Mexico drug boss death could spark power struggle

MONTERREY, Mexico, (Reuters) – Mexico’s killing of  a top drug trafficker is a coup for President Felipe Calderon,  but it may result in a spike in violence and is unlikely to  lead authorities to the country’s most wanted drug boss.

“Given the increase in violence from other drug bosses  captured or executed, it’s probable that the strike on Ignacio  Coronel will provoke shocks, above all throughout Guadalajara,”  leading newspaper La Jornada wrote in an editorial on Friday.

Mexican authorities touted the raid in the western city of  Guadalajara on Thursday, when over 100 soldiers burst in on  Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel and shot him as he tried to escape, as  a major victory in Calderon’s war against cartels.

Coronel was a top lieutenant to Joaquin “Shorty” Guzman,  the most wanted man in Mexico and the leader of the powerful  Sinaloa cartel, which controls major drug smuggling routes  along the Pacific into the United States.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration praised Calderon,  saying Coronel’s death was “a crippling blow to that  organization’s ability to function.”

Yet the killing raises questions about whether a vacuum  near the top of the highly organized Sinaloa cartel could spark  a fresh bout of violence in Guadalajara and Jalisco state,  until now a relatively quiet spot in the drug war.

More than 26,000 people have died in drug violence since  Calderon launched his drug war in late 2006. The bloodshed has  become a growing worry for the administration of U.S. President  Barack Obama, global investors and foreign tourists.

In the past, violence has followed arrests or deaths of  drug leaders, like in 2004, when heavy fighting broke out as  Guzman struggled to take over smuggling routes made vulnerable  by the arrest of Osiel Cardenas, head of the Gulf Cartel.

Bloodshed has jumped since the start of this year in  Mexico’s Acapulco beach resort as part of a leadership battle  following the killing of drug lord Arturo Beltran Leyva by  Mexican special forces in December.

“The glow … is likely to be short-lived. As the Sinaloa  Federation scrambles to regroup, other organizations will  undoubtedly seek to challenge its dominance in the region, such  as the Beltran Leyva organization and Los Zetas,” U.S. security  consultancy Stratfor said in a report yesterday.