July 17, 2010 8:02 AM

Car Bomb Signals New Turn in Mexico Drug War

(AP)  Updated 12:28 a.m. ET

A drug cartel has used a car bomb for the first time in Mexico's decades-long fight against traffickers, setting a deadly trap against federal police in a city across the border from Texas, the mayor of Ciudad Juarez said Friday.

Mayor Jose Reyes said federal police have confirmed to him that a car bomb was used in the attack that killed three people Thursday.

It was the first time a drug cartel has used a bomb to attack Mexican security forces, marking an escalation in the country's already raging drug war.

Federal police and paramedics were lured to the scene by a phone call reporting that shots were fired at a major intersection and a municipal police officer lay wounded, Reyes told The Associated Press.

As the paramedics were working on the wounded man, a parked car exploded, he said.

Reyes said authorities later determined that the wounded man was not a policeman, although he was wearing a fake uniform. The man was among the three people who died in the attack. The others were a federal police officer and a medical technician.

Brig. Gen. Eduardo Zarate, the commander of the regional military zone, told reporters that up to 22 pounds (10 kilograms) of explosives might have been used, although investigators were still trying to determine what type.

He said the bomb might have been detonated remotely with a cell phone, adding that burned batteries connecting to a mobile phone were found at the scene.

"From what distance? We don't know. But we think it was a distance that allowed (the assailants) to watch the area, waiting for the police to get out of their vehicle," Zarate said.

The car bomb demonstrates the growing boldness and military sophistication of Mexico's drug traffickers, who have dramatically stepped up attacks against security forces and government officials since President Felipe Calderon deployed thousands of troops and federal police to crush the cartels in their strongholds.

"We have to change the way we operate," Reyes said. "We've started changing all our protocols, to include bomb situations."

City and federal authorities said the attack appeared to target only security forces.

"The threat was directed at the police departments, so it is not a threat against the population," he added. "But we have to be very careful with our police departments, their actions and how we protect them, and of course, how we protect the population from the fallout."

A graffiti message appeared on a wall of a Ciudad Juarez shopping mall Thursday night warning of more car bombs.

In the northeastern border city of Nuevo Laredo, meanwhile, a series of shootouts Friday prompted the U.S. Consulate to warn American citizens in the city to remain indoors. The consulate said drug traffickers were throwing up roadblocks on at least one major avenue and were carjacking vehicles.

"We have received credible reports of widespread violence occurring now between narcotics trafficking organizations and the Mexican Army in Nuevo Laredo. We have credible reports of grenades being used," the consulate said in a statement. "We advise all U.S. citizens in Nuevo Laredo to remain indoors until the security situation improves."

Army officials reached by phone in Nuevo Laredo declined to comment.

Roadblocks have been another tactic to recently emerge in Mexico's drug war. Gangs in the neighboring northeastern states of Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas, where Nuevo Laredo is located, have thrown up the blockades to impede soldiers from coming to the aid of colleagues under attack.

Drug gangs have previously attacked Mexican soldiers and police with grenades and powerful rifles, and there had long been fears they might turn to bombings. Soldiers have seized homemade explosives from gang vehicles after gunbattles, and assailants have stolen explosive material from transport vehicles.

Federal police said the attack was in retaliation for the arrest of a top leader of the La Linea drug gang, Jesus Acosta Guerrero, earlier in the day.

Police said Acosta Guerrero, 35, was the "operations leader" of La Linea, which works for the Juarez drug cartel. He was responsible for at least 25 killings, mainly of rival gang members, and also ordered attacks on police, a federal police statement said.

The Juarez cartel appeared to claim credit for the attack in the graffiti message, which accused federal police of supporting the rival Sinaloa cartel, led by Mexico's most-wanted kingpin, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman.

"What happened ... is going to keep happening against all the authorities that keep supporting 'El Chapo,"' the message read. "We have more car bombs."

Calderon's government has long faced allegations that his government does not pursue the Sinaloa cartel as aggressively as other gangs, accusations he vehemently denies.

What appeared to be the charred bottom half of the explosives-rigged car still lay at the scene of the attack Friday. The debris from the blast was spread out over a 300-yard (300-meter) radius. The explosion also blew out the windows of a nearby home and blackened the corner of the building nearest to the crash.

"Thank God we weren't home," said a woman who lives in the damaged house. She refused to give her name, citing safety concerns, before driving away from the scene Thursday.

Although the car bomb was a new tactic, it was far from the deadliest attack on Mexico's security forces. Last month, a carefully planned ambush killed 12 federal police officers in the western state of Michoacan.

And a week before July 4 local and state elections, suspected cartel members ambushed and killed the leading candidate for governor of Tamaulipas. Calderon called the assassination — which followed a series of attacks and threats against candidates throughout the campaign — evidence that drug cartels were trying to control Mexican politics through intimidation.

On Wednesday, gunmen killed the nephew of the governor-elect of Chihuahua, the state where Ciudad Juarez is located, although it was unclear who was behind the attack. Mario Medina, nephew of Cesar Duarte, was shot in the back as he tried to escape from would-be kidnappers in the state capital, also named Chihuahua.

Earlier Friday, federal Attorney General Arturo Chavez said he could not confirm if the latest attack involved a car bomb and said investigators were running forensic tests to determine if the assailants packed the car with explosive material or launched grenades.

Chavez said the killings did not qualify as terrorism.

"We have no evidence anywhere in the country of narco-terrorism," he said.

The attorney general says at least 24,800 people have been killed in drug-gang violence since Calderon launched his military-led offensive in 2006.

Ciudad Juarez has become one of the most dangerous cities in the world, with more than 4,000 people killed since the beginning of 2009. Reyes said at least 14 police officers have been killed in the city and surrounding areas in recent weeks.

Chavez reiterated the government's argument that violence has surged in large part because cartels are splintered and on the defensive.

"The actions of the government are forcing criminals to modify their strategies," he said. "The strongest keep what they have, while the defeated are looking for new turf, and this means invading territories that belonged to someone else. This provokes confrontations and internal wars."

But Mexico's drug cartels have extended their reach into other criminal activities. On Friday, federal police announced that five men who allegedly worked for the Zetas drug gang had been breaking into pipelines operated by the state-owned Petroleos Mexicanos company to steal large quantities of fuel. The five men were detained at a pipeline in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by consciousnes July 17, 2010 8:57 AM EDT
Yep, and if OBama doesn't close the mexican boarder the bombings will move accross into the US. It is just a matter of time.
THE WRITTING IS ON THE WALL FOLKS, "READ IT"
Reply to this comment
by texas_liberal July 17, 2010 10:16 AM EDT
it might work to mine the waterways as well, build a huge wall around the pacific coast with gates for shipping lanes, close the Canadian border
the Mexican border, mine the pacific coast.
construct a dome. that will work to keep everyone in.

priceless.
by wyodutch July 17, 2010 10:45 PM EDT
i don't mind the illegals as long as they stay in Texas.
by vielmann July 17, 2010 3:52 AM EDT
These drug cartels are no better than AlQaeda terrorists. It's time to start treating them the same way.
Reply to this comment
by texas_liberal July 16, 2010 10:08 PM EDT
what has fighting them over there gotten you?
first it was Colombia, AmeriKKKa spent Billions of dollars to bring down
Pablo Escobar, they took down the CIA darling Noriega, Funded the Contras through drug dealing via the taxpayers expense, went into Honduras
and finally Mexico got conned into fighting a war with promises of help which never got there. meanwhile the U.S. Crackhead continued to party away by the millions funding an underground economy that rivals Exxon
Billions of Dollars go south through legal banking routes, millions of guns flow with it, tons of drugs come north to the U.S. crackhead
brokered by U.S. drug dealers.
take responsibility, this war is as much about use as it is about dealing.and as much as it is about prohibition,
it is not about immmigration unless you assume that the immigrant is lighting the crack pipe because Americans are too lazy to light it themselves.
Reply to this comment
by ky7474 July 17, 2010 11:41 AM EDT
Cannibis users are very different from crackheads, so legalize cannibis and give people a much safer and less intrusive product to use. Those unwilling to give in on anything and chase the 0 tolerance policies have created much of this problem. Cannibis users have had enough, as they should. They have been abused, discrimminated against, crimminalized, and killed for their right to use. Then there's pharmaceutacals, alcohol, tobacco, and many other dangerous substances that are legal. Cannibis users are very productive citizens when given the chance. Change the hypocritical policies and you will see.
by Perish1 July 17, 2010 9:43 PM EDT
I agree texas_liberal...

What use has it been to fight drugs in other countries. It should always have been here. We should have shut down the borders 30 years ago and only let in what we wanted and knew of. We should assign more Coast gaurd to our ports and have more inspectors. We should have less military excursions and bases in other countries and worry more about protecting our own.
by lilbear925 July 16, 2010 8:40 PM EDT
Yes, Californica wants to allow Mexicans to continue creeping across their border, taking up residence, stealing American benefits, then probably moving in and taking over like the Taliban and al Qaida. This sounds more like terrorism than gang warfare.
Reply to this comment
by vielmann July 17, 2010 3:54 AM EDT
Yes, and Americans just can't seem to get free of their drug addictions and greed which makes all the weapons available to the drug cartels.
by AttentionDeficit July 17, 2010 10:44 AM EDT
Nor are we willing to acknowledge that prohibition is a magificently failed policy which makes cheap agricultural products fantastically lucrative.
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