‘El Taliban’ Is Gone, But His Rival Mexican Drug Lord Is Worse
- 09.27.12
- 3:29 PM
The Mexican marines just took down an infamous capo for
Mexico’s most brutal cartel. But they may have accidentally cleared the decks
for an even more vicious one to take his place.
Ivan Velazquez
Caballero, known by the alarming name “El Taliban” — a likely reference to the
way cartels glorify lopping
off the heads of their enemies — was captured Wednesday in the city of San
Luis Potosi apparently without
firing a shot, according to Reuters. But “El Taliban” was doing more than
smuggling drugs and fighting the authorities. He was waging a civil war within
the Zetas and against Miguel “Z-40″ Trevino Morales, a brutal assassin. Trevino
recently seized control of the Zetas, and he’s known for “cooking” his enemies alive
in burning oil drums.
That’s the risk in taking out drug lords, and it’s similar to
the risk in taking out insurgent chieftains. Doing so risks elevating whoever’s
angling to take their place. A successor may turn out to be more lethally
competent than the last leader was. And that appears to be exactly what’s
happening with the Zetas. The guy named after the Taliban may turn out to be the
moderate one.
Some background: The Zetas are arguably Mexico’s most powerful
drug cartel. Originally a hit squad for the Gulf Cartel (CDG) and comprised of
former Mexican commandos, the Zetas split with their former patrons in 2010.
Since then, they’ve waged a war for control of the CDG’s turf in the border
cities of Reynosa and Matamoros opposite the Texas border. Under the leadership
of former kingpin Heriberto “Z-3″ Lazcano, the Zetas became a major cartel in
their own right, expanding far beyond its core of former commandos to form a
paramilitary force of thousands. The cartel now controls much of eastern Mexico
from the U.S. border to Guatemala in the south, sparking a pandemic of killings
and kidnappings.
Enter El Taliban. During this period, Velazquez rose to become
the “plaza” boss — controlling a drug-trafficking hub — for the municipality of
Cadereyta Jimenez, a key highway chokepoint between the Monterrey metropolis and
the Gulf-controlled border towns. If drugs move from Monterrey to those towns,
and then across the border into Texas, much of it moved at the control of El
Taliban.
But then came another split, this time within the
Zetas.
The rift is complicated, and it involves a series of shifting
alliances between competing cartels and factions within those cartels. But
sometime earlier this year, Trevino — the Zetas’ brutal second in command —
reportedly seized control of the Zetas from his boss Lazcano. Factions formed
around each leader, and an internal conflict erupted between. Velazquez remained
a Lazcano loyalist. El Taliban left his stronghold outside Monterrey then moved
south, where he reportedly attempted to seize control of the drug plazas in
Mexico’s interior. A wave of violence resulted. Trevino retaliated in August,
“dumping” 14 bodies — possibly loyalists to Velazquez — at a gas station in San
Luis Potosi.
Meanwhile,
Velazquez opened a second front: an alliance with his former enemies in other
cartels against Trevino. “Narco-banners,” the giant posters that the cartels use
as their primary tool to announce alliances, began spreading across Mexico
accusing Trevino of betraying the Zetas. Others announced a pact between
Velazquez, the Gulf Cartel and the Knights
Templar — a smaller cult-like cartel that models
itself on the medieval Christian military order. (You heard that right: the
Mexican Taliban allied with the Mexican Knights Templar.)
Duplicated banners
signed by Velazquez and referring to the alliance appeared in the cities of
Puebla and Monterrey as recently as this Monday, and accused Trevino of stabbing
other Zetas leaders in the back. The banners asked pointedly, ”Why
do you think Commander Taliban returned to the Gulf Cartel?” On Sept. 18, a
banner signed by Velazquez appeared in Puebla, calling on Trevino’s enemies to
unite. In August, banners signed by the Knights Templar appeared in their home
state of Michoacan, promising to aid
“our brothers” against Trevino.
The alliance could
have been provoked by Trevino’s notorious reputation. “Trevino
is someone who wants to fight the fight,” Samuel Logan, the director of
Latin America security analyst group Southern Pulse, told the Associated
Press. Lazcano was more like The Wire’s gangster-turned-business man
Stringer Bell, if less reluctant to use violence; Trevino is the thug kingpin
Marlo Stanfield who rises after Bell’s shift disrupts his gang’s previously
dominant business. Trevino, Logan added, wants to go out “with his guns
blazing.”
Velazquez, of
course, surrendered without a shot. His capture also follows the arrest
of another top drug lord: Gulf Cartel boss Jorge Eduardo Costilla Sanchez,
alias “El Coss,” which removes another obstacle for Trevino to expand control
over Mexico’s criminal underworld.
Sure, Velazquez uses a frightening nom de guerre. But
what Trevino lacks in nicknames he makes up for in brutality. El Taliban’s
departure from the streets might make the Zetas even more dangerous
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