Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat TY R. Bunker from Small Wars Journal
Mexican Cartel Tactical Note #42:
Robert J. Bunker, David A. Kuhn and John P.
Sullivan
On Thursday 7 November 2019, a vehicle
containing a visible IED was discovered in front of a residence in Apaseo el
Alto, Guanajuato. The device was a ‘Papa Bomba’ (Potato Bomb) based on a FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia)
design. A Mexican Army (SEDENA) bomb squad subsequently rendered the explosive
device safe. The placement of the IED in the vehicle has been attributed to
violent competition between the Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) and
Cártel de Santa Rosa de Lima (CSRL) in the town and surrounding region.
Key Information: “Hallan una camioneta llena de explosivos en
Apaseo el Alto.” La Silla Rota
Guanajuato. 7 November 2019, https://guanajuato.lasillarota.com/estados/hallan-una-camioneta-llena-de-explosivos-en-apaseo-el-alto-apaseo-el-alto-camioneta-explosivos-constituyentes/333962:
Un equipo antibombas de la Secretaría de Defensa
retiró los artefactos que estaban en el interior de una Chevrolet color plata
estacionada en la colonia Santa Elena Norte
Tensión en Apaseo el Alto tras
el hallazgo este jueves de una camioneta llena
de artefactos explosivos. De forma
extraoficial trascendió que el vehículo estaba estacionado en la calle Andrés
Quintana Roo esquina con Constituyentes del
municipio.
Los vecinos
alertaron de una presencia de un vehículo sospechoso en la colonia Santa Elena Norte sobre
las 13:30 horas de este jueves.
La zona fue
resguardada por autoridades, además elementos del equipo antibombasde la Secretaría de la
Defensa y de la Guardia Nacional. Elementos de la Agencia de Investigación Criminal (AIC)
también arribaron a la zona para resguardar la seguridad de la ciudadanía y
controlar el manejo de los explosivos.
Aunque
todavía no hay información oficial sobre el hallazgo, se sabe que la camioneta en la que fueron
encontrados los explosivos es
una Chevrolet de color plata.
Key Information: “Encuentran explosivos dentro de vehículo,
en Apaseo el Alto.” Milenio. 7
November 2019, https://www.milenio.com/policia/encuentran-explosivos-en-apaseo-el-alto-dentro-de-un-vehiculo:
Al momento se desconoce el tipo de explosivos o
la cantidad; autoridades aseguran que la situación está controlada.
En el interior de una camioneta fueron
encontrados explosivos, confirmaron fuentes de primer nivel de la Guardia
Nacional.
El hallazgo se reportó en el municipio de Apaseo el Alto, el vehículo sospechoso fue
encontrado estacionado sobre la calle
Andrés Quintana Roo esquina con Constituyentes,
de la colonia Santa Elena Norte,
cerca de las 13:00 horas de este jueves.
La zona ha sido resguardada por autoridades,
además elementos del equipo antibombas de la Secretaría de la Defensa y
de la Guardia Nacional así como Agentes de Investigación Criminal (AIC) arribaron
a la zona para resguardar la seguridad de la ciudadanía y controlar el manejo
de los explosivos.
Key Information: Jaeson Jones and Ildefonso Ortiz, “NARCO-TERROR:
Mexican Cartel Uses Car Bomb to Target Rivals.” Brietbart
(Cartel Chronicles). 11 November 2019, https://www.breitbart.com/border/2019/11/11/narco-terror-mexican-cartel-uses-car-bomb-to-target-rivals/:
In recent days, violence in the state of
Guanajuato between Cartel Jalisco New Generation (CJNG) and Cartel Santa Rosa
de Lima (CDRL) left at least 25 dead, including five police officers.
Authorities in the town Apaseo el Alto also
responded to a call of a car bomb presumably left by one of the cartels
fighting for control of the region. A military
bomb squad responded to the scene and deactivated the explosive device, Milenio reported.
The device bears the familiar features of a
“bomba papa” or potato bomb, as they are commonly referred to in Central
America. They are used extensively by the terrorist
organization FARC, also known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Columbia-Peoples Army...
Unfortunately, this is not the first potato bomb
interdicted by Mexican law enforcement in Guanajuato. In October 2017,
authorities seized a weaponized drone containing the improvised explosive
device during a traffic stop. The state of Michoacán also reported four other
potato bombs recovered in 2017.
Months earlier, a 17-page report from the Center
for Research and National Security (CISEN) warned Mexico’s law enforcement that
the cartels’ international expansion helped them to acquire new tradecraft in
building potato bombs from the FARC. The report
further warned that members of the FARC may be seeking work with Mexican cartels.
Key Information: “Dejan camioneta con explosivos y un hombre
muerto en Apaseo.” El Otro Enfoque.
7 Noviembre 2019, https://elotroenfoque.mx/dejan-camioneta-con-explosivos-y-un-hombre-muerto-en-apaseo/:
APASEO EL ALTO, GTO.– La tarde de este jueves, fue localizada
una camioneta con explosivos y un hombre muerto.
El incidente se registró en las calles Andrés
Quintana Roo esquina con Constituyentes en la colonia Santa Elena Norte.
El vehículo es una camioneta Chevrolet Equinox
plata.
Hasta el lugar llegaron elementos de la Policía
Municipal, de la Guardia Nacional, de las Fuerzas de Seguridad del Estado y del
Ejército Mexicano y acordonaron varios metros a la redonda.
Key Information: Andrés Becerril, “Narcos copian bombas de FARC;
Cisen alerta de explosivos tipo ‘papa.’” Excelsior.
21 July 2017, http://www.excelsior.com.mx/nacional/2017/07/21/1176937#imagen-1:
El Cártel
Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) utiliza explosivos como los usados por las
Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC), alerta un informe de
seguridad nacional.
Un reporte
de 17 fojas elaborado por el Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional
(Cisen) indica que los cárteles mexicanos, además de droga y armas, obtienen de
organizaciones internacionales estrategias para su expansión…
Pese a que
el grupo narcoguerrillero las FARC firmó la paz y ya se desarmó, el Cisen
indica que algunos de sus integrantes pueden buscar oportunidades entre las
organizaciones criminales mexicanas.
EMULA CÁRTEL DE JALISCO LAS TÁCTICAS DE LAS FARC
El
documento, del cual Excélsior tiene copia, alerta a la Secretaría de la Defensa
Nacional, Marina, Policía Federal y a las corporaciones estatales y municipales
a rediseñar las estrategias existentes para la contención y evitar la expansión
de dicho grupo delincuencial, así como incrementar los protocolos de seguridad
para garantizar la integridad física de los servidores públicos que participan en
los operativos contra este cártel, que se plantea como el más poderoso a nivel
nacional…
De acuerdo
con el documento señalado, “el CJNG para expandirse y mantener su hegemonía
recurre a fortalecer sus estructuras criminales a través del adiestramiento que
obtiene de otras organizaciones delictivas de talla internacional; así fue como
obtuvo la técnica de fabricación del artefacto explosivo tipo papa de las FARC.
Who: A Mexican cartel is presumed to have left the
IED in the vehicle. The Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) is suspected
because of the type of device utilized. The CJNG is engaged in a violent
competition with the Cártel de Santa Rosa de Lima (CSRL) in the surrounding
region.
What: A papa
bomba (‘potato bomb’)—with what appears to be a remote control radio
frequency trigger and wiring to the IED—visibly placed in the front passenger
seat of a silver Chevy Equinox SUV.
When: The IED in the vehicle was noticed by local
residents between 1:00-1:30 PM (13:00-13:30 hours) on Thursday 7 November
2019. The residents altered local authorities. The scene containing
the incident vehicle was cordoned off while SEDENA bomb technicians attended
the scene and rendered the device safe. The vehicle was removed from the
incident scene by 5:00 PM (1700 hours).
Where: In front of a residence on Andrés Quintana Roo
street in the Santa Elena Norte neighborhood of the town of Apaseo el Alto,
Guanajuato.
Why: Unknown; the incident appears to indicate a case
of threat messaging—overt IED placed in a vehicle to be discovered (rather for
detonation purposes)—but no narcomanta or
other messaging or communication was evident at the scene or associated within
it near the incident.
Analysis
At approximately 1:00-1:30 PM (13:00-13:30
hours) on Thursday 7 November 2019, a silver Chevy Equinox SUV was noticed by
concerned residents parked in front of a residence in the town of Apaseo el
Alto, Guanajuato. An IED—known as a ‘Papa
Bomba’ (Potato Bomb)—consistent with a FARC design was overtly left on
the front passenger seat of the vehicle. Some type of radio frequency (RF)
receiver was taped (with gray electrical tape) to the explosive payload covered
in white plastic with 2 sets of white wires emanating from the RF receiver to
the explosives. The door and driver window of the vehicle was also visible in
the incident image—locked and rolled up, respectively—as well as a clear bottle
of a some sort of liquid with the partial word “..OWER” on it (Refer to the incident
photos).
Mexican authorities arrived at the incident
scene and cordoned off the street after being notified by the local residents
(See incident
photo). Mexican Army (SEDENA) bomb squad personnel then arrived
and rendered the device safe, at which point it and the vehicle were removed by
5:00 pm (17:00 hours). The configuration and size the device are consistent
with an anti-personnel IED design and it was officially announced that the bomb
was a live device. An early report suggested that a dead body was also left
with the vehicle but this appears to be erroneous.[1]
Concerning the attribution of the car bomb to a
cartel operating in Apaseo el Alto, both CJNG and CRSL have past linkages to
IED usage. CJNG has utilized Papa
Bombas on number of prior occasions—including at least one from
October 2017 with what appears to be RF detonation capability.[2] Hence,
placing an IED within a vehicle would be relatively simple for them to
undertake. Although they have not deployed a car bomb in Mexico in the past (or
placed an anti-personnel IED in a vehicle for that matter), they have however
deployed a true car bomb (with anti-infrastructure destruction capability) in
Colombia—via ex-FARC mercenary forces—a few weeks after this incident took place.[3]
The CSRL, on the other hand, in January 2019
placed an IED in the front passenger seat (as in this incident) of a vehicle
parked by an oil refinery in Salamanca, Guanajuato for threat messaging
purposes.[4] That IED was composed of Emulex, however, and had a different
signature than the potato bomb/RF receiver combination found in the Apaseo el
Alto incident. These signatures support the assessment that a greater
probability exists that the Apaseo el Alto IED may be linked to the CJNG. This
assessment is provisional and is not definitive (additional analysis is
warranted).
In a
previous IED incident in Apaseo el Alto an explosive device was left in a
plastic bag with a RF transmitter in front of a residence on 24 October 2017.
It was rendered safe by SEDENA EOD personnel and its signature is somewhat
similar to the IED placed in the vehicle on 7 November 2019.[5] The October
2017 and November 2019 IED incidents occurred about 550 meters by road from one
another (as determined by geospatial analysis of the herein undisclosed
locations).
Vehicle IED Analysis and Damage Estimate from a
Potential Detonation
The antenna on the detonator box that is attached to
the explosive package discovered within the vehicle parked on a residential
street in Apaseo el Alto, Guanajuato, and the antenna on a previous IED package
discovered in front of a another residence in Guanajuato on 24 October 2017
indicate that the operating (triggering) frequency for both device triggers is likely
to fall within the HF (3-30 MHz) and VHF (30-300 MHz) ranges.
The telescoping antennas on each package, while
significantly different in physical length when fully extended, are well within
the above frequency ranges. These antennas may have been salvaged from common
AM / FM receivers and repurposed for this use.
A portable transmitter using the correct wattage would be able to
trigger the target receivers within a specific range [range undisclosed here
for operational security] in urban terrain with height obstructions that are
consistent with both locations.
Limited information is available on the explosive
compounds that are currently used on these types of IEDs:
These IEDs are composed of a sphere-like mass of
explosives tightly taped together with the inclusion of nuts and nails for a
shrapnel effect. The initial explosive mixture utilized in these devices was
potassium chlorate, sulfur, and aluminum powder based. Their use or possession
in Mexico has been identified in at least four [previous] cases since at least
February 2017, two in La Piedad (with one detonation), one in Santiguito, and
one near Cerrito de Ortiz, all in Michoacán.[6]
Papas bombas are primarily anti-personnel devices.
Potassium chlorate, sulfur, and aluminum powder compounds are generally
incendiary in nature when placed together and can produce a violent exothermic
reaction. While mixtures such as these are not generally explosive, they can
become so under certain conditions and types of confinement. Historically, these devices have been coupled
with various forms of shrapnel, as described above. Therefore, certain chemical
compounds may have been added to this device that would place it in an
explosive-incendiary category.
Recent Guanajuato Incidents in Historical Context
This recent Apaseo el Alto incident is not
surprising as car bombs—specifically bombs placed in cars with weaker
anti-personnel payloads—have been appearing increasingly in Guanajuato state
over the last year or so. On 5 November 2019, a suitcase containing explosives
and a triggering system was left in a black Grand Cherokee that was recovered
in Rincón de Centeno, Guanajuato. The IED was neutralized by Mexican Army
(SEDENA) explosive ordinance disposal (EOD) personnel with no cartel
attribution mentioned.[7]
An earlier incident related to an explosive device
(artefacto explosivo) left in a stolen red Ford Explorer abandoned on the side
of a highway took place in Apaseo el Alto on 15 October 2019. The device—which
was sausage shaped and constructed with tape and electrical cable—was
transported by SEDENA EOD personnel to a remote location for destruction. No
attribution to a specific cartel being involved in the incident was made.[8]
Prior to that, in September 2018, a White Silverado containing C4 explosives
was found in the parking lot of the public ministry (ministero publico) of
Apaseo el Grande, Guanajuato. This device was also rendered safe by SEDENA EOD
personnel with no cartel linkages stated.[9] A couple of years earlier, in
August 2016, a Dodge Avenger on a highway near Pénjamo, Guanajuato heading to
La Piedad, Michoacán was interdicted by Mexican authorities. The vehicle was
driven by two individuals and contained a remote control detonation explosive
device that was subsequently deactivated by SEDENA EOD personnel.[10]
The use of car bombs in Mexico by the cartels has a
sporadic history going back to the mid-1990s with a few bombings then
evident.[11] In July 2008 an incident in Culiacán, Sinaloa included IEDs with
gas canisters for boosting purposes. A cluster of about twenty car bombs were
then utilized between July 2010 and July 2012 in an intense cycle of cartel
violence spanning the Mexican states of Chihuahua, Tamaulipas, Jalisco, Nuevo
León, and Hidalgo.[12] Since that time, a lull existed with no cartel car bomb
deployment taking place until the August 2016
and onward incidents in Guanajuato state mentioned above.
Historically, these devices have consistently
remained anti-personnel in their construction rather than true or full-potential
VBIEDs (vehicle borne improvised explosive devices) with infrastructure
destruction targeting capability as were utilized in Colombia decades ago by
the Medellín cartel against the Colombian state or most recently by CJNG
(attributed) also in Colombia.[13] What the future now holds for car bomb use
in Mexico by the cartels is unknown, although recent incident trending suggests
that we are increasingly in an active phase of their utilization.[14] Further,
if the full-potential VBIED anti-infrastructure targeting ‘fire break’ should
at some point be broken, the Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación would be the
mostly likely current criminal organization in Mexico to do so.
Conclusion
The potentials spread of FARC explosives [both
devices and tactics, techniques, and procedures – (TTPs)] to the Mexican crime
wars is now clearly evident. Prior
warnings of the spread of FARC tradecraft to the Mexican situation are
unfolding.[15] CISEN had previously assessed that papas bombas based in the
FARC template were being integrated into cartel TTPs.[16] All public safety
personnel in Mexico (police, firefighters, emergency medical responders,
Guardia Nacional) and military operators (SEMAR and SEDENA) involved in
counter-cartel pacification missions need to be aware of the threat of papas
bombas and other IEDs. The proliferation of these devices potentially enhances
the lethality of cartel violence and may signal potential trends toward the use
of explosives and car bombs (including the deployment of full-potential VBIEDs).
For a list of sources please link here
How is a tactical team of frustrated huachicoleros coming in contact with a drug trafficking and terror exporting country like Colombia?
ReplyDeleteWell, former presidente Alvaro uribe velez is still doing what he does best, terrorist campaigns and drug trafficking, also governor ainhue needs more, MORE, MORE!!!! Federal funds from AMLO to steal, or to PRIvatize, as the criminal Mexican narco-politicos use to do with impunity, and this is PAN, PRI, MC, PVEM, PRD and others, pinche bola de ratas.
Yes. All of the parties in Mexico are compromised. It would seem that this is the case world wide, Mexico just happens to have a spotlight shone on its corruption, as the violence attracts attention. Sad how little coverage it gets in the media, that is of course, until it affects white people. This is what makes Borderland Beat and sites that are not compromised so important, as they inform those of us who are interested in getting real news. CNN and Fox News are a joke. A sick, awful, joke of a distraction from the global decay and greed that fuel catastrophic suffering most of the world is subjected to.
DeleteThat's good it never went off, baby killer cartel member, was too sissy to detonate it.
ReplyDeleteSo you saying he should of detonate it? You salty because he was a sissy? The hell is wrong with you?
DeleteIt seems like an anomaly that during all of the carnage in Mexico
ReplyDelete, bombs have been hardly utilized. I’m glad of course, civilians tend to get blown up as well as the target.
During the Quebec biker war of the 90’s 88 bombs were employed to kill rivals, as ‘Mom’ Boucher laid waste to any DTO not buying from his nomads. He was the closest thing Canada has seen to a cartel leader willing to kill police judges and corrections officers. Guess how that worked out for him. Seeking to control a state is the mark of a megalomaniac as opposed to a business like, low profile dealer seeking money rather than notoriety such as Vito Rizzuto, Montreal mob boss who was the most powerful narco globally prior to his death in 2013. His ‘sicarios’ were precise and only used when diplomacy failed. Very few people are aware of the tens of billions this man generated through bringing together various DTO’s rather than killing everybody.
“Keep it boring strang’ keep it dead fuckin boring.”-proposition Joe
The Wire
DeleteA dark harbinger of things to come, reminiscent of mass causality bombings in Columbia attributed to Escobar. This will be the future and catalyst for change for Mexico as a critical mass of society finally will have had enough and revolt against the status quo. Things will be worse before becoming better.
ReplyDelete@1031: things will get worse for sure, but there will be no revolt (unfortunately). The Mexican government is totally in control and with its big neighbour in the north having no interest in revolutionary instability, the situation for the common and honest person will just get worse.
ReplyDeleteOnly legalisation (=taking the profit out of crime) can make a change for the better for the innocent and honest people.
Taking profits out of crime? Some acts are simply malum in se and cannot be legalized, lest a state of anarchy and chaos reigns.
ReplyDelete