The Guardian (USA)

Former Mexico defence minister arrested on drug charges in Los Angeles

- David Agren in Mexico City

Mexico’s former defence secretary has been arrested in Los Angeles on charges of drug traffickin­g and money laundering, becoming the latest in a string of senior officials accused of collaborat­ing with the very criminal groups they were supposed to be confrontin­g.

Gen Salvador Cienfuegos was detained at Los Angeles internatio­nal airport late on Thursday, and is expected to appear in court on Friday afternoon, according to the foreign secretary, Marcelo Ebrard.

Cienfuegos was Mexico’s top military official during the 2012-2018 presidency of Enrique Peña Nieto, and played a key role in the militarize­d “war on drugs”.

The country’s current leader, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, seized on the arrest as confirmati­on of his narrative that preceding administra­tions were rife with corruption.

“This is an unmistakab­le example of the decomposit­ion of the government, of how civil service was degrading, the government service during the neoliberal period,” López Obrador said on Friday.

But the president, who has kept the armed forces at the centre of his strategy against organized crime, was quick to assert that the current crop of military leaders are “incorrupti­ble”.

Cienfuegos, 72, is the second former Mexican cabinet official arrested in the US on drug charges in the past year.

Genaro García Luna – the former public security secretary during the 2006-12 administra­tion of Felipe Calderón – was arrested in Texas last year and faces accusation­s of allowing cocaine shipments to head to the United States. He faces trial in New York.

Two of his top lieutenant­s in the federal police, Luis Cárdenas Palomino and Ramón Pequeño, were also indicted in New York on accusation­s they permitted the “Sinaloa Cartel to operate with impunity in Mexico … in exchange for multimilli­on-dollar bribes.”

Cienfuegos was charged with money laundering and conspiracy to distribute drugs in the United States between Dec 2015 and Jan 2017, according to an indictment by prosecutor­s the Eastern District of in New York. The indictment alleges that Cienfuegos allowed the Beltran Leyva cartel to “operate with impunity”, helping with the arrest and torture of rivals in exchange for bribe payments.

In Mexico, Cienfuegos was notorious for repeatedly refusing to allow investigat­ors to interview soldiers in the city of Iguala about their activities on the night in September 2014 when 43 teachers trainees were abducted and presumably murdered.

Cienfuegos also defended soldiers accused of massacring civilians in the town of Tlatlaya.

Despite repeated accusation­s that troops have been involved in human rights abuses and drug traffickin­g, they remain largely untouchabl­e by civilian justice, said Falko Ernst, senior Mexico analyst for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

“There is no transparen­cy. The armed forces remain black boxes that continue to successful­ly defend themselves against independen­t oversight,” he said.

Generation­s of the Mexican military have been implicated in drug violence: the country’s first anti-drug czar Gen Jesús Gutiérrez Rebollo was arrested in the late 1990s and convicted of taking bribes from drug cartels.

One of the most bloodthirs­ty factions in the drug war, the Zetas cartel, was formed by former special forces members.

But the armed forces remain one of the country’s most trusted institutio­ns, “despite their known issues with corruption and human rights abuses”, said Rodolfo Soriano-Núñez, a sociologis­t in Mexico City.

Amlo came to power promising to return troops to the barracks, but has increasing­ly relied on the military. His proncipal anti-crime policy has been the creation of a militarize­d “national guard” mostly composed of former soldiers. The force will be under military command until 2024, despite previous promises that it would be run by civilians.

Troops have also been used for a range of non-military programmes, from managing the country’s customs service to building a new airport in Mexico City.

The president has put little priority on improving police forces, which “leaves him no one else to lean on except for the armed forces”, said Jorge Medellín, a journalist covering Mexican military matters.

 ?? Photograph: Daniel Becerril/Reuters ?? Mexico’s then defence minister, Gen Salvador Cienfuegos, in 2018.
Photograph: Daniel Becerril/Reuters Mexico’s then defence minister, Gen Salvador Cienfuegos, in 2018.

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