Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera’s abrupt exit to face charges in the U.S. marks the end of an era in which he was Mexico’s most notorious drug cartel boss and, for some, the stuff of folk legend.
It’s also seen by many in Mexico as a delicately timed maneuver aimed at limiting political fallout for President Enrique Peña Nieto, already deeply unpopular in part for his perceived mishandling of Donald Trump’s tough rhetoric on Mexico.
Deputy Attorney General Alberto Elias Beltrán, asked at a Thursday night news conference about the timing of Guzmán Loera’s extradition, said the federal government cannot interfere in court decisions.
“It was resolved today, and we under terms of the international treaty had to make the handover immediately,” he said.
But observers still considered the timing to have been carefully planned.
“It could be a coincidence, but I think that’s unlikely,” Mexican security analyst Alejandro Hope said, noting it came the last full day of Barack Obama’s presidency and hours before Trump’s inauguration.
“They could not send him after Trump was inaugurated because the interpretation would have been that of a tribute,” Hope said. “But maybe they wanted to do it close enough so that both administrations — the outgoing and the incoming — could really make some political hay out of this.”
Others saw it as a reward to Obama and a shot across the bow of Trump, who has called immigrants coming illegally from Mexico criminals and “rapists” and vowed to build a border wall and make Mexico pay for it.
“The Mexican government decided to move up the time frame because they didn’t want Trump to be in the presidency when they sent him over,” said Michael Vigil, the former head of international operations for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. “They wanted Obama to take credit. They wanted to send a message to Trump that they won’t be bullied.”
One Guzmán Loera lawyer, José Refugio Rodríguez, said the extradition violated due process. He told the Radio Formula station that he planned to file a complaint with the Inter-American Human Rights Commission.
Guzmán Loera’s departure came the same day Mexican officials announced high-level talks Jan. 25-26 in Washington. The discussions will include Mexico’s newly installed top diplomat, Luis Videgaray, and key Trump administration officials such as chief of staff Reince Priebus, son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner and senior adviser Stephen Bannon.
Hope said the timing also sends a message that Mexico is serious about anti-drug cooperation regardless of who occupies the White House.
Sen. Miguel Barbosa of the leftist opposition Democratic Revolution Party seized on the extradition to take a swipe at Peña Nieto. He said it was apparently the only choice after Guzmán Loera twice pulled off embarrassing escapes from maximum-security lockups.
“We should not celebrate that the Mexican state was not capable of processing the greatest criminal that has ever existed in Mexico and was not capable of guaranteeing his incarceration,” Barbosa said in a statement.
Peña Nieto currently has the lowest approval ratings for any Mexican leader in the polling era. Besides his handling of Trump, Mexicans are also angry about corruption, rising drug gang violence and a Jan. 1 deregulation that led gasoline prices to spike by as much as 20 percent.
Another of Guzmán Loera’s lawyer, Andrés Granados, accused the government of trying to distract the public.
“They handled it politically to obscure the situation of the gas price hike,” Granados said. “It’s totally political.”
Some Mexicans feared Guzmán Loera’s extradition to the United States, where he will surely be kept from communicating with underlings, could unleash a cartel power struggle and more bloodshed.
“All the different bands are going to start fighting among themselves, no? Drug traffickers, to see who ends up being No. 1,” said Roberto Lascurain, an architect in Mexico City.
Guzmán Loera associate Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada is believed to be running the cartel following “El Chapo’s” recapture last January. Some analysts believe Guzmán Loera’s sons may have also taken on increased roles.
Raúl Benítez, a security expert at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), said Guzmán Loera’s offspring may try to challenge for control in what “could be a negotiation without violence, or a war with machine guns.”
However, Vigil predicted that the operations of Guzmán Loera’s Sinaloa cartel are unlikely to be affected.
“Most cartels have a vertical structure, but … Sinaloa has a horizontal one with cells that operate in a semi-autonomous manner,” Vigil said. “They have a strong bench. They have a respected leader in Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada.”
On Twitter, some saw humor in Guzmán Loera’s extradition the day before Trump takes office.
“‘They’re sending the worst, they’re bringing drugs, they’re criminals,'” tweeted Jorge Guajardo, Mexico’s ambassador to China in 2007-2013, echoing Trump’s comments about illegal immigration. “Ok, you won. Here’s our very worst, El Chapo.”
U.S. presidential transitions have been used by foreign countries before to send a political message. On Jan. 20, 1981, only minutes into the presidency of Republican Ronald Reagan, Iran freed 52 U.S. hostages it held for 444 days after the storming of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.
A deal between Iran and the U.S. to unfreeze billions of dollars in Iranian assets in exchange for the hostages had been largely reached under outgoing Democratic President Jimmy Carter. But while Carter greeted the hostages on their landing in West Germany, it was Reagan who announced their freedom to cheering U.S. citizens.