This is a source for analysis, interviews, and commentary on security in Latin America. Herein you will find rumors, the results of off the record interviews, and information you'll not find in international or United States news media.
Tuesday, December 08, 2009
Perspective
There were over 14,000 homicides registered in Venezuela in 2008.
By the end of November, authorities had registered 7,396 homicides in Mexico, passing 16,000 since December 1, 2006.
Monday, November 02, 2009
Breaking the Silence
Posts have been thin and sporadic of late - such is the life of a freelance journalist. Wells have dried up, so like most of my brethren, I'm scrambling to keep pace with the changing nature of the media industry… Here are some updates:
With John Sullivan, I published a piece on how Costa Rica and Panama have been caught in the middle between Mexico and Colombia, where organized criminal operatives from both countries have pushed into new territory.
Since that publication, we have seen a string of murders in Panama City, and just this past week, the head of the Sinaloa Federation in Costa Rica was arrested in Puntarenas (See Southern Pulse newsletter, Networked Intelligence tomorrow afternoon for details).
Honduras continues to provide some interesting developments. Since I published a piece on Honduras and how mainstream media should be focusing on what's going on behind the so-called coup de teat, we've seen a sharp up-tick in narco-flights landing in various points across the country.
Most of the flights, according to both Honduran and Colombian officials, originate in Venezuela, where the bulk of air traffic has shifted - it was once the purview of Colombian traffickers.
And Caracas has quietly become one of the most dangerous places on earth. With over 14,000 murders last year (country wide but many in Caracas), and police as corrupt as ever, Caracas has become a nightmarish place to visit. I'm told that you can't walk on the streets in a business suit after dark, and during the day, you should stick to the main streets. I felt this tension on my last visit to the city in November 2005.
Side streets, apparently, are teeming with young thieves. Dairy products and meat are hard to come by, and soon the entire city will begin rationing water, with rolling "water cut offs," scheduled by the government in 48 hour segments. Can you imagine being mugged for a bottle of water? Back in Mexico, we continue to watch an ever-changing situation. Many of the country's states remain in solid control of one of the many DTOs there, but the agreements between various groups form and break like ice melting and re-freezing from one day to the next.
From what I understand, the Beltran-Leyva Organization (BLO) has hired Los Zetas to strengthen its fight against the Sinaloa Federation. The Carrillo-Fuentes Organization (CFO) cooperates with BLO and the Zetas, and remains very active with its own group of sicarios.
Los Zetas, meanwhile, have targeted Sinaloa and Michoacan.
The Arellano-Felix Organization continues to crumble, and now faces a very real threat from inside Tijuana. The tit-for-tat murder and dismemberment of cops and others in the state of Michoacan indicates that the Zetas are pressuring members of La Familia, who have initiated La Familia Guerrense for the state of Guerrero. The Zetas are also pushing into Sinaloa, and the recent kidnapping if nearly two dozen ranch workers outside of Culiacan indicates that the powers that be in that area are worried about Zeta infiltration. After all, these guys - and their trainees - are well versed in training locals to act on their behalf…
I'll also add that I recently published a piece on diamond smuggling in South America, with a focus on Guyana, Venezuela, and Brazil. The Panamanians will soon open the region's only diamond trading hub, and some are worried that it will become a funnel for illegal diamonds leaving the region.
Friday, August 14, 2009
Southern Pulse Intel Brief, 13 August 2009

Out of India, sugar refining group Shree Renuka Sugars has made public its interest in acquiring a stake in Brazilian sugar and ethanol producer Grupo Moema. Shree Reunka has up to US$100 million available for the acquisition. Moema is also reportedly interested in other sugar refining groups, including Cosan, São Martinho Guarani, Cargill and Bunge.
Finally, we have learned that in Mexico, Army personnel detained Roberto Gaspar Caballero, a 21 year-old resident of Reynosa, Tamaulipas on 5 August 2009 as he attempted to smuggle 20 grenades into the U.S. in his Chevy Suburban via the Reynosa-Pharr port of entry.
ANALYSIS
Russia’s new relationship with Cuba began to take shape in June 2008 when Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin made a state visit for formal talks. Sechin returned with a delegation of businessmen and diplomats on 18 September 2008. News of the development of a Russian-Cuban space center later surfaced, and in mid-March 2009, we learned that five Russian companies could begin oil exploration in several Gulf of Mexico blocks owned by Cuba. With this agreement in place, Russia has solidified its position in Cuba as an energy partner for many years to come.
Indian sugar producers have had a tough year. This explains, in part, why the international price of sugar hovers at record highs, and why Brazilian sugar producers have begun to shoulder global demand, raising their international profile. Brazilian sugar production is closely tied to ethanol as both are made from sugar cane. Grupo Moema is but one of many companies that can produce ethanol or sugar, but only a few have attracted international attention. Cosan, which has been negotiation with Shell oil over a minority stake, is another. In the short-term, Brazil’s sugar/ethanol producers will struggle to meet domestic and international demand. The price of sugar, however, will help offset losses over the depressed price of ethanol and limited export markets.
The news of a Reynosa man caught smuggling grenades into the United States reminded us of when an unidentified man threw a grenade into a bar in Pharr, Texas. From 2008 to 2009, there has been a considerable jump in the amount of seized grenades in Mexico, indicating that the use of explosives in armed confrontations will continue to be a normal occurrence. We are watching for improvised explosive devices, however, which would be a serious escalation. On 16 March 2009, Mexican soldiers seized 34 Tovex sausage explosives, 47 meters of explosive fuse, and around ten pounds of granulated explosive from a safe house just south of Sunland Park, New Mexico. Additionally, on 19 and 24 February 2009, 30 kilos and 121 kilos of explosives, were stolen in Mexico. These explosives have yet to turn up.