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Ivan Velazquez Caballero, known as “El Taliban,” was seized by a team of marines in the northern city of San Luis Potosi, the Mexican navy said. He becomes the 24th of Mexico’s 37 most-wanted alleged cartel leaders to be killed or captured under President Felipe Calderon.
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Mexican Marines Capture One
of Zetas Cartel’s Top Capos

The Washington Post
Mexican marines acting on US intelligence seized the leader of a breakaway faction of the hyper-violent Zetas cartel, officials said Thursday, proclaiming the third such arrest in a month as a victory for a bi-national strategy focused on removing the leadership of Mexico’s powerful organized crime groups.

Ivan Velazquez Caballero, known as “El Taliban,” was seized by a team of marines in the northern city of San Luis Potosi, the Mexican navy said. He becomes the 24th of Mexico’s 37 most-wanted alleged cartel leaders to be killed or captured under President Felipe Calderon, who escalated Mexico’s war on drug gangs days after taking office and who ends his term in two months.

Calderon has been praised by the US for his assault on the cartels, but heatedly criticized inside and outside Mexico for an excessive focus on using armed force and arresting gang leaders.

“Calderon is in his phase where he’s establishing legacy, and he wants people to say, ‘His strategy was bloody but it worked,’” said Samuel Logan, managing director of the security analysis firm Southern Pulse and co-author of a recent book on the Zetas. “They’re pushing forward on as many fronts as they can before he leaves office.”

Critics say Calderon’s approach splintered cartels into dozens of smaller factions, increasing the competition among them and fueling a brutal war for control of smuggling routes before Mexico had an adequate law-enforcement and justice system in place.

“You lose the leadership and the group starts fighting for power. We’ve seen that with every group that’s been beheaded,” said Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, an expert on the Zetas’ home state of Tamaulipas, and chairwoman of the government department at the University of Texas at Brownsville.

The government said at least 47,500 people had been killed in drug-related violence during Calderon’s term before it stopped releasing figures last year. Independent observers say the death toll could be many thousands higher.

Velazquez Caballero allegedly has been fighting a bloody internal battle with top Zetas’ leader Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, and officials have said the split was behind a recent surge in massacres and shootouts, particularly in northern Mexico.

The US Drug Enforcement Administration declined to comment on the potential for more violence in the wake of the arrest.

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Editor's Note: Yet, by making the bad guys fight amongst themselves, resulting in them killing each other, the number of bad guys is depleted at their own hands...


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