Borderland Beat
Washington, D.C., November 6,
2013 – Four months before the feared Zetas drug cartel kidnapped and
murdered 72 migrants in northeastern Mexico, the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City
said that narcotrafficking organizations in that region operated with "near
total impunity in the face of compromised local security forces." As
the date of the massacre drew nearer, another U.S. agency, the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA), reported
new evidence linking the Zetas to soldiers from the Kaibiles, an elite
Guatemalan special forces known for spectacular acts of cruelty and brutality
during that country's civil war.
These records are among a set of
U.S. documents declassified under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
and published today by the National Security Archive, providing
a glimpse of what U.S. diplomats and intelligence analysts were saying about
the extreme violence that has engulfed Mexico's northern border state of
Tamaulipas in recent years and the apparent complicity of Mexican officials.
Just this week, a new round of violence in Tamaulipas took the lives of
13 more people, as drug-related violence flared yet again.
Some of these documents are
featured in this week's edition of Proceso
magazine, in an article by award-winning investigative journalist Marcela Turati.
Her report highlights the unchecked power of the Zetas in the region and the
inability or unwillingness of federal, state and local officials in Mexico to
provide security for citizens and migrants traveling in the region.
The turf war between the Zetas,
the Gulf Cartel and other criminal organizations for control of drug
trafficking, human smuggling and other illicit enterprises in northern Mexico
produced unimaginable scenes of carnage, including the August 2010 massacre of
72 migrants in San Fernando and the discovery, the following year, of graves
containing the remains of hundreds more.
Another DEA cable from 2009
traces the "evolution and expansion" of the Zetas organization, many
of whom were recruited from an elite Mexican Army unit known as the Grupo
Aeromóvil de Fuerzas Especiales (GAFE). The group was "no longer solely
operating as the enforcement arm of the Gulf Cartel," according to the
report, and had "established a methodology to move into new territory and
assert control over that geography." The "strength" of the
Zetas, according
to the DEA, "is their ability to corrupt, kill and intimidate and
these factors have given the Zetas the power to conduct activities throughout
Mexico."
The Zetas had also stepped up
attacks on public officials and other prominent figures, which the DEA said was
a reaction to President Felipe Calderón's "counter-cartel
initiatives." Intelligence
gathered by the U.S. State Department also led to the assessment that
Calderón's anti-crime strategy had "unintended consequences" and had
contributed to a "spike in drug-related murders."
The documents were released in
response to a strategic freedom of information effort led by the Archive in
coordination with partner organizations in Mexico and the U.S. The campaign is
part of a larger joint effort to push for greater transparency in security and
migration policy and on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border. Documents and
other information obtained by the Archive and its partners is routinely
published on our Migration
Declassified blog.
As the violence has escalated in
recent years, the presumed role of Mexican officials at the federal, state and
local levels in this shocking campaign of atrocities and counter-atrocities has
remained shrouded in secrecy. While a number of people have been arrested in
relation to the crimes, there has been little information available on the
cases against them. The presumed authors of the violence, Édgar Huerta Montiel
("El Wache") and Martín Omar Estrada Luna ("El Kilo")
remain in detention. Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales, the top leader of the Zetas,
was arrested by Mexican authorities in July 2013. Just two days ago, Mexico
reported the arrest of an alleged human smuggler (pollero) said to
be linked to the case.
In August, we published the
first set of cables on the San Fernando massacres, including one in which
U.S. diplomats say that Mexican authorities wanted to minimize "the
state's responsibility" for the massacres in the region. Government
authorities sought to cover up information on the violence, according to U.S.
officials, and jeopardized investigations into the killings by splitting up
corpses of the victims "to make the total number less obvious and thus
less alarming."
The same document notes possible links between government
security forces and criminal organizations, reporting on the arrest of 16
police officers from San Fernando, on charges of "protecting Los Zetas
TCO [Transnational Criminal Organizations] members responsible for the
kidnapping and murder of bus passengers in the San Fernando Area".
Mexico's Attorney General's office claims that there are still certain
individuals under investigations for the massacre, but has not released any
information about the charges underway or whether the 16 police officers
arrested in April 2011 have ever been sanctioned.
The collection of documents
includes a number of reports from U.S. consulate officials in Matamoros, a town
in Tamaulipas located just across the border from Brownsville, Texas, which
provide detailed summaries of the extreme acts of violence experienced in the
region leading up to the San Fernando massacres. Consulate officials warned in
March 2010 of the expanding conflict between the Zetas and rival gulf Cartel
over lucrative drug routes, predicting that Matamoros would be the scene of confrontation
in the near future. The U.S. Embassy in Mexico City echoed the assessments,
and warned in April 2010 that the Mexican government had failed to predict the
Zetas offensive and was unprepared to deal with the violence that was sure to
come. The report said drug trafficking organizations had been operating with
"near total impunity" in Tamaulipas, "in the face of compromised
local
security forces."
The files expose U.S. concerns
that high-level corruption had complicated the ability of the government to
properly investigate the massacres and maintain security over the region. In
one cable, the U.S. Embassy notes reports that three successive governors of
Tamaulipas were under investigation by the Attorney General's office for
suspected links to organized crime. The Embassy said the arrests reportedly
stemmed from the capture of Zeta founder Miguel
Ángel Soto Parra.
For its part, the Mexican
government has stonewalled
requests for information on the San Fernando investigations. The Mexico office of
Article 19, an international pro-transparency organization, has led the
effort to unlock records on the Mexican attorney general's investigations into
the 2010 San Fernando massacre. The groups argues that the state has an
obligation to release the case files on San Fernando in compliance with Article
14 of Mexico's transparency law, which says that information on severe violations
of fundamental rights or crimes against humanity must be released in all cases.
On September 4, 2013, however, Mexico's Federal Institute for Access to
Information (IFAI) confirmed that the investigative files on the massacre of 72
migrants carried out in San
Fernando in 2010 would remain secret.
"IFAI had the opportunity in their hands to open the
archives and interpret the transparency law in the interest of full disclosure
and uphold the right to truth," says Ana Cristina Ruelas of Article 19.
"This was an occasion to demonstrate their strength and capacity to
protect the right to truth as a fundamental human right; nevertheless, they
failed to live up to the occasion." Ana Cristina also poses the question:
"How can we place trust in an institution that is supposed to guarantee
access to information when it does not claim to know basic human rights principles?"
THE DOCUMENTS
Declassified Documents on the San Fernando Massacre & Violence against Migrants in Northeastern Mexican States
Click on blue hyperlink to view document.
Document
1
August 25, 2007
Shutdown Slows but Doesn't Stop Central Americans Headed North
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, sensitive, 3 pp.
August 25, 2007
Shutdown Slows but Doesn't Stop Central Americans Headed North
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, sensitive, 3 pp.
The perilous path Central
American migrants take while traveling through Mexico to reach the U.S. border
has been an area of concern for human rights groups and U.S. and Mexican
officials for years. This U.S. Embassy cable reports on a conversation in 2007
that addresses the vulnerability of migrant groups, involving a U.S. political
officer and officials from Mexico's migration agency — the National Migration
Institute ( Instituto Nacional de Migración — INM). During the
conversation, U.S. officials raise concerns over recent media reports on the
deployment of Mexican army units to migrant regions and allegations of troop
involvement in assaults and thefts against migrants. In response to these
concerns, INM officials refute the allegations and deny reports that federal
forces have been used to disperse migrants.
Document
2
c. July 2009
Assessment of "Los Zetas" Evolution and Expansion (2001-2009 )
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), cable, sensitive, 9 pp.
c. July 2009
Assessment of "Los Zetas" Evolution and Expansion (2001-2009 )
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), cable, sensitive, 9 pp.
The DEA provides an assessment on
the evolution and expansion of the Zetas and the Gulf Cartel from their
inception around the year 2000 to the time of the report, in 2009. In addition
to the DEA stations in the U.S. and Mexico, the assessment was also sent to the
U.S. embassies in Mexico City, Guatemala City, as well as to officials at the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms (ATF), and the
National Security Agency (NSA).
Based on internal discussions and
intelligence briefings, the assessment highlights important details about the
composition of, growing threat posed by, the Zetas, and provides details on the
links to Guatemalan Kaibiles, elite special operations forces tied to massacres
carried out during Guatemala's internal armed conflict. According to the
assessment, in 2005 an arrested Zeta member said his organization had recruited
"former Guatemalan Kaibiles to work with the Zetas, and that the Kaibiles
were procuring firearms and grenades from Guatemala on behalf of the Gulf
Cartel."
The document warns, "The
Zetas are no longer solely operating as the enforcement arm of the Gulf Cartel.
The strength of the Zeta force is their ability to corrupt, kill, and
intimidate and these factors have given the Zetas the power to conduct
activities throughout Mexico, and they have established a methodology to move into
new territory and assert control over that geography. Zeta activities have
evolved from drug trafficking to traditional organized crime as well…While
still closely allied with the Gulf Cartel, the Zetas have evolved into a
separate drug trafficking organization that is independently transporting
cocaine from Colombia to Mexico."
Document
3
c. February 2010
Los Zetas Fact Sheet
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Huston Field Division, report, classification unknown, 2 pp.
c. February 2010
Los Zetas Fact Sheet
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Huston Field Division, report, classification unknown, 2 pp.
The DEA's Houston Field Division
provides a fact sheet on the Zetas, again highlighting their growth and
independence as a "highly sophisticated organized crime syndicate."
The fact sheet notes that "They include Mexican military deserters, former
police officers and family members of Zetas as well as Kaibiles (former
Guatemalan Army Special Forces Soldiers)." Once the Zetas become
entrenched in an area, they engage in organized crime that includes
"…extortion, kidnapping, murder-for-hire, money laundering,
human-smuggling" among other criminal activities.
Document
4
March 23, 2010
Nuevo Leon: Citizens Wonder Who's Winning in the Fight Against Organized Crime
U.S. Consulate Monterrey, cable, confidential, 5 pp.
March 23, 2010
Nuevo Leon: Citizens Wonder Who's Winning in the Fight Against Organized Crime
U.S. Consulate Monterrey, cable, confidential, 5 pp.
With violence spinning out of
control, the U.S. Consulate paints a grim picture of the security situation in
and around Monterrey, describing a number of violent crimes committed in the
recent days by cartels and state officials. In Santa Catarina, a routine arrest
resulted in a mob attack on the police chief. One suspect in the attack who was
detained and delivered to the military "was found dead (and bearing signs
of torture) shortly thereafter" according to the consulate. State
officials also "admitted misidentifying as gangsters two students who were
killed" during the gunfight at Monterrey Tec.
The governor of Nuevo Leon suspended
81 police officials after admitting "that the Zeta drug trafficking
organization (DTO) had co-opted some state and police officials" in
setting up roadblocks around the city. The Mexican marines have been
"aggressively targeting cartel figures, leading to shootouts during
military attempts to arrest high-ranking cartel members and during chance
encounters with cartel motorcades." Violence has now reached "beyond
Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon" to include Ciudad Valles in the state of San
Luis Potosi. The consulate adds that, "The struggle between the Gulf
Cartel and the Zetas has clearly shifted from the border to the outlying towns
in Nuevo Leon state."
Document
5
March 24, 2010
Matamoros Emergency Action Committee; 03/24/2010
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 2 pp.
March 24, 2010
Matamoros Emergency Action Committee; 03/24/2010
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 2 pp.
Amid a wave of violence in the
region, the U.S. consulate in Matamoros reports that the consular district has
U.S. diplomatic staff on special security status. The cable highlights the
growth of narcotics violence throughout the state of Tamaulipas and the
widespread and mobile nature of the conflict and warns of the "high
likelihood that Matamoros may be the scene of confrontation in the near
future." It adds, "Matamoros remains the accepted headquarters of the
Gulf Cartel, and a high-value target for any future Los Zetas offensive."
Document
6
March 25, 2010
Continuing Violence in Northern Mexico Between Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas
U.S. Department of Homeland Security, cable, unclassified, 6 pp.
March 25, 2010
Continuing Violence in Northern Mexico Between Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas
U.S. Department of Homeland Security, cable, unclassified, 6 pp.
Based on information provided by
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), this U.S. Customs and Border Protection
(CBP) document reports on the worsening security situation in Mexico's northern
states, where fighting between the Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas has led to
escalating violence in the region. The document cites "corroborated and
reliable information" on the widespread use of roadblocks along highways
in the region. This is the first mention in the declassified documents of
roadblocks used by the cartels in Tamaulipas, which was the method used to stop
buses carrying passengers and carry out the San Fernando massacres.
The document goes on to describe
fierce gun battles between the rival gangs, which in one case left the bodies
of "approximately 20 to 25 Gulf Cartel members…scattered in Jiménez
[Tamaulipas]." "The Gulf Cartel has been attacking small plazas in
Tamaulipas," according to the CBP report, adding that "[t]he attacks
occur simply because the area belongs to the Zetas." The DHS ominously
predicts that "a retaliatory strike by Los Zetas is likely
inevitable."
One section of the document
emphasizes the intensity of the violence, relating a gripping tale of a
21-year-old U.S. citizen who arrived at the Paso Del Norte border crossing
"shot twice in the chest" with "his left leg amputated as a
result of a grenade explosion." CBP officials on the case received
conflicting reports about the cause of his injuries, with one version
indicating the grenade was tossed into his vehicle, while another claimed it
had accidentally exploded as he "was attempting to toss a grenade into
another vehicle." These report comes amid Operation Knock Down, in which
U.S. authorities at the federal, state and local levels targeted Barrio Azteca
gang members in El Paso, Texas.
Document
7
April 16, 2010
Narcotics Affairs Section Mexico Monthly Report for March 2010
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 11 pp.
April 16, 2010
Narcotics Affairs Section Mexico Monthly Report for March 2010
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 11 pp.
The U.S. Embassy's Narcotics
Affairs Section provides a monthly summary of internal developments in Mexico,
reporting that "March ended as one of the bloodiest months on record, with
an estimated 900 killings nationwide." The cable highlights that Mexican government
officials did not anticipate the sharp increase in violence in the northeast
that occurred as the Zetas took control the lucrative plazas in the region.
U.S. officials report the violence has "cut a swath across north-east
Mexico, including key towns in Tamaulipas, Coahuila, and Nuevo Leon, and even
in neighboring Durango." The document highlights the failure of the
Mexican authorities to manage the growing threat, highlighting how "DTO's
[Drug Trafficking Organizations] have operated fairly openly and with freedom
of movement and operations…In many cases they operated with near total impunity
in the face of compromised local security forces."
As part of U.S. support provided
through the Mérida Initiative, the document also reports on U.S. efforts to
implement an initiative to train regional police under the Culture of
Lawfulness education initiative, involving officials from the now-defunct
Secretariat of Public Security (SSP) in Baja California, Chihuahua, Nuevo Leon,
Coahuila, and Tamaulipas
Document
8
May 28, 2010
FW: SEARS NBR 6152 for North & Central America case [redacted]
Drug Enforcement Administration, cable, classification unknown, 4 pp.
May 28, 2010
FW: SEARS NBR 6152 for North & Central America case [redacted]
Drug Enforcement Administration, cable, classification unknown, 4 pp.
This heavily-redacted DEA cable
reports on significant criminal activities taking place in Mexico, including
arrests, seized vehicles, and seized weapons. It includes details on an
incident that took place just three months before the San Fernando massacre,
involving the arrest of four members of the Zetas in Tamaulipas and the
subsequent seizure of eight assault rifles and two vehicles on May 19, 2010. A
shootout between security forces led to the deaths of four Zetas and capture of
four others. While the names of the Zetas are withheld from the document, it
notes that "it was determined that some of them were members of the Zetas
and the subjects from Guatemala were members of the Fuerzas Especiales de
Guatemala (Kaibiles)."
Document
9
c. July 2010
[Summary and Analysis of Significant Events of Violence in Ciudad Juarez]
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, cable, classification unknown, 8 pp.
c. July 2010
[Summary and Analysis of Significant Events of Violence in Ciudad Juarez]
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, cable, classification unknown, 8 pp.
The DEA provides a summary and
analysis of significant events of violence that have taken place in Ciudad
Juárez, Chihuahua and surrounding areas. It reports that "Cartel
operations against Mexican law enforcement officials have been a major component
of the CDJ Plaza battle since its beginning. The primary reason is the heavy
reliance Mexican cartels have in the use of corrupt officials."
Document
10
c. August 2010
State of Cartels
U.S. State Department, Bureau of Intelligence and Research, memorandum, Secret/NOFORN/ORCON, 3 pp.
c. August 2010
State of Cartels
U.S. State Department, Bureau of Intelligence and Research, memorandum, Secret/NOFORN/ORCON, 3 pp.
The State Department's
intelligence arm considers President Calderón's anti-crime strategy, noting his
decision to deploy military and federal police forces "to states where
weak and often corrupt state and local police units were unable or unwilling to
combat powerful cartels." Calderón's "crackdown" has put
pressure on the cartels but has also "resulted in some unintended
consequences…For example, the removal of DTO leadership has allowed less
experienced and undisciplined personnel to fill the leadership vacuum,
contributing to the spike of drug-related murders."
Document
11
August 26, 2010
Zetas massacre 72 migrants in Tamaulipas
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 3 pp.
August 26, 2010
Zetas massacre 72 migrants in Tamaulipas
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 3 pp.
The U.S. Consulate in Matamoros
sent this report four days after the San Fernando massacre of August 22, 2010,
providing the first in the series of declassified cables on the incident. The
Embassy describes how on August 22 approximately 75 migrants "were stopped
by an unknown number of organized crime figures and transported under guard to
San Fernando." According to a U.S. consulate source, the hijack point was
north of a fixed military highway checkpoint, which the migrants avoided by
using small rural roads.
Sole survivor of Tamaulipas massacre returns home to Ecuador |
An Ecuadorian male who survived
the massacre described how before the killings some of the victims were offered
an opportunity to work for the Zetas as assassins ("sicarios"). After
all but one member of the group turned down the offer to work for the Zetas,
the survivor stated that 54 men and 15 women were subsequently executed.
Mexican Navy officials found the bodies two days after the massacre in an
abandoned barn/warehouse. Two days later, on August 26, Mexican authorities
reported that the director of the municipal police in San Fernando was found
dead with other unidentified bodies, one of which was believed to be the state
prosecutor.
The document concludes with the
assessment of the consular official, noting that, "If the survivor's
account of the murders is accurate, then this represents a new level of
violence form the Zetas. It remains unclear how these deaths benefit the
Zetas…One theory proposed by [name redacted] is that as the profits from the
migrants proposed illegal entry in to the U.S. were destined for the Gulf
Cartel, their murders were a way for the Zetas to financially hurt the Gulf
Cartel's interests."
Document
12
August 27, 2010
Timeline of violent events occurring in Matamoros consular district August 22-27, 2010
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 2 pp.
August 27, 2010
Timeline of violent events occurring in Matamoros consular district August 22-27, 2010
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 2 pp.
The U.S. Consulate in Matamoros
provides further details of the timeline of events beginning with the San
Fernando killings through to August 27. The events include a shootout between
Mexican military officials and cartel members on August 24, grenade attacks the
same day, car bombs on August 27, and discovery of decapitated bodies believed
to be the state prosecutor and director of municipal police in San Fernando,
both of whom disappeared on August 25.
Document
13
August 31, 2010
Tamaulipas Massacre Seizes Front Page in El Salvador
U.S. Embassy in San Salvador, cable, Unclassified, 2 pp.
August 31, 2010
Tamaulipas Massacre Seizes Front Page in El Salvador
U.S. Embassy in San Salvador, cable, Unclassified, 2 pp.
The U.S. Embassy in El Salvador
reports on the strong public condemnation of the killings in Tamaulipas, which
included at least 13 Salvadorans. While the public sentiment in El Salvador
focuses on the failure of Mexico's government to provide safety for Salvadoran
migrants, U.S. officials attempt to frame the issues around the message that
illegal migration is dangerous and should therefore be avoided. The Deputy
Foreign Minister for Salvadorans Abroad has echoed this U.S. Embassy message.
Document
14
September 3 2010
Timeline of major violent events occurring in Matamoros consular district August 29 through September 3, 2010
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 2 pp.
September 3 2010
Timeline of major violent events occurring in Matamoros consular district August 29 through September 3, 2010
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 2 pp.
U.S. Consulate officials provide
a roundup on continuing violence in Matamoros in the wake of the San Fernando
massacre. The incidents include a grenade attack against a Mexican Naval
hospital where one of the survivors of San Fernando was recovering. Additionally,
on September 2, a second survivor of the massacre located federal authorities
in Matamoros, was taken in, and reportedly moved to Mexico City for debriefing.
The same day officials from Mexico's Attorney General's Office (PGR) and open
sources reported on military clashes with Zetas in Tamaulipas, near Nuevo Leon.
32 cartel members were reported killed along with two military officials.
Document
15
September 7, 2010
Mexico Presents Migrant Protection Plan
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 2 pages
September 7, 2010
Mexico Presents Migrant Protection Plan
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 2 pages
The U.S. Embassy reports on the
Mexican government's presentation of a five-point plan to address kidnappings
and other abuses targeting migrants. The plan included a pledge of cooperation
signed by Interior Secretary Francisco Blake Mora and other top officials
"in response to pressure on the GOM [government of Mexico] to act in the
wake of the August 24 massacre of 72 migrants in Tamaulipas." The plan
reportedly included commitments to protect migrants and combat kidnappings and
executions committed by organized criminal groups, including "increased
efforts to disband groups of migrant smugglers." The effort will also
involve focusing on increasing the capacity of the INM through "training,
increased personnel and cooperation with U.S. counterparts."
Document
16
September 10 2010
Timeline of major violent events occurring in Matamoros consular district September 4 through 10, 2010
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 2 pp.
September 10 2010
Timeline of major violent events occurring in Matamoros consular district September 4 through 10, 2010
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 2 pp.
Open sources report that the head
of public safety in Tamaulipas resigned because of escalating violence in the
state and after confirmation that bodies recently discovered were that of San
Fernando's director of the municipal police and state prosecutor. U.S. contacts
in the Attorney General's office also tell consulate officials that nine cartel
members in the San Fernando area were arrested but would not confirm if the
individuals were connected with the August 22 killing of 72 migrants.
Document
17
January 31, 2011
A Perilous Road through Mexico for Migrants
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, sensitive, 6 pp.
January 31, 2011
A Perilous Road through Mexico for Migrants
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, sensitive, 6 pp.
The U.S. Embassy reports that it
was only after the mass killings, subsequent protests from Central American
governments, and daily headlines of the ongoing violence, that the Mexican
government recently focused attention "on the protection of Central and
South American migrants transiting northwards through Mexico."
The cable highlights the
ineffectiveness of Mexico's National Migration Agency (INM) in allowing migrants
to bypass checkpoints, due to "a combination of understaffing, inability,
and corruption." It also brings attention to how the situation for
migrants has worsened "due to pervasive TCO [transnational criminal
organizations] control of routes and crossings," where "TCO's act
alternatively as paid facilitators, extortionists, kidnappers and
traffickers." Moreover, according to the cable, "anecdotal evidence
suggests that migrant authorities and local police often turn a blind eye or
collude in these activities."
The Embassy comment stresses that
a permanent solution to addressing the treatment of migrants transiting through
Mexico will require strengthening in the rule of law and increased
professionalization of law enforcement agencies. The document notes that these
types of programs are underway and are partially financed by the U.S. under the
Mérida Initiative.
Document
18
February 5, 2011
Secretary Clinton's January 24, 2011 Conversation with Mexican Foreign Secretary Espinosa
U.S. State Department, cable, confidential, 11 pp.
February 5, 2011
Secretary Clinton's January 24, 2011 Conversation with Mexican Foreign Secretary Espinosa
U.S. State Department, cable, confidential, 11 pp.
The U.S. State Department reports
on the January 24, 2011 meeting between Hillary Clinton and Mexico's Foreign
Secretary Patricia Espinosa, in which they discuss President Calderón's
upcoming visit to Washington and ways to develop a "narrative about the
depth and breadth of the relationship that goes beyond security matters."
During the meeting, Secretary Clinton apologizes for any embarrassment caused
by the WikiLeaks documents, and emphasizes the need to form a unified
narrative so both countries can portray the bilateral relationship as reaching
"beyond Merida" and involving more than just security assistance.
Clinton said the narrative should express the full story of the relationship,
and notes that on the U.S. side there has been a need to "explain to
Congress why foreign assistance money under 'Beyond Merida' should
continue."
With respect to immigration,
Secretary Espinosa brings up the San Fernando massacre, and emphasizes the need
to address the violence against Central American migrants through bilateral
cooperation. Espinosa notes that the recent violence brought a new angle to
immigration, which needs to be addressed through cooperation, and that the
immigration bill before the Mexican Congress is designed to deal with some of
the issues relating to transmigration.
Document
19
February 15, 2011
February 14 : A Day of Violence in Tamaulipas
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 2 pp.
February 15, 2011
February 14 : A Day of Violence in Tamaulipas
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 2 pp.
The U.S. Consulate in Matamoros
reports on the most violent day in the district since the San Fernando massacre
of August 2010. Twenty-six people were killed in the cities of Nuevo Padilla,
San Fernando, and Ciudad Victoria in attacks linked to translational criminal
organizations (TCO). Bodies were discovered in San Fernando, and assailants
killed a police officer in Ciudad Victoria. U.S. officials comment that Mexican
military forces are heavily involved in fighting the Zetas in the town of San
Fernando.
Document
20
April 6, 2011
Two Mass Graves Containing 48 Bodies Discovered in the San Fernando Area
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 2 pp.
April 6, 2011
Two Mass Graves Containing 48 Bodies Discovered in the San Fernando Area
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 2 pp.
The U.S. Consulate in Matamoros
continues to report on the discovery of bodies in the area. On April 2 and
again on April 6, mass graves containing 48 bodies, two reportedly wearing
police uniforms, were discovered in the community of La Joya near San Fernando.
SEDENA, the Mexican defense ministry, is in charge of recovering the bodies,
and the Attorney General's office is investigating the matter. The U.S.
Consulate comments that the bodies were likely either members of transnational
criminal organizations, victims of kidnappings by criminal organizations, or
victims of highway violence.
Document
21
April 8, 2011
More Mass Graves Found in Tamaulipas: Body total Now 81
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 3 pp.
April 8, 2011
More Mass Graves Found in Tamaulipas: Body total Now 81
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 3 pp.
Kidnappings continue in the state
of Tamaulipas on a large-scale, with clashes occurring between Mexican military
officials and criminal organizations, and new discoveries of mass graves of
victims. More mass graves have been discovered in San Fernando, bringing the
body count to 81, across 17 different burial sites. "Federal officials
believe that the majority of the bodies belong to people kidnapped from public
buses in the San Fernando area by Transnational Criminal Organization (TCO)
members in recent weeks." The victims were kidnapped on buses heading
north to the border from San Luis Potosi, destined for Reynosa, as well as
buses coming from Michoacán, and Guanajuato. SEDENA has deployed its Special
Operations Investigation unit in San Fernando to investigate.
SEDENA has also reportedly
deployed forces, rescued kidnapped victims, discovered grave sites in the
region, and detained presumed TCO members. The document notes that
"According to federal officials, the vast majority of the remains appear
to have been beaten to death. A small number had bullet wounds. Officials
sources say they believe that many individuals taken from buses have not been
reported and authorities are continuing to search the area for their
remains." As for the 14 presumed TCO members, they were reportedly brought
to Mexico City, and placed in custody of the Office of Special Investigations
of Organized Crime (SIEDO) of the Attorney General.
The U.S. Consulate official
comments that federal officials believe the Zetas are responsible for the
killings, and that the majority of the kidnapping victims discovered were
migrants heading to the U.S. "who were intercepted en route and unable to
pay what was demanded of them."
Document
22
April 15, 2011
Tamaulipas' Mass Graves: Body Count Reaches 145
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 4 pp.
April 15, 2011
Tamaulipas' Mass Graves: Body Count Reaches 145
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 4 pp.
Summing up information taken from
official sources, the U.S. Consulate reports that a total of 36 grave site
containing 145 bodies were discovered in the San Fernando area during a SEDENA
operation that took place April 1-14, 2011. Seventeen Zetas and 16 members of
the San Fernando police have been arrested in connection with the deaths. The
police officials are being charged with "protecting the Los Zetas TCO
members responsible for the kidnapping and murder of bus passengers in the San
Fernando area."
Off the record, Mexican officials
tell Consulate officials that "the bodies are being split up to make the
total number less obvious and thus less alarming." Consulate officers also
comment that, "Tamaulipas officials appear to be trying to downplay both
the San Fernando discoveries and the state responsibility for them, even though
a recent trip to Ciudad Victoria revealed state officials fully cognizant of
the hazards of highway travel in this area."
Document
23
April 20, 2011
Arrest of ZETA DTO Cell Head Martin Omar ESTRADA-Luna and Seizure of Weapons
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Report of Investigation, sensitive, 3 pp.
This DEA report includes details on the arrest of Zeta drug trafficking cell head Martín Omar Estrada Luna. According to the DOJ investigations, Estrada Luna ("El Kilo") was the leader of a Zeta cell arrested by Mexican Navy (SEMAR) on April 16, 2011 in Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas, for "alleged participation and involvement in the kidnappings and deaths of numerous innocent victims found in clandestine mass graves in San Fernando, Tamaulipas."
April 20, 2011
Arrest of ZETA DTO Cell Head Martin Omar ESTRADA-Luna and Seizure of Weapons
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Report of Investigation, sensitive, 3 pp.
This DEA report includes details on the arrest of Zeta drug trafficking cell head Martín Omar Estrada Luna. According to the DOJ investigations, Estrada Luna ("El Kilo") was the leader of a Zeta cell arrested by Mexican Navy (SEMAR) on April 16, 2011 in Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas, for "alleged participation and involvement in the kidnappings and deaths of numerous innocent victims found in clandestine mass graves in San Fernando, Tamaulipas."
Document
24
April 29, 2011
Holy Week Vacations Marred by Violence; San Fernando Body Count Reaches 196
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 4 pp.
April 29, 2011
Holy Week Vacations Marred by Violence; San Fernando Body Count Reaches 196
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, sensitive, 4 pp.
The U.S. Consulate reports that
Mexican government authorities are covering up information to hide the total
number of bodies that have been discovered in mass graves Tamaulipas.
"Though not publicized by authorities," the cable reads, "the
number of bodies found in mass graves in the San Fernando area since April 1
has reached 196 and is expected to rise as Mexican Army (SEDENA) and Marine
(SEMAR) forces continue to search the area." Official sources indicate
that SEDENA and SEMAR continue to search for new bodies, and the military
continues to respond to ongoing gun battles between rival cartels.
Despite providing private
statements about the insecurity of the region, Mexican government officials
have been downplaying the violence, particularly in the lead up to Holy Week,
so as to not deter tourism in the area. The cable reads, "Despite stating
privately in January that security in general, and highway violence in
particular, is their top concern…government officials have avoided publicly
drawing attention to the level of violence in Tamaulipas."
Document
25
May 13, 2011
Mexican Army Seizes Weapons of Local Police in Tamaulipas
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 3 pp.
May 13, 2011
Mexican Army Seizes Weapons of Local Police in Tamaulipas
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 3 pp.
U.S. Consulate officials report
that SEDENA has disarmed municipal and transit police in all but one of the 43
Tamaulipas municipalities. The government has not made public comments on the
seizure, but initial reports indicate the measure was carried out to determine
if the weapons were used in crimes. The seizure comes in the wake of the arrest
of 17 San Fernando police officers in connection with the discovery of 196
bodies in mass graves in that city. Sources tell the Consulate officials that
the SEDENA forces seized a total of 460 weapons in Matamoros, leaving
Matamoros' 700 police officers without weapons.
Document
26
May 16, 2011
Narcotics Affairs Section Mexico Monthly Report for April 2011
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 11 pp.
May 16, 2011
Narcotics Affairs Section Mexico Monthly Report for April 2011
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 11 pp.
The Embassy reports on internal
developments in Mexico, including the discovery of 183 bodies in mass graves in
the area of San Fernando, Tamaulipas, and the arrest of 17 of the 25
municipality police officers, including the municipality police chief, in
connection with the discovery of the mass grave.
Document
27
June 13, 2011
Narcotics Affairs Section Mexico Monthly Report for May 2011
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, sensitive, 9 pp.
June 13, 2011
Narcotics Affairs Section Mexico Monthly Report for May 2011
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, sensitive, 9 pp.
The document reports on drug
violence and the latest developments in U.S.-funded Mérida programs, including
the U.S. support for the SSP National Command and Control intelligence center,
biometric data collection for INM officials, and other programs. The document
also discusses the firing of seven top INM officials "amid allegations
that some agents had been involved in the kidnapping of migrants." It adds
that "Immigrants from Central America (namely from El Salvador and
Guatemala) accused the immigration agents of pulling them off buses and handing
them over to drug gangs in the state of Tamaulipas."
Document
28
October 7, 2011
Alien and Narcotics Smuggling Along the Southwest Border
U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, Intelligence Information Report, confidential, 4 pp.
October 7, 2011
Alien and Narcotics Smuggling Along the Southwest Border
U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, Intelligence Information Report, confidential, 4 pp.
This DIA intelligence report
includes information based on a human source with "both direct and
indirect access" to the information "during the course of official
duties." It reports that, "At least four Mexican police officers may
have been accepting payment from drug trafficking organizations (DTOs).
Although law enforcement officers being involved with DTOs [drug trafficking
organizations] and alien smuggling organizations (ASOs) was not new information
it was important to note so that it continued to be passed as current practice
(sic)."
The document goes on to discuss
the harsh treatment of migrants and widespread abuses carried out by human
smugglers on migrant populations.
Document
29
February 3, 2012
Mexican Political Highlights January 28-February 3, 2012
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 5 pp.
February 3, 2012
Mexican Political Highlights January 28-February 3, 2012
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 5 pp.
The U.S. Embassy highlights the
problem of corruption at the highest levels of the Tamaulipas state government,
reporting that the Attorney General's office (PGR) has been investigating three
former Tamaulipas governors since early 2009 in connection to the arrest of
Zeta founding member Miguel Angel Soto Parra. The governors include Manuel
Cavazos Lerma (1993-1999), Tomás Yarrington (1999-2004) and Eugenio Hernández
Flores (2005-2010). All three were pursuing Senate seats at the time of the
investigations and, according to the assessment, "pundits speculate that
PRI presidential candidate Enrique Pena Nieto will only give the nod to
Cavazos." It also comments that "PRI leaders say the investigation
reflects a 'dirty war' against them, and that GOM [government of Mexico] is
exploiting PGR for political purpose," and notes how "Pena Nieto
visited Tamaulipas on February 2 to launch his campaign in the state."
The cable also reports on the
trial of General Jesús Moreno Aviña, charged with human rights violation and
corruption stemming from his actions as former head of thermy garrison in
Ojinaga, Chihuahua. The charges include accepting bribes from narcotics
traffickers, and authorizing extrajudicial killings, among others.
Document
30 May 22, 2012
Sinaloa Cartel Offensive Posture Against Los Zetas and its Implications to Nuevo Laredo Plaza 21 May2012
U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), report, secret, 11 pp.
The document discusses the
continued clashes between the Zetas and the Sinaloa and Gulf cartels over
Tamaulipas Plaza in Nuevo Laredo, "a highly contentious and lucrative
corridor known for narcotic and alien trafficking." It goes on to discuss
a number of incidents involving the Zetas, and reports on the discovery in
March 2012 of 49 mutilated bodies highlighting the "abhorrent brutality
transpiring over the control of the coveted Tamaulipas Plaza."
LUZ PDF (google translated by Choco)
Source: National Security Archive
and Señor Joe of Forum
LUZ PDF (google translated by Choco)
Secrets of the massacres of Tamaulipas
Based on Freedom of Information
Act U.S. National Security Archive organization managed de-classified
diplomatic documents that reveal the collusion of federal, state and municipal
former governors including Manuel Cavazos, Tomas Yarrington and Eugenio
Hernández-with criminal organizations operating in Tamaulipas. Process provides
a summary of the manner in which Los Zetas committed their outrages against
hundreds of undocumented Central Americans between 2010 and 2012.
They left on bus passengers
heading to the border so- Nando in his new life , but returned on board a trai
- ler with coolant that deposited cash into a morgue. Most of the 196 bodies
found in April 2011 in the graves in San Fernando , Tamaulipas , was of poor
migrants beaten to death , his life was not worth even a bullet. The Tamaulipas
government was concerned that the bad publicity shooing tourism and investment.
When some-one out of the state ordered the bodies to cover up the scandal .
The information is contained in
the series of declassified cables that American officials sent to Mex-ico to
Washington between 2010 and 2012 . In these reports it is clear that the
Mexican government was aware of the crimes that they committed the Zetas in San
Fernando before the slaughter of the 72 mi -grants August 2010 and the
discovery, the following year, of the mass graves.
The reports, obtained by the
organization National Security Archive (NSA ) based on the Freedom of
Information Act
United States ( FOIA , for its
acronym in English ), reveal the collusion of municipal, state and federal
Mexican criminals with us ( the suspicion includes former governors Manuel
Cavazos Lerma , Tomas Yarrington Ruvalcaba and Eugenio Hernandez Flores) and
the presence of Kaibils in the area and the request for assistance to
Washington by the Mexican Foreign Ministry to save the popularity of Felipe
Calderon , slumped for a strategy of fight against drugs ( co-financed by the
United States) that Mexicans , and American officials themselves , regarded as
generating deraban violence.
Diplomatic reports - made-up by
various agencies from informants , Mexican officials , press releases and analysis
show that the cartels - controlled part of Tamaulipas , the suffering of the
population, some -ment of the press and the pantomime of a government that
pretended to take the reins .
Researcher Michael Evans , NSA ,
published the first papers on the organization 's blog to show the intent of
the Mexican State minimize their accountability to the crimes. New leads
provided to complete the process lived horror movie
Tamaulipas just the past six
years . The classified report with numbers 20100416 (key indicating the year,
month and day of the writing of April 16, 2010 ) notes that March , with 900
homicides nationwide , was one of the most san- grientos and Mexican officials
did not anticipate the escalation of violence when the Los Zetas Cartel
launched control the lucrative northeastern squares . During February and March
the Matamoros consular do , a town bordering Brownsville, Texas , said the
ruptu - ra of the Gulf Cartel ( CDG ) with an- teriores allies caused the
population was punished only by living in areas controlled by rivals. At each
stroke he
was a vengeance. (20100325) Panic
gripped Victoria - state capital , Matamoros , Reynosa and Nuevo Laredo , and
rumors closable forced schools. Matamoros - foresaw the consulate - could be
" confrontation scene in the future" to be barracks CDG and value
future strategic offensive.
" From the May 28, 2010 one of these documents mentions a confrontation ,
like many, between federal forces and gunmen . Its content was almost totally
censored , except one fact:
Four people killed and four
arrested on 19 " it was determined that some of them were members of Los
Zetas and Guatemala subjects were members of Guatemala 's special forces (
Kaibils ) " military known for extreme cruelty of his methods of
subjugation , among them the beheadings .
The following August , a secret
memorandum from the Office of Intelligence and Research of the State Department
mentioned : " Calderon 's offensive has put pressure on the cartels, but
has also had consequences pre - view : for example, the removal of leaders of
drug trafficking organizations has led to people with less experience and
discipline to fill these gaps , contributing to a spike in drug-related
killings " ( 20,100,800 ) .
Revelations of the slaughter
On August 22 of that year , 75 mi
-grants of Guatemala , Honduras , Brazil, Ecuador and a " Hindu " who
traveled to the border in three panels trailer were stopped by a separate
number
finished criminals and
transported under guard to San Fernando .
The kidnapping would have been
made north of a stationary seal of the Ministry of National Defense ( Defense
Secretariat ) on the road, through small rural roads, according to the cable
sent from the consulate in Matamoros , four days after the slaughter ( 20100826
) .
Among the bodies of 58 men and 14
women lay two by the impact migrants lost consciousness but awoke : it was a
Salvadoran and Ecuadoran 18. The latter related the above facts .
The survivors fled in differ-ent
directions. The Ecuadorian heard that the Salvadoran chased a truck , then
gunshots , and imagined that he was murdered . Meanwhile, sought help in a
house or go-ing tried local police ( desta - ca cable that narration differ on
this point ) , but did not help .
He walked at night. In the ma -
drugada August 23 reached a Navy seal , which gave warning of what happened
-do. When trying to locate down the place of slaughter reached sailors ran -cho
where they were attacked. Three marine and died a cartel member . One child was
apprehended , and then the survivor identified him as one of the hijackers .
On the 24th at six o'clock the Ma
- rina found the bodies in an abandoned ranch : 72 appeared to have been
stacked against the wall of the bode -ga . “Unconfirmed reports indicate that
one or more of the victims were pregnant women . The victims were found without
any identification inlet . The three trucks and baggage of migrants were not recovered,
"reads the text .
In a final comment, the diplomat
who made the report states : " If the survivor's story is accurate , this
represents a new level of violence of Los Zetas " . This is because there
seems to be a utility of these deaths to them as they did not ask for their
rescue kidnap victims as they used to
" One theory posed by - the
name of the source is deleted , is that as the profits from the smuggling of
Migrants to the United States are destined to the Gulf Cartel , the killings
were the way to Los Zetas found I - rir CDG financial interests . "
The following communication, the
27th, is a summary of events of the past four days.
In September, al- Matamoros and
its surrounding hinterland seem to live a war. Hidalgo Mayor has been killed,
the army and the Zetas face in Ciudad Mier dad , three fragmentation grenades
injuring 29 civilians in Reynosa. The attacks occur within three blocks of a
funeral service for the 72 migrants near the morgue where were deposited some
of their bodies.
Later there was an attack on the
Navy hospital where he recovered the Ecuadorian raba was the informant .
On day 2 of the month do you
receive the second survivor of the slaughter , who , according to the Center
for Investigation and National Security ( Cisen ) to estadu - nidenses , had
moved only Ma - tamoros and " supposedly was taken to DF to declare "
( 20100903 ) .
Meanwhile, Mexico tried to clean
her international reputation .
Autobuses Crisis
The February 14, 2011 was the
most violent day slow since the slaughter of August last year : 26 people are
killed . A grenade in a shopping center in Mata- moros injures nine civilians ,
according to the re -port 20110215 - "an attempt to Los Zetas to heat the
square to the dominant group ."
Findings begin cal- sored cars on
the roads, the killings of bus passengers reached by crossfire and mass arrests
like the one between Victoria and Matamoros - ros , where 23 passengers were
forced off and stripped them of their belongings .
Two months later, in April ,
begin- zan to discover narcofo - sas calls . First there were 48 bodies, two of
them dressed in police uniforms , in the community of La Joya , near San
Fernando . Some in advanced state of decomposition , others died in a span of
less than 10 days .
The first information received by
the Mexican Consulate officials is that the bodies are probably drug ,
kidnapped or road violence victims . The ter- na report with a comment :
"According to official sources at least 224 people have been kidnapped in
Tamaulipas roads in recent weeks , including a group -do forced down a long
distance truck on March 23 " ( 20110406 ) .
That same week and were 81 corpses found at 17 sites . 20110408 The
document reveals a hidden history :
On March 19, members of organized
crime kidnapped 24 people from a public bus from San Luis Potosi traveling to
Reynosa. On March 24 kidnapped 12 people from Michoacán truck . Also on 24 ,
kidnapped the 48 passengers of a truck that was going to Reynosa Guanajuato .
The three near San Fernando .
As of April 1 , with information
from detainees and their ex-hostages , the Army graves located in La Joya,
north of San Fernando . First there were 11 bodies , then 145.
From the beginning the
responsibility awarded to Los Zetas. " This is consistent with the local
press coverage , as Los Zetas controlled villages have been covered by the
findings," the report indicates .
In connection with these killings
, 17 of the 25 members of the police of San Fernando were arrested on charges
of " protect " the perpetrators.
The search for mass is
interrupted on April 13 , it notes the co - diplomats , and officials expressed
their intention to continue it later.
From the April 6 , when the
discovery was announced , the Semefo of Matamoros was crowded with people
seeking in- formation about missing relatives.
“San Fernando findings have
attracted many family -bian has not wanted to report the disappearances earlier
because of fear or threats from organized crime ," the report mentioned
once that as the excuse this - such officials to inaction, " the lack of
normal denunciations before the discovery of the mass prevented the state
prosecutor investigate the problems were suspected in the San Fernando" .
Highlight another fact: "
None of the bus companies has filed a formal complaint about the attacks from
members of organized crime on buses or passengers despite the fact that the
kidnapping had been widespread ( ... ) The authorities only had received two
official reports are not two of the passenger mass kidnappings March 24 .
Although private sectors authorities recognized that kidnappings are common. "
By then the press mentioned that
nine buses were kidnap victims at that point , to terminals came only pack.
On April 13 , the PGR sent to the
capital of the country and argued that 105 bodies have more equipment there and
families from Guanajuato and Michoacán have more facilities . The rest is that
-mended in Matamoros , the most decomposed cough would be sent to Victoria .
Off the record, officials di -
jeron Mexican consulate officials that " the bodies are being separated
(in groups ) so that the total is less obvious and thus less alarming " .
The diplomatic type -reporting
states: " The transfer of 105 bodies from the supersaturated enough
Matamoros to Mexico City morgue , is understandable from a practical point of
view , but also helps to downplay the tragedy."
It also reveals that the state
authorities knew what was happening , " apparently Tamaulipas authorities
are trying to minimize discoveries of San Fernando and state responsibility ,
although on a recent trip to Victoria was revealed officials were aware of the
danger of traveling by road through this area. "
By the end of the month were 196
bodies and " is expected to increase because the Department of Defense and
Semar continue the search " , 74 people were arrested in connection with
the crimes. After The Kilo would be arrested Martin Estrada , lo- cal chief of
Los Zetas.
State officials , meanwhile, ma -
niobran to hide the facts. "Despite government claims to the incremental
security during the period of the Easter holidays ( April 16-24 ) were several
violent incidents , including attacks on three trucks transiting -ban by
Victoria -Monterrey highway at the height of Ciudad Hidalgo , in which there
was a casualty of shootings in each " .
In April another cable indicates
that the federal governments and the state are awarded each other 's
responsibility. In private sectors , as indicated , officials have said that
security in general, and violence on the roads in particular is their biggest
concern , but evi -so in public on the issue of violence . A sample of the
nonsense is the announcement of Governor Egidio Torre Cantú that the state is a
good place to invest and secure exaggeration on beach conditions ' heavily patrolled.'
"
Officials also have said that you
can ensure the security of any business from investors without explaining how
they plan to " ( 20110429 ) .
By May, the Department of Defense
had 700 unarmed policemen do . In June it was reported the dismissal of seven
top officials of the National Institute of Migration "amid allegations
that were involved in the kidnapping of migrants " , because "
immigrants from Central America ( specifically in El Salvador and Guatemala )
the accused them out of the bus made months and deliver them to the bands of
drug traffickers in the state of Tamaulipas " ( 20110613 ) . Those months
both Fed-eral Police and the Department of Defense is engaged in freeing
hostages safe houses .
Source: National Security Archive
Chapo gave the go-ahead for this information to be released.
ReplyDeleteChivaaa! nice reporting,that manuel cavazos lerma,is really something,from governor to federal Senator right now,he outlived outsmarted and outlasted all of the corrupt tamaulipas politicians, somebody must have a lot more dirt on him.
ReplyDeleteAgain nice job chivis and BB
all corrupt Mexican politicians should be ousted by the NSA/CIA...
ReplyDeleteAnother sad moment in Mexican history .It was a cover up from day one.
ReplyDeleteVery little coverage north of the Rio Bravo. And we know why.... Recently someone said Mexico is 500% safer than Detroit or St. Louis. Where the hell do these people get their statistics from?
http://www.twtex.com/forums/showpost.php?p=1193223&postcount=94
Chiva copeas tus historias. Esto ya avia salido en narcopress.. Por vete a ya sabes donde
ReplyDelete11:07 she posts this report, and credits the source,for us,the people that would not have read it anywhere else,I am grateful for the help BB and the reporters provide and the time it saves me looking for something like this all over the internet,it is like somebody had patented exclusivity to the word asshole,which reminds me of you,I DON'T KNOW WHY...must be the smell of you know what...
DeleteAh the good ol' days the letter people were on top of their game I shed a tear to think I was alive to see them form from the ground up talk about a true badass cartel.
ReplyDeleteATTE: English Z
12:55 my deer inglish zeta,the zetas were nothing but a communist cult,from "elite" military to "elite"sicarios,to muggers of the traffickers that trusted them,to exploitators of the maruchanerozzz carwazhing paleteroz
Deletethat worked for them,to finally losing all of the whole gang,money,business,lives and freedoms to the backstabbing treviños,only el Taliban had the presence of mind to call it as he saw it,and the smarts to do something about it.the narcotized narcozetas,never even had what it takes to be a soldier, personal integrity,and had even less of what is takes to be a criminal,stealth and intelligence,which a backstabbing judazzz had a little,not too much a little more of...
Inglish zeta,even your mother would agree to these postulates born out of scientific observation,all so true that you can't answer
And I don't blame you,I understand how hard it is to discover that you have been idolizing that big of a pile of shit!!!
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
It is just so telling that the Kaibiles are a product of the US. Initially trained and equipped by the US in order to serve the landlords of the guatemalan feudal system (given legitimacy by operating under the disguise of the guatemalan state of course) ensuring the stability of their sweet business relationships with US-corporations.
ReplyDeleteGAFE is the same (set up as a reaction to the Zapatista uprising) and in the end members of both organizations end up as full fledged criminal organizations.
The phenomena is, of course, not limited to latin america. Anyone here young enough to remember president Reagan labelling the Taliban in Afganistan "freedom fighter"???
Or Sadam Hussien (sic) as an ally of the USA against Iran?
Delete4:40 you all right,except that the taliban did their job against the russians,if they had not been dropped in the garbage,they would not have been picked up by the alqaeda religio-fanatistas,dropped themselves in the same fashion...carrying away with themselves the moslemo world,and Iran and Pakistan...
Delete9:23 and before helping Saddam,the Republicans,allied with the ayatollah ruhollah Khomeini to stick it to Jimmy Carter's ass,to deal with in iran-contra,to move illegal oil sales,they were helped too in the war against the iraquis,in which the war-machines that be helped both sides...
Chivis you most be a fool if you think most of the people will read a long post like this one. At the most only 10% will probably read it, not to mention that this is just conspiracy theory.
ReplyDelete5:34 based on the circumstantial evidence that proves you a fool ass,you are a fool dumbass!
DeleteTry and learn to read,or just get a video,or...
any credit to insightcrime.org?
ReplyDeletemaybe they should take the captured Zetas and drop them off in the neighborhoods of Central America - the same places where the relatives of the dead immigrants still live. that might give some justice, don't you think?
ReplyDeleteas for the corrupt authorities ... you never want to try to be the smartest rat in a sewer. you know why? because even if you escape the sewer and get to the streets - you will never be able to smell the fresh air. the stink of corruption stays with you forever.
This is not Insight Crime I gave credit to the source National Archive and the link to it. it is from George Washington University.
ReplyDeleteAs for no one reading the entire thing...don't be silly and immature.
I provided ALL docs, which I don't know who else has.
instead of me selecting what may interest you, you can select by linking on after reading the intro.....
The Mexican government doesn't give a shit about it's people, they can't protect them. What makes the U.S.A think that they are going to protect immigrants?? Let alone give a crap about them. The NSA with their little spy shit. When U.S soldiers commit the worse crimes, where is that accountability??
ReplyDelete@11:07
ReplyDeletethank you! Narcopress is BDN and HIstorias. But when I tried to link to narcopress it took me directly to historias/bdn
Chivaaa! never mind your detractors,it's only that you are so inaccessible,that some resort to slamming you in the comments to attract your attention.that what you get for being so pretty!!!
ReplyDeleteXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOX
Sad day when these Bully's kill poor people who have nothing to do with the Narcos. Why? i hope God has found a place for these good people.
ReplyDeleteBully , What ever happened to men like Theodore Roosevelt ?
ReplyDeleteA real American Hero !!!!!!!!!