I noted recently that two Mexican generals had been arrested by state authorities on suspicion of links to drug traffickers. The government also took a third general into custody, and the arrests might not stop there.
According to the New York Times, “local news reports suggested that the corruption investigation was continuing and could net other key figures in the drug war…the accusations against the third general…include that he ignored a tip by American drug agents about an imminent airplane delivery of a drug cartel’s cocaine in December 2007.”
Alejandro Hope, a private security analyst and a former Mexican government intelligence official interviewed by the Times underscored a point I made earlier. “There has been worry that the more you use the military the more corruption there will be, so one purpose of this could be to send a message.” Says Robert Bonner, who has been unambiguous in his support of Mexican President Felipe Calderón, “This is what Mexico needs to do. It needs to identify the corrupt officials and put them behind bars. I am encouraged because they are not trying to sweep this under the rug.”
But there’s another, less noble, possibility that could be animating this week’s action. As the Times notes, “It remained unclear why the men were detained this week for acts that transpired a few years ago,” but one of the generals arrested “had recently appeared at a security forum put on by a nonprofit group with ties to the Institutional Revolutionary Party, whose candidate for president, Enrique Peña Nieto, is leading by a wide margin in polls ahead of the July 1 election. Mr. Peña Nieto said the generals had played no role in his campaign, though General Ángeles served in Washington in the early 1990s under a former ambassador, Jorge Montaño, who is the party’s foreign affairs adviser and has met with policy makers and analysts in recent weeks in Washington.”
- Rocky Road to Gender Equality in Latin America
- Uribe vs Santos Feud Could Cripple Colombia
- Free Trade Agreement Ignores Colombian History of Violence Against Trade Unions
- Free-Trade Deal May Prove Greater Obstacle to Colombian Peace Than FARC
- Mexicans Romanticizing Drug Kingpins Reflects Lack of Confidence
- Fighting Drug Cartels Exposes Mexican Military to Corruption
- Mexico's Boring Election Won't Be A Bore
- Mexican President Calderon: Kingpin of the Kingpin Strategy
- Arrest of Mexican General for Cartel Connections May Be Purely Political
- Truce Between Salvador's Maras for Real -- for Now
- Corporations and Campesinos Clash Again in Peru
- The Potential of Cuba's Search for Oil
- Politics Crippling Latin American Universities
- Juanes Hits Right Note On Education
- United States Unlikely To Condemn Argentina's 'Outlaw Behavior' -- Yet
- Who Lost Latin America?
- Florida Law Against Cuba May Help Cuba
- Honduras: Sovereignty for Sale
- Honduras Coup Delivering a Bloody Return
- Latin America Delivers a Good, Swift Kick to the United States
- Latin American Countries Raising Trade Barriers Despite Vows to 'Connect The Americas'
- Regional Security, Not Iran, Primary Focus in Latin America
- One Laptop Per Child Plan Has a Future
- Argentina's Grab of Oil Firm: Bad Idea, Worse Timing
- Argentine President Takes It on the Chin
- Drug War Will Change Course in 2013
- Winning the Drug War and Rebuilding Mexico in the Process
- Mexico's Plan to Create a Paramilitary Force
- The Capital of Colombia Says, 'Farewell to Arms'
- Wal-Mart de Mexico: The Mexican Job
- Brazil Has Become A Disoriented Giant
- Argentina Hurts Itself in Falklands/Malvinas
- Falklands: Masterclass in UN Tactics
- American Gun Lobby Could Help Stop Mexico's Violence
- The U.S. Embargo Against Cuba: Washington's Sterile Havana Strategy
- Our Failed Cuba Policy Fixation
- Everybody Won and Lost in Pope's Trip to Cuba
- Latin American Schools: Disconnected
- Colombia's New Counterinsurgency Plan
- With the Focus on Syria, Mexico Burns
- Bolivian President Bows to Pressure and Cancels Amazon Highway
- Latin American Presidents Scrutinize 'War on Drugs'
- Iran's Quest to Expand its Diplomatic Frontiers in Latin America
- Latin Americans Complain of 'Ineptocracies'
- Chile's Interest in the Falkland Islands Dispute
- Region's First 'Virtual Summit' Should Set The Trend
- United States Should Treat Brazil Like India
- Mexico's Violence is Up, and So is Tourism
- Cardinal's Action Clouds Pope's Visit To Cuba
- Rethinking Latin America
- Chavez's Health Will Impact Venezuelan Elections
- Obama Should Take the Offensive on Cuba
- Pro-Drug Legalization Forces Gaining Clout
- Central America is No Somalia, But Close
Courtesy: Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA)
