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Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

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Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

WonderBread

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — A signature trophy that Gen. Oscar Naranjo has carefully displayed in glass at Police Intelligence headquarters is odd by any measure: the neatly folded uniform of a rebel commander slain in 2008, clearly showing the holes from the shrapnel that killed him.

The four-star general, who retired as Colombia's police director this week, is proud of that and the others that line a hallway at the Police Intelligence Directorate in northern Bogota. They are testament to an intelligence empire he built that is unrivaled in Latin America.

Naranjo, 55, has played a central role in the capture or death of nearly every top Colombian drug trafficker, beginning with Pablo Escobar. The dismantling of the Medellin and Cali cocaine cartels and the splintering of successor trafficking organizations into ever-smaller groups was, as much as anyone's, Naranjo's doing.

On Thursday, Mexican presidential front-runner Enrique Pena Nieto said Naranjo has agreed to serve as his adviser on fighting drug trafficking if Pena Nieto wins the July 1 election.

The candidate has pledged to reduce violent crime affecting ordinary people in Mexico's drug war, a contrast to President Felipe Calderon's strategy of going after drug kingpins. Analysts have said Pena Nieto's strategy could mean that drug dealers who conduct their businesses discreetly will be left alone.

But Naranjo, standing with Pena Nieto at a news conference, said all cartels should be treated equally because "there can't be inequalities in the treatment of criminals."

Naranjo's 36-year career in Colombia, the last five as commander of 170,000 cops, coincides with his country's tortured journey from the verge of a near-failed state to what U.S. officials, Naranjo's chief patrons, tout as a model for the region's deadliest drug-war battlegrounds.

For a man who navigated the depths of the underworld for most of his career, whether battling rebels or ferreting out drug traffickers, his approval ratings in Colombia have been as high as any other public figure save Alvaro Uribe, Colombia's pugilistic law-and-order president in 2002-1010.

In a leaked 2009 Wikileaks cable, former U.S. ambassador William Brownfield said Naranjo was "perhaps the smartest, best informed member" of Colombia's government.

A leading Colombian rights activist, Gustavo Gallon, said Naranjo "has been upstanding, and has favored rights of civilians over the military."

And this from Myles Frechette, the U.S. ambassador in 1994-97: "It was Naranjo's analysis and many of the strategies he put together that slowly and eventually got Colombia to where it is today."

Yet Naranjo acknowledges making dark alliances when it was a question of national survival.

Colombians tend to agree that they were worth it.

___

With his urbane manner and generous six-foot frame, Naranjo is unusually patrician for a cop.

Though the son of a former Colombian police chief, Naranjo's teen years were more bohemian than boy scout. He wore his hair long and read Kafka, Camus and papal encyclicals. He played volleyball competitively. He wobbled between studying sociology and journalism before getting hooked on police work after tagging along with some detectives on a kidnapping case.

Naranjo graduated first in his class at the police academy and, when his father retired in 1983, went into intelligence work.

That's when his education began to get especially dangerous.

Medellin cartel kingpin Pablo Escobar would soon emerge as an existential threat to the state. In Escobar's fight against the extradition of drug traffickers to the United States, he waged all-out war, including targeted assassinations and indiscriminate bombings of civilians.

In 1989, after Naranjo escorted out of the country his first "extraditable," an Escobar money-launderer, the long reach of drug cartels touched him personally.

"When I returned to Bogota the next day," he recalled, "I found my wife had to move because a funeral wreath was delivered to the small apartment where we lived that said: 'Maj. Naranjo, Rest in Peace.'"

The Medellin cartel put a $5,000 bounty on his head. Escobar offered smaller bounties for rank-and-file policemen. About 500 were killed in Medellin alone in the worst year.

In 1991, Escobar surrendered and entered a custom-built prison he'd helped design. A few months later, he was a fugitive again.

Naranjo, who had moved to Buenos Aires, was brought back to Colombia and named intelligence chief of the "Bloque de Busqueda," a special force formed to hunt down the arch criminal. He gave weekly briefings to a group led by the defense minister that included the top CIA and DEA officers in Colombia. And he designed the clandestine operation that led to Escobar's killing in December 1993.

At the time, the kingpin's family had returned to Bogota after Germany rejected its asylum request. Fearful that Escobar's underworld foes would try to assassinate members of the family, they agreed to be put up in a residence hotel suite.

Naranjo had bugged the suite beforehand. Then he positioned himself one floor up, where, with the help of U.S. agents, he directed one of the earliest successful cellphone triangulations.

The Bloque de Busqueda's operations chief, now retired Gen. Leonardo Gallego, said Naranjo succeeded in forcing Escobar "into errors that made him break his own strict security rules."

Obsessed over his family's safety, Escobar lingered too long on the phone with his son.

His location pinpointed, his fate was sealed. He was gunned down on a rooftop in Medellin while trying to make his escape.

___

People looking to draw lessons for today's Mexican drug warriors from Colombia's defeat of the Medellin cartel should not overlook the ethical compromises and dark alliances made in that epic struggle, says Vanda Felbab-Brown, a drug war analyst at the Brookings Institution in Washington.

To weaken and isolate Escobar, Colombia's government and police allied themselves with the Cali cartel and estranged former Escobar henchmen, including men who would go on to lead the far-right militias known as paramilitaries.

The government's criminal allies killed several hundred of Escobar's mid-level operatives and thus paralyze the group, Felbab-Brown said.

Naranjo does not deny that bloody marriage of convenience.

It's easy to be critical in hindsight, he says, "but when two or three car bombs are going off in Bogota, in Medellin or in Cali and there are 120 dead every week from this war, the truth is that the state and society said, 'Do whatever you need to do to stop this.'"

That included leaning on Danilo Gonzalez, one of Naranjo's police academy classmates who had gone rogue.

Gonzalez always had the best intelligence on Escobar, Naranjo argued, because he got it from the Cali cartel, the next big target in the U.S.-sponsored drug war.

Naranjo says that in 1995, he persuaded the incoming police director, Gen. Rosso Jose Serrano, not to forcibly retire Gonzalez because the latter provided "very useful information."

Serrano eventually forced Gonzalez out when it became clear he was deep into drug trafficking with other rogue policemen.

In 2006, Gonzalez was killed in a gangland-style shooting.

Naranjo attended the wake.

___

During Serrano's 1995-2000 tenure, Naranjo gravitated to the "yuppies" — educated cops who favored well-cut suits and worked shoulder-to-shoulder with the DEA, CIA and Scotland Yard. The two men purged about 10,000 police officers. During Naranjo's time as director, nearly 2,900 were forcibly retired.

No one questions Naranjo's effectiveness against drug traffickers and leftist rebels, but analysts say Colombia's police under Naranjo have achieved far less on other fronts.

Kidnapping and murder are down dramatically, but criminal bands continue to thrive in the provinces, running drugs, extorting, "taxing" illegal gold mining. Colombia also remains the world's most deadly for trade union organizers.

"The strategy of going after high-value targets has its limits," said Maria Victoria Llorente, director of the Bogota think tank Fundacion Ideas para La Paz. "You capture the capos, but they have a great capacity for regeneration."

That's one reason drug decriminalization has a growing number of proponents in Latin America.

Naranjo is not among them, and his personal experience can't help but influence his thinking.

"Drug trafficking is good at transforming values into anti-values," he says, "and ends up enslaving societies."

http://news.yahoo.com/colombias-legendary-police-chief-heads-mexico-054335233.html
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

empire23
Thank you. Excellant article of a true police legend. I would be curious how he could help Mexico.
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

el Spaceio
In reply to this post by WonderBread
i like this Colombian and the fact he admits to partnering up with some cartels. he is the man

reason being all governments are cartels in the strongest form. USA empowers rebel groups and such to take countries if they have respect for human rights(sometimes backfires). with that being said.

the police abduction video could be many things. but what each plaza will have to realize  as i'm sure they already do. is there will always be an underworld.now is the time for local soldiers to empower a "cartel" that has value for life and innocent people. they will empower respectable people to regulate the norms of underworld activity and to clean house of kidnappers.ect.ect....

i dunno maybe i crazy from all those years in prison
~~~ I believe in equal rights for every Honest Person on this Planet regardless of Race or Money ~~~

favorite quote "helping to better the lives of others is the greatest of all achievements" http://www.feinsteinfoundation.org/

Viva the Law!!!

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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

el Spaceio
In reply to this post by WonderBread
also facts being so many USA operators already worked with this guy with successful outcomes. mean opens lot of doors for USA Mexico because USA already has established trust with him
~~~ I believe in equal rights for every Honest Person on this Planet regardless of Race or Money ~~~

favorite quote "helping to better the lives of others is the greatest of all achievements" http://www.feinsteinfoundation.org/

Viva the Law!!!

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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

Siskiyou_Kid
In reply to this post by WonderBread
I hope everyone realizes that Oscar Naranjo's younger brother was busted for selling 35 kilos of coke to undercover officers in Germany, and that in the past he has been tied to the Cali Cartel.
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

empire23
You can't always assume a family connection would include a criminal one. I don't think Naranjo is corrupt, just pragmatic, and maybe unethical.  Without los pepes he never would have gotten Escobar, and pepes was as bloody as the zetas. They killed families and innocents. Naranjo removed the guards from Pablo's family when pepes threatening Escobars children.  Bottom line: he'll get the job done however he can.
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

Chimera
In reply to this post by WonderBread
Excellent article on Gen. Naranjo and all the, yes, good he has done for Columbia. He has definitely broken up cartel  power to cause mass havoc and destruction and killing.

Here is my problem: Even with all this -- which I give him much credit and respect for -- we have record amounts of cocaine and coca paste coming out of Columbia now. So I think we do have to ask the question, is the job only half done? Or even less than half done since killings still happen a lot, etc.
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

theboss
In reply to this post by el Spaceio
I actually agree with partnering up as well, and I'm sure many would disagree with that idea; but taking on every cartel at once is an impossible fight for Mexico. The last six years have proven that. They simply don't have the resources. They have too much corruption in government, the police police and the army. Target corruption (revamp the police force and create a watchdog for the finances of government officials) and target the cartels that venture outside of the drug trafficking business and target innocent civilians and businesses. I understand that's a pretty broad description since every cartel does target civilians to some extent, but it's something that should be considered. It's a paper thin line between striking deals for progress and striking deals for corruption - that's the main problem. Time for a change in strategy either way. There's never going to be a perfect strategy, so it's imperative that people talk about ideas. The war on drugs will always be an endless pit of death.
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

Baggy
Still alot of cc comes from columbia but with all the 'good' this guys done we've only seen the cultivation move to peru and other places, He knows you cannot and will not ever stop drug trafficking n i'm sure he's as dirty as they come but knows how to distance himself just enough so that he doesn't take the fall for moving the drugs to the rest of the world.

Whatever the military mission in Juarez was called was simply a test case to see how one cartel partnered with the army/police with government collusion could reduce violence..

Operation SAFE VERACRUZ is probably another example. Pushed the zetas out so that cds could move in correct?

This guys just gonna do the same across the rest of the country aslong as the cartel he picks pays him well. Most likely CDS.they aren't afraid to work with the govt/military to take out enemies and gain new turf. I doubt the americans would even  complain about his selling of cc unless it becomes public knowledge and they are forced to act so they don't appear soft on drugs... even tho the CIA are the worlds largest government sanctioned cartel.

Tbh i just hope they start to decriminalize and then finally legalize and regulate so that organised crime stays in wall st and the white house heh. oh and lets not forget the petrol companies... now thats what you call CARTELS. opec!
Patriotism is a propaganda tool used to make people blind to the lies of their government through unquestioning devotion.
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

Siskiyou_Kid
Hey Baggy, I've got some friends in Toowoomba who showed me their tree farm. I wonder if you've read about this Kookaburra.

http://www.thechronicle.com.au/story/2012/06/16/life-evolved-around-drugs/
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

Baggy
LOL. The guys obviously a religious nutter.Goodluck to him n hope he doesnt serve toomuch time. Thats a great story tho thanks for showing me. havnt seen anything in the aussie media but i do tend to ignore/not pay attention to it cause its as corrupt n biased as the mexican police.

Might get a chance to read it all n discuss it more later but gotta split to go shopping for my daughters 2nd bday presents.

Peace
Patriotism is a propaganda tool used to make people blind to the lies of their government through unquestioning devotion.
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

Siskiyou_Kid
Hey Baggy, happy birthday to your 2 year old. I have 6 and 9 year old daughters.
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Re: Colombia's legendary police chief heads to Mexico

Baggy
This post was updated on .
Thanks man shes really excited, We pickedup a few gifts for her today, Her bday is on the 19th Eyeing some walkie talkies and maybe a trike like this . Got her a bowling set n more paints today n a few bits n pieces for making things with our play dough,

So whats the deal with this kookaburra as you call him? Tbh thats gotta be the most noble goal ive heard of for a mass market marijuana dealer. hahaha ofcourse he was selling to the nimbin crowd, That whole town all smoke weed apparently, Misguided if anything but atleast he wasn't doing it out of pure greed or lack of will.  Still havnt heard anything about this in the press but im not exactly searching for it, I think they wanna keep it quiet since it would jus prove howmuch drugs are really out there/Here and that the govts attempts at prohibition failed before they even started.

Back on the little ones, Havin kids changed almost everything about me.. Especially having a girl.Most wouldnt believe some of the shit ive got into since i was 13, Nobody thought i would make it to 21 without gettin killed or put in prison, Made it to 28 before my daughter was born, Turned most of it around and im still trynna stay out of trouble as best i can. Aint easy tbh. but this kids amazing and she deserves better than i was/am, Time will tell if i actually deserve her
Patriotism is a propaganda tool used to make people blind to the lies of their government through unquestioning devotion.
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