U.S.
role at a crossroads in Mexico’s intelligence war on the cartels
By Dana Priest,
The Washington Post, Published: April 27/2013
MEXICO
CITY — For the past seven years, Mexico and the United States have put aside
their tension-filled history on security matters to forge an unparalleled
alliance against Mexico’s drug cartels, one based on sharing sensitive
intelligence, U.S. training and joint operational planning.
But
now, much of that hard-earned cooperation may be in jeopardy.
The
December inauguration of President Enrique Peña Nieto brought the nationalistic
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) back to power after 13 years, and with
it a whiff of resentment over the deep U.S. involvement in Mexico’s fight
against narco-traffickers.
The
new administration has shifted priorities away from the U.S.-backed strategy of
arresting kingpins, which sparked an unprecedented level of violence among the
cartels, and toward an emphasis on prevention and keeping Mexico’s streets safe
and calm, Mexican authorities said.
Some
U.S. officials fear the coming of an unofficial truce with cartel leaders. The
Mexicans see it otherwise. “The objective of fighting organized crime is not in
conflict with achieving peace,” said Eduardo Medina Mora, Mexico’s ambassador
to the United States.
Interviews
with more than four dozen current and former U.S. and Mexican diplomats, law
enforcement agents, military officers and intelligence officials — most of whom
agreed to speak about sensitive matters only on condition of anonymity — paint
the most detailed public portrait to date of how the two countries grew so
close after so many years of distance and distrust, and what is at stake should
the alliance be scaled back.
U.S.
officials got their first inkling that the relationship might change just two
weeks after Peña Nieto assumed office Dec. 1. At the U.S. ambassador’s request,
the new president sent his top five security officials to an unusual meeting at
the U.S. Embassy here. In a crowded conference room, the new attorney general
and interior minister sat in silence, not knowing what to expect, next to the
new leaders of the army, navy and Mexican intelligence agency.
In
front of them at the Dec. 15 meeting were representatives from the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA), the CIA, the FBI, the Office of the Director
of National Intelligence and other U.S. agencies tasked with helping Mexico
destroy the drug cartels that had besieged the country for the past decade.
The
Mexicans remained stone-faced as they learned for the first time just how
entwined the two countries had become during the battle against narco-traffickers,
and how, in the process, the United States had been given near-complete entree
to Mexico’s territory and the secrets of its citizens, according to several
U.S. officials familiar with the meeting.
The
administration of former president Felipe Calderon had granted high-flying U.S.
spy planes access to Mexican airspace for the purpose of gathering
intelligence. Unarmed Customs and Border Protection drones had flown from bases
in the United States in support of Mexican military and federal police raids
against drug targets and to track movements that would establish suspects’
“patterns of life.” The United States had also provided electronic signals
technology, ground sensors, voice-recognition gear, cellphone-tracking devices,
data analysis tools, computer hacking kits and airborne cameras that could read
license plates from three miles away.
Under
a classified program code-named SCENIC, the CIA was training Mexicans in how to
target and vet potential assets for recruitment and how to guard against infiltration
by narco-traffickers.
In
deference to their visitors, the U.S. briefers left out the fact that most of
the 25 kingpin taken off the streets in the past five years had been removed
because of U.S.-supplied information, often including the location of top
cartel members in real time, according to people familiar with the meeting. The
CIA and Calderon declined to comment for this article.
Also
unremarked upon was the mounting criticism that success against the cartels’
leadership had helped incite more violence than anyone had predicted, more than 60,000 deaths and 25,000
disappearances in the past seven years alone.
Meanwhile,
the drug flow into the United States continued unabated. Mexico remains the
U.S. market’s largest supplier of heroin, marijuana and methamphetamine and the
transshipment point for 95 percent of its cocaine.
No
one had come up with a quick, realistic alternative to Calderon’s novel use of
the Mexican military with U.S. support. But stopping the cartel violence had
become Peña Nieto’s top priority during the campaign. The U.S. administration
didn’t know what that meant. Some feared a scaling back of the bilateral
efforts and a willingness to trade the relentless drive against cartel leaders
for calmer streets.
When
the Dec. 15 meeting concluded, Mexico’s new security officials remained
poker-faced, “They said they were very appreciative to have received so much
information,” said one U.S. official familiar with the meeting. We will be in
touch, they added, and left.
The
roots of cooperation
U.S.
involvement in Mexico’s deteriorating internal security first peaked in the
mid-1980s when the cocaine epidemic in the United States turned the southern
neighbor into a prosperous distribution route north. In 1986, President Ronald
Reagan signed a National Security Decision Directive instructing U.S. law
enforcement and intelligence agencies to help defeat the growing
narco-trafficking menace worldwide.
Beginning
in the late 1980s, a massive U.S. air, sea and land effort was shutting down
many Caribbean drug routes. The traffickers were increasingly forced to move
their product through the only territory left unhindered: Mexico.
Mexico’s
secret security ties with the United States date at least to the Cold War, when
Mexico City was a hub of intrigue, the “Beirut of the Western Hemisphere,”
according to intelligence history scholar Sergio Aguayo. To keep an eye on the
United States, the Soviet Union and China had their largest embassies here,
necessitating a large CIA presence.
Back
then, the Mexican intelligence service, CISEN, “was basically run by the CIA,”
according to one former CISEN official. Although that has changed with time,
the unusually close relationship between Mexican presidents and CIA chiefs has
not. Then-CIA director David H. Petraeus attended a party at the Mexican
Embassy in Washington in 2011 and visited Calderon in Mexico last year. As many
of his predecessors had done, Calderon usually met with the CIA director when
he came to Washington.
The
CIA’s importance here can be explained, in part, by the historically strained
dealings between Mexico and the DEA and U.S. military. “There was a void that
the CIA stepped into,” said Jeffrey S. Davidow, a former U.S. ambassador to
Mexico and author of a book about the prickly relationship between the two
countries.
In
the mid-1980s, the DEA had been virtually banished from the country because of
its aggressive pursuit of a slain DEA agent’s killers. But that relationship
has improved greatly in the past five years. Now, the DEA has more employees in
Mexico than in any other of its 67 foreign posts.
In
2000, a political earthquake in Mexico paved the way for a less suspicious era
between the two neighbors. The 71-year political reign of the authoritarian and
corrupt PRI ended with the election of Vicente Fox of the National Action Party
as president. The Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States turned
the new openness into unprecedented bilateral action against terrorism.
The
two countries fortified the border with personnel and surveillance technology.
Eventually, a protocol was worked out for Mexico to stop, detain and
interrogate non-Mexicans traveling north toward the United States. Mexican
authorities allow U.S. officials to remotely question third-country nationals
of concern to the United States, according to Mexican and U.S. officials.
Clamping
down on illegal border crossings, however, had an unintended consequence: It
upset agreements among the cartels over smuggling routes, sparking yet more
violent competition.
By
the time Calderon was inaugurated in late 2006, many experts believed that
Mexico was losing control of parts of the country. Even before his
inauguration, Calderon pleaded with President George W. Bush to help the
Mexican military quash the cartels, according to Antonio Garza, then U.S.
ambassador to Mexico, who attended a meeting between the presidents.
Bush
agreed to help, and the Merida Initiative, a $1.9 billion aid
package for military training and equipment and judicial reform, set the
framework for a new level of U.S.-Mexican cooperation. In a little-noticed
move, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence took a leading role
in the U.S. effort to defeat the cartels, signaling the importance of
intelligence in combating organized crime.
By
then, cartels had begun employing assassination squads, according to Guillermo
Valdes, who was CISEN director at the time. CISEN discovered from a captured
videotape and a special analytical group it set up that some of the cartels had
hired former members of the U.S.-trained Guatemalan special forces, the
Kaibiles, to create sociopathic killers who could behead a man, torture a child
or immerse a captive in a vat of acid.
Anxious
to counterattack, the CIA proposed electronically emptying the bank accounts of
drug kingpins, but was turned down by the Treasury Department and the White
House, which feared unleashing chaos in the banking system.
As
the Mexican death toll mounted, Calderon pleaded with Bush for armed drones. He
had been impressed by the results in Iraq and Afghanistan, two former U.S.
officials said. The White House considered the request, but quickly rejected
it. It was far too likely to result in collateral damage, they said.
Violence
deepened ties
By
2009, President Obama’s first year in office, horrific scenes had become
commonplace throughout Mexico: severed heads thrown onto a dance floor, a half-dozen
bodies hanged from a bridge, bombs embedded in cadavers. Ciudad Juarez, a stone’s throw from El Paso,
was a virtual killing zone.
Obama
approved an intensification of bilateral measures. Deputy national security
adviser John O. Brennan, also in charge of counterterrorism operations focused
on al-Qaeda, led the U.S. side. His Mexican partner was CISEN director Valdes.
“We
got people together to define the operations,” Valdes said in an interview
here. Every new program was vetted by Mexico’s security team and often by
Calderon. The day-to-day operations were conceived in Mexico and approved by
the U.S. ambassador at the time, Carlos Pascual, and the specific Mexican
agency head involved.
The
first important decision was to use the same “high-value target” strategy that
had been so successful against al-Qaeda in Iraq and Afghanistan. U.S.
authorities used real-time intelligence against kingpins on a Mexican-U.S.
priority list — including cellphone geolocation, wiretaps, electronic
intercepts and tracking of digital records — to help Mexican authorities target
them.
The
second was to clean up the Mexican units that would be responsible for carrying
out raids.
As
early as 1997, the DEA had funded the creation of Sensitive Investigative Units
(SIU) made up of foreign nationals, first in Colombia, then in Bolivia, Peru
and Mexico, and eventually in nine other countries. By mid-2006, the DEA had
two units with a total of 184 members in Mexico alone, according to a DEA
inspector general’s report. The Mexicans were brought for training to the DEA’s
facility at Quantico.
Mexico
does not allow U.S. agents to take part in the actual raids, but they can be
involved in planning operations and can even direct them remotely.
The
CIA also has trained units in raid tactics, protection of senior officials,
intelligence collecting and, in a departure for the spy agency, in gathering
and preserving evidence that can be used in court.
To
guard against penetration from the cartels, members were polygraphed,
drug-tested and vetted for criminal and financial irregularities. But
operations were still routinely exposed by moles inserted by the cartels. So,
beginning in 2009, the size of the units was cut significantly. Those who
remained worked under cover and lived in secret safe houses. The U.S. agencies
they worked with provided special cellphones and even paid their salaries and
set up their bank accounts. There are now six or seven SIUs in Mexico,
sponsored by the DEA, CIA and at least one other U.S. law enforcement agency.
The
two countries also have constructed an elaborate physical infrastructure and
developed protocols for sharing sensitive, often real-time intelligence. Garza,
the former U.S. ambassador, called it “the plumbing” of the security
relationship.
“We
started to appreciate that the same sort of plumbing construction for
counterterrorism naturally translated into other security cooperation,” he
said.
By
2011, the plumbing extended to a CIA-run fusion center in Mexico City, a
DEA-sponsored fusion center in Monterrey, a federal police bunker of “Star
Wars”-like screens and computer terminals, also in the capital city, as well as
separate military and federal police intelligence centers and one inside the
headquarters of CISEN.
“They
gave us intelligence, they helped teach us the 24-hour intelligence cycle,
helped build up our intelligence centers and taught us the importance of
connecting intelligence to operations,” said Valdes, the CISEN director until
September 2011. “Both DEA and the [CIA] helped, and we had a high level of
support from Washington.”
The
infrastructure also has included regional law enforcement headquarters with
temporary war rooms set up during large-scale Mexican military and federal
police operations in Ciudad Juarez, Tijuana and Acapulco.
To
support Mexican operations in Ciudad Juarez, U.S. authorities arranged two
brainstorming sessions at nearby Fort Bliss in Texas for their Mexican
counterparts. Experts were brought in, including, upon Mexican request, the
police chief of New Orleans, from whom they wanted to learn about the civilian
large-scale control and relief measures after Hurricane Katrina.
U.S.
liaison officers remained on hand inside the federal police war room in Ciudad
Juarez for more than two years, according to U.S. and former Mexican officials
involved.
The
bulk of the U.S. work finding cartel members depends on the DEA’s exhaustive
network of informants and undercover agents. Their information usually trumps
what Mexican authorities bring to the table, particularly because local and
state police remain riddled with corruption.
DEA-provided
information led to the killing of cartel leader Arturo Beltran Leyva in
December 2009. The cartel not only moved significant quantities of cocaine into
the United States but also had penetrated the highest level of Mexico’s
institutions. His death gave Calderon his first significant victory in the
militarized anti-cartel campaign.
But
planning for the Beltran Leyva operation had to overcome significant hitches.
The CIA persuaded the embassy team to give the mission to a specialized Mexican
army unit it was working with at the time. But the army chain of command
dragged its feet. After several weeks of delay, the DEA insisted the mission be
given to Mexico’s more aggressive Naval Special Forces.
In
another successful mission, the DEA in the summer of 2010 was able to locate
the multiple cellphones of U.S.-born kingpin Edgar Valdez Villarreal, known as
“La Barbie” for his Ken-doll good looks. The drug agency tracked his travels
over time, allowing Mexican authorities to pursue him through five Mexican
states. He was captured in August 2010 and is in Mexican custody, still
awaiting extradition to the United States.
Drones
became part of the mix, too.
In
July 2009, hours after Mexican smugglers shot and killed a U.S. Border Patrol
agent while trying to steal his night-vision goggles, U.S. authorities were
given permission to fly an unarmed Predator drone into Mexican airspace to hunt
for suspects. Intelligence from the flights was passed to the Mexican army.
Within 12 hours, the army brought back more information, according to two U.S.
officials involved in the operation. Eventually, four suspects were captured.
Three pleaded guilty, one is awaiting trial and a fifth remains at large.
That
first flight dispelled Mexican fears that U.S. authorities would try to take
control of drone operations. An agreement was reached that would temporarily
give operational control to Mexican authorities during such flights. U.S.
pilots sitting in the States would control the planes remotely, but a Mexican
military or federal police commander would be able to direct the pilot within
the boundaries of a Mexico-designated grid.
By
late 2010, drones were flying deeper into Mexico to spy on the cartels, as they
did during the two-day gun battle involving 800 federal police that resulted in
the death of Nazario Moreno Gonzalez, head of the ultra-violent La Familia
Michoacana cartel.
By
then, Mexican authorities had grown so enamored with drones that they were
requesting more flights than the United States could deliver, given that most
of the aircraft were being used to support operations in Afghanistan, Iraq,
Yemen and Pakistan. So Mexican authorities bought their own drones. The first
public indication of this development came when one crashed in El Paso in
December 2010.
“Eventually,
when they got better at using their own, they would fly more missions than we
would,” said one former law enforcement official involved in drone operations.
Mexico’s
new approach
Four
months and many conversations after the Dec. 15 meeting, the new Mexican
government is still fleshing out the details of its counterdrug approach.
In
a visit to Washington two weeks ago, Mexico’s top security team shared the
broad outlines of the plan with U.S. agencies, according to U.S. and Mexican
officials. It contains many changes.
The
president will not be nearly as directly involved in counterdrug efforts as
Calderon was, the officials said. The interior minister will coordinate the
relationships between various Mexican and U.S. agencies and other Mexican
units. The director of the Mexican intelligence agency will decide which
Mexican agency should receive and act on sensitive U.S. information.
Given
the corruption of Mexican law enforcement and armed forces, U.S. officials said
privately they would be unwilling to share sensitive information until they
have vetted the people involved and understand how their information is to be
protected.
The
Mexican government also plans to create five regional intelligence fusion
centers, staffed with federal and state officials, and to build a 10,000-member
super police force. This force would be steeped in military discipline but
would use police tactics, rather than overwhelming military force, to keep
violence to a minimum.
Medina
Mora, the Mexican ambassador, said in an interview that his nation considers
U.S. help in the drug war “a centerpiece” of Mexico’s counternarcotics
strategy. But the Mexican delegation in Washington also informed U.S.
authorities that Americans will no longer be allowed to work inside any fusion
center, including the one in Monterrey. The DEA agents and retired military
contractors there will have to go.
Several
senior U.S. officials say U.S. agencies stand ready to help in any way the new
administration allows.
They
anxiously await further details.
Julie Tate in Washington and
Gabriela Martinez in Mexico City contributed to this report.
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