Los Angeles Times

Security questions for Mexico leader

A year into his term, the president faces increased scrutiny of his security policies.

- By Kate Linthicum and Steve Fisher Linthicum is a Times staff writer and Fisher a special correspond­ent. Cecilia Sanchez of The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

Rising violence has fueled scrutiny of president’s policies a year into his term.

MEXICO CITY — At 7 a.m. each weekday, as the sun is rising over this sprawling mountain capital, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador steps in front of a gaggle of cameras and begins to talk.

His news conference­s, which can stretch as long as three hours, often meander among a wide range of topics. On any given day he may discuss policy, baseball, the impact of neo-liberal economic policies or the history of the Spanish conquest.

Increasing­ly, the loquacious commander in chief has had to face one subject he’d rather not address: Mexico’s spiraling violence, and growing doubts about his strategy to fix it.

López Obrador, a 66year-old populist leftist, was elected in a landslide victory last year in part on his pledge to bring peace to this violence-weary nation.

Renouncing the militarize­d approach of his predecesso­rs, whom he accused of turning Mexico “into a graveyard,” he vowed to transfer public safety duties from the armed forces to a new civilian National Guard and to tackle organized crime by fighting poverty.

“Hugs, not bullets” was his catchy campaign promise.

But as López Obrador prepares to mark his first year in office Sunday, record-high homicide rates and a series of extreme acts of cartel violence have invited increased scrutiny of his security policies, some of which contradict his lofty rhetoric.

Significan­tly, he has not demilitari­zed public security and sent soldiers back to their barracks as promised.

The National Guard, which López Obrador vowed to put under civilian control, is being led by a recently retired former army general, and nearly 80% of the force is made up of former soldiers or marines.

Many of the new troops have yet to receive promised training in human rights and how to carry out criminal investigat­ions, which is supposed to be one of their new duties.

In recent months, many members of the National Guard have been diverted entirely from addressing violence and organized crime. After President Trump threatened Mexico with tariffs if it did not reduce the number of Central American migrants reaching the U.S., López Obrador ordered thousands of those guards to Mexico’s northern and southern borders to curtail illegal immigratio­n.

The troops’ mandate remains largely unclear. Is it to essentiall­y replace local police? Under what circumstan­ces will they be deployed?

“I need to know a lot more about the National Guard and where it’s going to be and what it’s going to be doing,” said Aileen Teague, a postdoctor­al fellow at Brown University who is writing a book about the impact of U.S. drug policies and policing efforts on Mexico.

While many who have studied the drug war agree that a break with the militarize­d strategy of the past is a good move, Teague said, López Obrador has offered frustratin­gly few details.

“His goals are valuable,” she said. “But I question his plans for execution.”

When faced with such questions, López Obrador often responds by saying that he inherited a country where violence was already out of control. He has also stressed that some elements of his plan — a program that gives cash transfers to hundreds of thousands of poor Mexicans, for example — are not quick fixes and are designed to help curb crime over a longer period.

He has reacted angrily at times, saying that he has already made Mexico a more peaceful place and that Mexicans need to be patient.

He and his Cabinet members point proudly to a slight decrease in homicides in recent months — in October, 2,866 Mexicans were killed, down slightly from this year’s monthly peak of 2,993 in June. Security Secretary Alfonso Durazo has described the dip as an “inflection point.”

Yet Mexico is still on track to see nearly 35,000 homicides in 2019, which would break last year’s record of 33,341.

A number of high-profile security incidents have raised questions about whether the government has ceded control of parts of the country to organized crime, especially the government’s badly botched effort in October to capture the son of drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.

At least 13 people died when the Sinaloa cartel seized control of the northern city of Culiacan in a successful effort to force the release of Guzmán’s son.

Speaking about the incident at a news conference days later, López Obrador praised the soldiers and National Guard troops who took part in the failed operation and defended his decision to release the younger Guzmán, which he said was made to save lives.

“We will no longer fight violence with violence,” he said. “There is no longer a war against drug trafficker­s.”

Security expert Javier Oliva said statements like that send a dangerous signal to Mexico’s criminal groups.

“‘Hugs not bullets’ could be interprete­d by criminal groups as an opportunit­y to gain territory as authoritie­s step back,” he said.

In the weeks after the Culiacan incident, similar scenes played out in other cities.

This month a cartel terrorized Juarez, on the border with El Paso, igniting 35 vehicles in a fight with security forces. Another criminal group seized control of the border city of Nuevo Laredo, blocking intersecti­ons with buses and tractor-trailers that its members had set ablaze.

And then there are the dramatic mass killings that seem to occur every few months.

In Michoacan state, 19 bodies were hung from a bridge or scattered nearby in August, and 14 police officers were ambushed and killed in

October.

In Veracruz state, 30 people were killed when a strip club was firebombed in August, and in Sonora state, nine women and children who belonged to a breakaway Mormon sect were gunned down this month.

The Tijuana-based newspaper Zeta tallied 53 massacres — single violent incidents in which at least four people died — in the first 11 months of López Obrador’s term.

According to the newspaper, suspects have been detained in only five cases.

López Obrador still receives approval ratings above 60%, with many voters viewing him as more accessible and relatable than previous leaders.

Yet the continued violence is taking a toll.

In March, 53% of Mexicans approved of López Obrador’s work fighting organized crime, according to a poll by El Universal newspaper. That number fell to 31% this month.

The violence has also attracted unwanted attention from Trump, whom López Obrador has largely sought to appease on the issues of trade and migration. Trump and other Americans have called for Mexico to remilitari­ze its fight against cartels, with the U.S. president this week vowing to designate Mexican drug cartels as terrorist groups.

“The future of Mexico is so important,” U.S. Ambassador Christophe­r Landau said recently, urging Mexico to take a harder stance against criminal groups. “If we don’t fight this now, it’s going to get much worse.”

 ?? EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? MEXICAN forces clashed with cartel gunmen in Culiacan during the government’s botched effort in October to capture the son of drug lord Joaquín Guzmán.
EPA/Shuttersto­ck MEXICAN forces clashed with cartel gunmen in Culiacan during the government’s botched effort in October to capture the son of drug lord Joaquín Guzmán.

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