 1980s. To gloss over these issues and
focus on how narco-bosses are inherently bad people does little to help
readers understand the social and economic terrain of drug trafficking in
Mexico.

To the detriment of *Narcoland, *Hernández leans on the shaky theory that
drug violence has spilled over from Mexico into Central America and that
there is the potential for spillover violence from Mexico into the US.

This weakness in her analysis is partly linked to the fact that the US role
in funding the war in Mexico through the Merida Initiative is confined to a
single footnote in the text. Had she included a more thorough examination
of the US role in Mexico, and the correlation between that involvement and
rising violence, she may have been more able to explain the reasons why
drug violence has also risen in Central America. The United States
government has admitted that it is their anti-drugs programs that move drug
violence from place to place. "Just as Plan Colombia helped push the focus
of criminal activity and presence north to Mexico, so has the impact of the
Merida Initiative pushed the same activities into Central America itself,"
said William Brownfield, Assistant Secretary of the US Bureau of
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs. The idea that drug
violence randomly “spills over” from one place to another is, quite simply,
naïve.

Additionally, the notion that drug violence has spilled over the US border
US has been disproven time and again by statistics collected in US counties
all along the line. A 2013 report
<http://www.gao.gov/assets/660/652320.pdf> carried
out by the Government Accountability Office, found “violent and property
crimes were lower in 2011 than in 2004” in the counties along the southwest
border with Mexico.

But by far the biggest weakness of *Narcoland* is the insinuation that the
killings of innocents are those that take place by accident. As Hernández
writes, "In [the states of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, Tamaulipas,
Michoacán, Guerrero and Morelos], body parts from one side or the other
turn up on an almost daily basis – not to mention the many innocent
individuals who perish in the crossfire."

This is an unfortunate and untruthful assertion, which ignores the fact
that few killings are ever investigated. This lack of justice and legal
inquiry often makes determining the activities of the dead little more than
guesswork. In the rare cases where there have been investigations into who
the dead are (including those who were tortured, who turned up in mass
graves, and/or whose bodies were disfigured after death), authorities often
determine that the victims were migrants, day laborers, farmers, or people
not knowingly involved in the drug trade. These are not victims who caught
in the “cross fire,” rather, they were assassinated in planned events,
sometimes after kidnapping or extortion attempts.

The 
massacre<http://briarpatchmagazine.com/articles/view/the-spoils-of-an-undeclared-war>
in
La Libertad, Guatemala in May of 2011, the
massacre<http://mexico.cnn.com/nacional/2012/05/18/casas-de-migrantes-piden-que-la-cndh-vigile-identificacion-de-49-cuerpos>
in
Cadereyta, Nuevo Leon the following May, and
themultiple<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/26/world/americas/26mexico.html?_r=0>
 
massacres<http://justiceinmexico.org/2011/04/11/more-than-80-bodies-found-in-mass-graves-in-tamaulipas/>
in
San Fernando, Tamaulipas in 2010 and 2011, are gruesome examples of how
civilians are being killed and massacred, and how those killings are linked
to the violence and impunity stemming from the drug war. All four of the
above mentioned massacres were blamed on Los Zetas, and investigations into
the intellectual authors of these horrendous acts have gone nowhere.

In Juárez, during the worst of the
violence<http://news.nationalpost.com/2011/12/27/ciudad-juarez-10000-killed-in-four-years-as-mexicos-toothless-war-on-drugs-goes-on/>,
“General Jorge Juarez, in charge of the mission in Ciudad Juarez and the
rest of Chihuahua State at the time, told reporters they should stop
writing about ‘one more death’ and instead print that there was ‘one less
criminal.’” This attitude, which justifies the killings carried out by
state forces or other armed groups, is shockingly prevalent among military,
police and even civilian officials in Mexico.

Though Hernández’ aim is to discredit the strategy of the Calderón
government’s drug war, and uncover the rampant corruption in the political,
legal and police and military system, she also implies that the majority of
the people killed over Calderón’s term were involved in criminal
activities. In doing so, she reinforces one of the most problematic aspects
of government propaganda with relation to the war.

*Dawn Paley is an investigative journalist from Vancouver, BC. More of her
work can be found on her website at dawnpaley.ca, or follow her on twitter
@dawn_.*

*Note:*

------------------------------

[1]<http://upsidedownworld.org/main/mexico-archives-79/4336-narcoland-the-mexican-drug-lords-and-their-godfathers-book-review#_ftnref1>
It
is far more likely that the Guatemalans allegedly being trained were not
guerrillas but Contra or counterinsurgent (paramilitary) forces. Otherwise,
the CIA would have been training the same guerrillas that the US was
funding a genocidal war to destroy in Guatemala.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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