The Dawn of Mexico DIrty War
The Dawn of Mexico DIrty War
The Dawn of Mexico DIrty War
http://nsarchive.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB105/index.htm
Research assistance by Isaac Campos Costero, Eli Forsythe and Emilene Martnez
Morales
Special thanks to Suboh Suboh for his technical assistance
Posted - December 5, 2003
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This new Electronic Briefing Book is based on a
collaboration between Proceso magazine and the
National Security Archive and launched on March 2,
2003.
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Proceso Magazine
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Contents
Article
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Link - Proceso Magazine
El artculo en espaol (PDF - 844 KB)
Along with Genaro Vzquez Rojas, fellow teacher-turnedrebel, Lucio Cabaas launched an armed rebellion in the
mountains of Guerrero during the late 1960s against what
they considered a brutal and unresponsive regime.
Government efforts to defeat Guerrero's tiny guerrilla forces
began under Daz Ordaz. By early 1971, the Mexican army
had stepped up its campaign. All four military battalions
stationed in Guerrero were operating against the rebels.
At the time, the military as an institution was struggling to
combat declining morale. Low pay, scant resources, an aging
upper echelon and rusting equipment all contributed to
discontent and restlessness within the armed forces under
Echeverra.
Its public image was also suffering. There was lingering
resentment at the tarnishing of the military's image in the
wake of the massacre at Tlatelolco in 1968, when army troops
were used to crush student demonstrators, sparking national
and international outrage. To make matters worse, the
counterinsurgency campaign against the guerrillas in Guerrero
was faltering, despite ever-increasing commitments of
manpower and resources.
In 1971, a massive new assault dubbed "Operacin Telaraa"
had been launched by the military with much fanfare but with
very little to show for it. Given the publicity surrounding the
effort, one United States embassy report pointed out in
December, "the failure must be even more galling."
Failure in the field prompted increasing secrecy, obfuscation
and cover-up by the regime on the occasions when it
discussed the rebels in public. But while General Cuenca Daz
Documents
Document 1
May 27, 1971
Defense Secretary Denies Existence of Guerrillas in Mexico
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, confidential telegram
Mexican Defense Secretary Hermenegildo Cuenca Daz
Document 22
September 10, 1974
Figueroa Kidnapping
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, confidential cable
Assessing the liberation of Figueroa, the Embassy expresses
some doubt about the Mexican Government's official version
of events which they label "almost too much of a happy
ending." Noting that Echeverra Administration claims not to
have negotiated with rebels, yet freed Figueroa without a
single military casualty, the Embassy raises the possibility
that a secret deal was reached to release the PRI Senator.
Furthermore, the Embassy suggests that "there were more
casualties on both sides than published."
Source: National Security Archive, Freedom of Information
Request No.18971
Released June 2000
Document 23
September 10, 1974
Guerrillas Are Nuisance to Mexican Government
CIA National Intelligence Daily, top secret article
In a heavily excised version of this top secret article, the CIA
argues that guerrillas "do not threaten the stability of the
Echeverra Administration," but are capable of great acts of
terror and violence.
Source: National Security Archive, Freedom of Information
Request No.18961
Released June 2000
Document 24
September 10, 1974
Guerrillas Are Nuisance to Mexican Government
CIA National Intelligence Daily, top secret article
Under an NSA appeal, Document 23 was released without
excisions. Previously deleted sections include details on the
organization of Cabaas's group and the Mexican
government's response to guerrilla activities. According to the
CIA, the government has responded to political violence
primarily with "intensive police work and, as in the Cabaa's
case, the massive application of military manpower."
Source: National Security Archive, Freedom of Information
Request No.18970
Released on appeal July 2001
Document 25
September 13, 1974
Figueroa Kidnapping Case
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, confidential cable
Following the first appearance of Ruben Figueroa since his
"rescue," the Embassy continues to express doubt about the
official explanation of his liberation. American officials are
convinced that the official version of the events has been
modified to maximize political benefit for both the
government and the armed forces.
Source: National Security Archive, Freedom of Information
Request No.18971
Released June 2000
Document 26
December 3, 1974
[Army Kills Lucio Cabaas]
CIA Directorate of Intelligence, secret message
In this brief message, the CIA informs of the killing of Lucio
Cabaas in a clash with army troops, noting that "Cabaas'
death will be a severe blow to his Party of the Poor." The CIA
comments that Guerrero might nevertheless produce other
guerrilla leaders to take up Cabaas' cause.
Source: National Security Archive, Freedom of Information
Request No.18970
Released July 2001
Document 27
December 4, 1974
Death of Lucio Cabaas Barrientos
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, limited official use cable
In the wake of the death of Lucio Cabaas, the Embassy
argues that the Mexican Government's political position has
thus improved, at least in the Guerrero area. American
officials now believe that rural guerrilla activities represent a
minimal threat to political stability and that the "anonymous
violence of urban terrorist groups is cause for greater concern