Could ‘El Güero’s’ betrayal of ‘El Mayo’ Zambada trigger a ‘bloodbath’ in Mexico?

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The New York Times released details of the capture of Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada, and it is stated that there was allegedly betrayal by one of the sons of Joaquín ‘El Chapo’ Guzmán.

According to the media, Joaquín Guzmán López ‘El Güero’ deceived ‘El Mayo’. It cites two American police sources, who assure that the pretext of the trip was to visit some land.

The Mexican drug traffickers traveled in a private plane. Zambada thought that the destination was somewhere in Mexico and not in the United States.

After this important event and if the betrayal by Guzmán to save his brother Ovidio is proven, a new war would begin and the faction of ‘El Mayo’ could seek revenge

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This is what Eduardo Guerrero Gutiérrez says in his column Three keys to understanding the arrest of ‘El Mayo’, where he comments that the situation could become very delicate in Sinaloa and Durango.

‘‘We must not forget the bloodbath that was unleashed with the last great break in the Sinaloa Cartel, in 2008, when the Beltrán Leyva felt betrayed’’, Guerrero highlights.

He added that the mobilization of troops has already begun. Río Doce reported that early Friday 200 elements of the Army special forces arrived at military base no. 10 in Culiacán.

What is happening in Sinaloa, land of drug traffickers?

The Sinaloa Cartel could be in crisis after the leaders of the armed groups of Ismael “Mayo” Zambada and the sons of Joaquín “Chapo” Guzmán, known as the “Chapitos”, were captured or killed.

In June and July, events related to the conflict between the “Chapitos” and “El Mayo” occurred in Sinaloa.

The arrest of the founder of the Sinaloa cartel could bring calm to the criminal rivalry in Sinaloa, but it would also generate violence due to the leadership of this criminal organization, which also rivals the Jalisco Nueva Generación Cartel.

Since “El Chapo” Guzmán was captured and sentenced in the United States, his sons, Ovidio, Joaquín and Archivaldo, organized to traffic drugs to the United States.

Known as the “Chapitos” or the “Menores,” they rivaled “Mayo” Zambada and Aureliano Guzmán Loera, alias “Guano,” for control of drug trafficking such as fentanyl.

Source: elfinanciero