| |
 |
|
Last year alone, nearly 6,300
people were killed in Mexico's
drug war.
|
|
|
Mexico: The Drug War Next Door
EL PASO, TX
(CBS) March 2, 2009
There is a place where
kidnappings, torture, and even
brutal beheadings have become
common. It's not Iraq or Afghanistan
it's much closer than that:
Mexico.
Two years ago, Mexico's President
Felipe Calderon declared war on the
country's powerful drug cartels
the main suppliers of cocaine,
marijuana, and methamphetamine to
the United States. In response to
the government's assault, the drug
cartels have been fighting back
hard.
It's gotten so bad, a recent U.S.
military report warned Mexico could
face "rapid and sudden collapse."
How worried is the U.S. government
about the war next door?
According to the
the new secretary of the Department
of Homeland Security, Janet Napolitano,
"The stakes are high for the safety of
many, many citizens of Mexico and the
stakes are high for the United States no
doubt."
The stakes are high, not just because
Mexico is a key American ally and
trading partner, but because the drug
cartels are fighting to control areas
right along the U.S. border, just miles
from cities like San Diego and El Paso.
Asked if the violence in Mexico is a
threat to U.S. national security,
Napolitano said, "It is certainly
something of major concern. It's our
neighbor to the south. It's a major
partner in many areas. It's something I,
as secretary of Homeland Security, will
pay a lot of attention to."
There's a lot to pay attention to in
Mexico: 60,000 Mexican military and
police are fighting against the five
major drug cartels which control
lucrative smuggling routes into the U.S.
They've managed to arrest some top
traffickers, but new and more ruthless
leaders have filled the vacuum, battling
both the government and each other.
They're terrorizing the country with
very public acts of violence.
In December, a group of Mexican soldiers
was found with their heads cut off, and
a note from traffickers warning "for
every one of mine you kill, we will kill
10."
A decapitated man was left hanging from
a bridge; his head was found in the town
square. Last year alone, nearly 6,300
people were killed in Mexico's drug war
more than double the number the year
before.
Cartels are also increasingly expanding
into human smuggling, extortion and
kidnapping. Smaller criminal gangs have
also gotten into the game, turning
Mexico into one of the kidnapping
capitals of the world.
"We are afraid of getting in a car,
getting in a taxi, walking in the street
alone. Going by the hand with your
child," said Claudia Wallace.
Wallace's 35 year old brother Hugo was
kidnapped while on a date in Mexico
City. A month after he disappeared, his
mother, Maria Isabel got a ransom note
with a picture of him wearing a
blindfold.
Asked what she thought when she saw the
picture, Wallace said, "For me, it was
very difficult, but, at the same time,
we were laughing and screaming of joy,
because we were now waiting for someone
to call ."
The family thought Hugo was still alive.
But when the picture was taken, Hugo was
already dead. The kidnappers propped up
his body for the photo, and asked for
almost a million dollars in ransom.
Months later, some of the kidnappers
were caught and Hugo's family learned
what happened to him after the ransom
picture was taken.
"They took my brother to the bathroom,
went to Wal-Mart, bought a saw, an
electric saw, and returned to the
apartment and cut my brother. And put it
in a black bag," Wallace said.
They've never been able to find Hugos
remains.
Kidnappers don't just target the rich
the poor are victimized as well. A
5-year-old boy whose parents had a stall
in a market was kidnapped in October.
When the kidnappers thought the police
were on to them, they killed the boy by
injecting him with acid.
Last summer, 150,000 people marched to
voice their frustration over the rising
violence. Hugo's mother, Maria Isabel,
has become a vocal advocate for victims.
But in Mexico today, that can get you
killed.
Gunmen recently riddled her car with
bullets. "I think we're at a point in
which if the government doesn't put all
of its effort into this, the drug
traffickers, the kidnappers, and
organized crime will ultimately take
control of the country," said
Maria Isabel.
In some towns, they already are in
control. Just last week in the city of
Juarez, cartels threatened to kill a
police officer every 48 hours until the
police chief resigned. After two murders
he did. Juarez's mayor moved his family
to Texas.
Mexico's police are overwhelmed in part
because drug traffickers have them
outgunned. Mexico's Attorney General
Eduardo Medina-Mora is helping lead the
effort to break up the cartels.
"Half of what we seize, 55 percent are
assault rifles. And this is what gives
these groups this intimidation power.
Over 17,000 assault rifles, throughout
the last two years. Two thousand and 200
grenades, missile and rocket launchers.
Fifty caliber sniper rifles," the
attorney general explained.
It might surprise you to learn where all
these guns are coming from. It turns out
90 percent of them are purchased in the
US.
"The Second Amendment was never designed
to arm criminal groups, and especially
not foreign criminal groups as it is
today," Medina-Mora said.
Asked if he blames the U.S. for not
doing more to stop this flow, he told
Cooper, "We believe much more needs to
be done. We need a much more committed
effort from the U.S."
"There was an assault weapons ban in the
United States for ten years. It expired
in 2004. Would you consider asking
Congress to reinstate that?" Napolitano
was asked.
"I haven't thought that far," she
replied. "What I have worked on is
working with customs, with ATF and
saying "what do we need to do by way of
identifying who is putting these
unlawful gun into the hands of the
traffickers who are using them to murder
people. And what do we need to do to
stop it."
It isn't just guns coming from the U.S.
that's fueling Mexico's war: it's cash.
According to estimates drug trafficking
brings in as much as $38 billion a year
from the US.
"How much responsibility does the United
States have in helping Mexico in ending
this war?" Medina-Mora was asked.
"This is a shared responsibility," the
attorney general replied.
"'Cause there's many in the U.S. who see
this as a Mexican problem," CBS pointed
out.
"If demand comes from the U.S., if cash
coming from people acquiring and
consuming drugs in the U.S., if weapons
are coming from the U.S. this is a
shared responsibility," Medina-Mora
argued.
To find out how cartels are smuggling
cash and drugs so easily across the
border, 60 Minutes decided to visit one
of Mexico's most famous alleged
traffickers Sandra Avila Beltran.
She's the subject of a bestselling book
and there's even a song about her.
Beltran may not look like your typical
drug lord, but when she was arrested
after five years on the run, she was
brought to prison under heavy security.
Mexican authorities denied our request
to talk to her but we showed up anyway
on visiting day at the prison.
Surprisingly we got in.
Beltran's accused of being part of a
trafficking operation that smuggled
cocaine into the U.S. and now faces
extradition. She denies the charges, but
certainly seems to know a lot about drug
trafficking.
"There are more and more people involved
in drug trafficking now than ever
before. With more people going into
business, there is always someone who
wants to control that business. And
that's the reason for the murders, the
fights to control the cities and to
control the drug routes," she told CBS.
Beltran was born into a drug trafficking
family, and two of her husbands were
assassinated. Both were cops, allegedly
working for cartels.
"In Mexico there's a lot of corruption.
A lot. Large shipments of drugs can't
come into the Mexican ports or airports
without the authorities knowing about
it. It's obvious and logical. The
government has to be involved in
everything that is corrupt," Beltran
charged.
Asked if she thinks the government can
win this war against drug traffickers,
Beltran said, "I don't think so. You'd
have to wipe out the government to wipe
out drug trafficking."
Wiping out government corruption is one
of Attorney General Medina-Mora's jobs,
but even his office has been tainted: 35
members of his elite intelligence unit
were recently accused of taking bribes
from a drug cartel.
"The former drug czar himself was
accused of receiving I think it was
nearly half a million dollars every
month from drug cartels," CBS remarked.
"It is a matter of disappointment. And
it's a matter of certainly surprise,"
Medina-Mora acknowledged.
"Why have drug cartels been so effective
at corrupting police forces, corrupting
politicians?" CBS asked.
"Essentially because they have a
tremendous economic power, and a
tremendous intimidation power that comes
from cash and weapons," he replied.
Mexican authorities are now trying to
rebuild the federal police force from
the ground up. They're using background
checks, polygraph tests, and new
technology to monitor what local police
departments around the country are
doing.
Recent polls show most Mexicans believe
their government is losing the war. But
Medina-Mora insists the escalating
violence is a sign the cartels are
weakening and becoming desperate.
"It will take time. It will cost a lot
of money. It will cost lives. But we
will certainly win this war," he
predicted.
"What is it that gives you hope, though?
I mean
more than 8,000 dead in the last
two years, corruption at all levels of
government and the police," CBS asked.
"We have seized 70 metric tons of
cocaine," Medina-Mora said. "We have
arrested 57,000 people out of which
46,000 are drug-related."
Mexico is extraditing more of its high
level alleged drug lords to the U.S. and
is beginning to receive some of the $1.4
billion the United States has committed
to help Mexico fight its war. The
majority of money will go towards
equipment and training. But Janet
Napolitano, the new head of homeland
security is preparing in case the
violence spreads.
"We're in constant contact with law
enforcement on both sides. And we have
some contingency plans should it
escalate and actually spill over into
the United States," she told CBS.
"There have been reports the U.S.
considered the possibility of having a
surge on the border. Maybe even
involving U.S. military personnel," CBS
remarked.
"Well, That would be, certainly a last
resort. Because civilian law enforcement
is obviously what would be called on
first," Napolitano said.
The power of Mexico's drug cartels has
already spread far beyond the border.
Just this week, the Justice Department
announced they had arrested more than
700 people in the U.S. connected to just
one cartel.
Mexican traffickers are operating in
some 230 American cities, according to
the Justice Department, and they're now
considered the number one organized
crime threat in the United States.
"You're seeing drug cartel involvement
in Anchorage, Alaska. In South Dakota.
In Atlanta. In New York City," CBS told
Napolitano.
"Right. Right. That's why I say every
person you know in the United States has
a real stake in this. We have a stake in
it at that level. Drugs are being
distributed throughout our cities, our
communities, our neighborhoods. So this
issue in Mexico, this very brave battle
the president of Mexico is fighting, is
something every American has a stake
in," she replied.