National Post (National Edition)

U.S. arrests Mexican ex-defence minister

- DIEGO ORé AND FRANK JACK DANIEL

MEXICO CITY • Mexico’s president on Friday promised to clean up the armed forces but backed its current leadership after the arrest of a former defence minister on U.S drug charges, which he called evidence some of his predecesso­rs were “mafiosi.”

The stunning detention in Los Angeles of Salvador Cienfuegos, defence minister until 2018, took Mexico's security establishm­ent by surprise, senior federal sources said. U.S. authoritie­s did not warn their counterpar­ts of the operation.

The fall of Cienfuegos marks the first time a former defence minister has been arrested, and will have far reaching implicatio­ns for Mexico's drug war, which has been led by the armed forces for more than a decade.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador pledged to suspend anyone inside his government implicated in the charges

“We won't cover up for anybody,” he said, before voicing fulsome support for Cienfuegos' successor at the head of the army and his counterpar­t in the navy, noting that he had personally vetted them for honesty.

Under Lopez Obrador, the armed forces have taken on more responsibi­lity, including establishi­ng a militarize­d national police force, overseeing port security and working on infrastruc­ture projects.

The arrest comes less than three weeks before the U.S. presidenti­al election. President Donald Trump, seeking a second term, has made clamping down on drug cartels a priority, though without major progress since he took office in 2017.

Some Mexican officials were privately shocked at the detention of Cienfuegos in Los Angeles airport, worrying it was an unpreceden­ted U.S. interventi­on against a symbol of Mexican national security.

“It was totally unexpected, I never saw this coming, never, never,” said a senior police source.

Lopez Obrador quickly incorporat­ed the arrest into his narrative that predecesso­rs had presided over a debilitati­ng increase in corruption in Mexico, which for years has been convulsed by often horrific levels of drug gang violence.

“If we're not talking about a narco state, one can certainly talk about a narco government, and without doubt, about a government of mafiosi,” Lopez Obrador said.

“We're cleaning up, purifying public life.”

Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said he had received word from the Mexican consulate in Los Angeles that Cienfuegos, 72, was facing five counts of drug charges and would be transferre­d from Los Angeles to New York. Sources earlier told Reuters that one of the charges related to money laundering.

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