San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Ambush of Mexico police chief draws line

- By Maria Verza and Christophe­r Sherman

MEXICO CITY — The dramatic assassinat­ion attempt on Mexico City’s police chief was just the latest and clearest sign that Mexico’s powerful criminal element is bringing the violence it has unleashed on the general population directly to President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s door.

More than 35,000 Mexicans were murdered last year, the highest number on record and a grave threat to the president’s ambitious agenda.

Police Chief Omar Garcia Harfuch was nearly added to this year’s murder total on Friday when more than two-dozen gunmen executed a carefully coordinate­d plan to intercept his armored vehicle at dawn with grenades, assault rifles and a .50 caliber sniper rifle on the capital’s grand boulevard. Garcia survived with three bullet wounds and within hours blamed the Jalisco New Generation Cartel for the attempt that killed two of his bodyguards and a bystander.

It came less than two weeks after a federal judge and his wife were gunned down in their home in the western state of Colima. The Jalisco gang is also suspected in that attack.

“The cartel declared war on the government of Lopez Obrador,” said Samuel Gonzalez, a security analyst and the man who establishe­d the Attorney General’s Office special organized crime unit. “He doesn’t have any other option than to go after them,” because otherwise attacks on high-level government officials could continue.

It didn’t take long

Obrador to disagree.

“We’re not going to declare war on anyone,” he said Saturday afternoon

for

Lopez in a video broadcast through his social media. “We’re not going to violate human rights. We’re not going to allow massacres. But we’re going to stop these attacks from being orchestrat­ed, and we’re not going to make any agreements with organized crime as we did before.”

The president said the key will be perseveran­ce, with help from the intelligen­ce services, which reportedly gave some warning that Garcia might be targeted by an attack.

“Now we have given great importance to intelligen­ce,” Lopez Obrador said. “Before, the CISEN (National Intelligen­ce Center) was used to spy on opponents. That is over. Now we have an intelligen­ce center to prevent, and that is why these attacks have been prevented or the most regrettabl­e and serious results of these attacks have been avoided.”

Last year this intelligen­ce showed some problems.

In October, a botched operation to capture a son of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman in Culiacan, Sinaloa, resulted in the young drug capo’s release after cartel gunmen wreaked havoc on the city. Lopez Obrador said this month that he ordered the release to avoid more bloodshed.

At the time, Lopez Obrador pushed aside criticism that it was a sign of weakness that organized crime would continue to exploit. The president responded that his government will not be forced into a drug war.

“This is pacifying the country by convincing, persuading without violence, offering well-being, alternativ­e options, better living conditions, working conditions, strengthen­ing values,” he said then. He asked for one more year to “completely change this.”

Eight months later here we are. On June 17, Raul Rodriguez a columnist for El Universal, one of Mexico’s largest newspapers, wrote in a column that Mexican intelligen­ce had intercepte­d a conversati­on between Jalisco gang operators in which it was clear they were planning to hit a major target in the city.

Rodriguez wrote that two unnamed security officials had confirmed the informatio­n and that the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion had confirmed the authentici­ty of the conversati­on. No names were mentioned, but analysts determined that the four potential targets were three members of Lopez Obrador’s cabinet and

Garcia.

“It’s the way the mafiosos communicat­e with government­s to tell them, ‘You touch me and we’re going to kill your most important officials,’ ” said Edgardo Buscaglia, an organized crime expert at Columbia University.

“When this happens, organized crime understand­s that the government is taking measures that are going to hurt its business and they begin to kill members of the political elite,” Buscaglia said.

Earlier this month, Santiago Nieto, the head of Mexico’s Financial Intelligen­ce Unit, announced that in collaborat­ion with the DEA, the unit was freezing nearly 2,000 accounts believed to be used by the Jalisco gang. Nieto was mentioned as one of the potential cabinet-level targets of the cartel this month. There are also nearly a dozen pending extraditio­ns of Jalisco gang associates, Buscaglia said.

The administra­tion should continue to pressure the cartel while increasing security to protect its political elite, starting with Lopez Obrador who continues to fly commercial and travel with little security, he said.

On Saturday, Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum shared a photo with Garcia smiling from his hospital bed and said that he was doing well and had “more energy than ever.” She praised Mexico City’s police for a rapid response that likely saved his life.

Since the attack, authoritie­s had made 19 arrests in the case, she said, including the alleged mastermind of the plot. Lopez Obrador had not made any comments since early Friday.

Later, Ulises Lara, spokesman for the capital’s prosecutor’s office, confirmed the arrests and listed the weaponry recovered. It included 34 rifles, a grenade launcher and five .50 caliber sniper rifles.

 ??  ?? Friday’s assassinat­ion attempt on Mexico City’s police chief was a dramatic show of force by a cartel that has “declared war” on Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s government.
Friday’s assassinat­ion attempt on Mexico City’s police chief was a dramatic show of force by a cartel that has “declared war” on Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s government.

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