<<Note from MN: "Stratfor" is a corporate 
intelligence organization mostly concerned with 
the impact of national security operations and 
'subversive' activities on big business and investment opportunities.--MN>>

 From Stratfor

Anonymous vs. Zetas Amid Mexico's Cartel Violence

November 2, 2011 | 1701 GMT

By Scott Stewart

The online activist collective Anonymous posted a 
message on the Internet on Oct. 31 saying it 
would continue its campaign against Mexican 
criminal cartels and their government supporters despite the risks.

The message urged inexperienced activists, who 
might not be practicing proper online security 
measures, to abstain from participating. It also 
urged individuals associated with Anonymous in 
Mexico not to conduct physical pamphlet drops, 
participate in protests, wear or purchase Guy 
Fawkes masks, or use Guy Fawkes imagery in their 
Internet or physical-world activities. Guy Fawkes 
was a British Roman Catholic conspirator involved 
in a plot to bomb the British Parliament on Nov. 
5, 1605. The British celebrate the plot's failure 
as Guy Fawkes Day each Nov. 5. In modern times, 
the day has come to have special meaning for 
anarchists. Since 2006, the style of the Guy 
Fawkes mask used in the movie "V for Vendetta" 
has become something of an anarchist icon in the United Kingdom and elsewhere.

Related Video
Dispatch: Anonymous' Online Tactics Against Mexican Cartels

It was no coincidence, then, that in an Oct. 6 
video Anonymous activists set Nov. 5 as the 
deadline for Los Zetas to release an Anonymous 
associate allegedly kidnapped in Veracruz. The 
associate reportedly was abducted during an 
Anonymous leaflet campaign called "Operation Paperstorm."

The Oct. 31 message acknowledged that the 
operation against Los Zetas, dubbed "Operation 
Cartel," would be dangerous. It noted that some 
members of the collective would form a group of 
trusted associates to participate in a special 
task force to execute the operation. It asked 
supporters to pass information pertaining to drug 
trafficking to the Operation Cartel task force 
for publication on the Internet via a software 
tool developed by Anonymous that permits the anonymous passing of information.

When discussing Anonymous, it is important to 
remember that Anonymous is not a hierarchical 
organization, but rather a collective of 
activists. Individuals who choose to associate 
themselves with the collective frequently 
disagree over issues addressed by the collective 
and are free to choose which actions to support and/or participate in.

With Nov. 5 approaching, and at least some 
elements of Anonymous not backing down on their 
threats to Los Zetas, we thought it would be 
useful to provide some context to the present 
conflict between Anonymous and Los Zetas and to 
address some of its potential implications.

Context

The Mexican port city of Veracruz has been the 
epicenter of this event. Veracruz has been a busy 
place over the past few months in terms of 
Mexico's cartel wars. The port serves as a 
critical transportation hub for Los Zetas 
narcotics smuggling. Because of this, STRATFOR 
has identified Veracruz as a bellwether for 
determining Los Zetas' trajectory in the coming months.

In a major recent development in Veracruz, the 
Sinaloa cartel began an offensive into the Zetas 
stronghold using the Cartel de Jalisco Nueva 
Generacion (CJNG), which, under the name 
"Matazetas" (Spanish for "Zeta killers"), 
conducted high-profile body dumps of more than 50 
alleged low-level Zetas operatives on Sept. 20 
and Sept. 22. On Oct. 25, Mexican marines 
arrested Carlos Arturo Pitalua-Carillo, also 
known as "El Bam Bam," who was the Zetas' plaza 
boss in Veracruz. The Zetas in Veracruz thus are 
feeling pressure from both the Mexican government and the CJNG.

The Anonymous Internet collective entered this 
dynamic in August with its activities in 
Veracruz. It is common knowledge that members of 
local, state and federal governments in Mexico 
support various cartel groups. In the state of 
Veracruz, it is generally believed that some 
members of the state government support Los 
Zetas, the dominant cartel there. In response to 
this corruption, some who have associated 
themselves with Anonymous launched Operation 
Paperstorm. These activists distributed leaflets 
throughout Veracruz denouncing the state 
government for supporting Los Zetas. They 
conducted leaflet distributions Aug. 13, Aug. 20 
and Aug. 29. They also released videos on the 
Internet on Aug. 26 and Aug. 29 condemning the Veracruz state government.

Activities outside Veracruz also played a part in 
setting the stage. On Sept. 13, the bodies of two 
people who had been tortured and killed were hung 
from a pedestrian overpass in Nuevo Laredo, 
Tamaulipas state. Signs left with the bodies said 
Los Zetas had killed the pair because they had 
posted information pertaining to the Zetas on 
blogs that specialize in reporting on the Mexican 
cartels. On Sept. 26, the decapitated body of 
Marisol Macias Castaneda was found in a park in 
Nuevo Laredo. Macias, who worked for a local 
newspaper, allegedly posted on cartel blogs using 
the nickname "Laredo Girl." A message found with 
her body said the Zetas killed her due to her online activities.

Following the death of Laredo Girl, Anonymous 
claimed responsibility for a distributed denial 
of service attack against the official website of 
the state of Veracruz. Although her murder 
occurred outside of the state, Anonymous said its 
attack on the Veracruz website was in response to 
Laredo Girl's death. This indicates that 
activists understand that Los Zetas are active in 
both areas and suggests that Veracruz state-based 
activists are driving the Anonymous campaign against Los Zetas.

Significantly, some individuals associated with 
Anonymous already were unhappy with the state of 
Veracruz over its decision to prosecute two 
individuals who had posted kidnapping reports on 
Twitter on Aug. 25 that proved false. According 
to the reports, a group of children had been 
abducted from a Veracruz school. The inaccurate 
reports allegedly caused some two dozen traffic 
accidents as terrified parents rushed to the 
school to check on their children. The so-called 
Twitter terrorists initially were charged with 
offenses that could have carried a 30-year 
sentence. Some associated with Anonymous, which 
has absolute freedom of speech on the Internet as 
one of its foundational principles, took umbrage 
at the prospect of such stiff penalties — 
especially given the stark contrast with the 
impunity enjoyed by many cartel figures in Mexico.

STRATFOR began to focus on the story following 
the Oct. 6 release of the video in which 
Anonymous activists threatened to release 
information about individuals cooperating with 
Los Zetas if the Zetas did not release the 
Anonymous activist kidnapped during Operation 
Paperstorm. In light of the approaching Nov. 5 
deadline, we published an analysis of the topic 
on Oct. 28; the topic subsequently received a great deal of media coverage.

This publicity has generated a very interesting 
response from Anonymous that emphasizes that it 
is a collective, not an organization. Some 
Anonymous activists began to back off the issue, 
erasing online user accounts formerly associated 
with the campaign, suggesting the operation 
against Los Zetas had been a hoax and claiming 
that no activist had been kidnapped. Other 
activists suggested that the campaign was 
dangerous, ill-advised and should be suspended. 
Still other activists became more strident and 
determined in their posts, urging that the 
campaign continue. As noted, Anonymous' 
collective nature means activists can select the 
actions they participate in, including Operation 
Cartel. It would only take one dedicated individual to continue the operation.

The will to continue was manifested Oct. 29 with 
the hacking of the personal website of Gustavo 
Rosario Torres, the former attorney general of 
the Mexican state of Tabasco. The site was 
defaced with a message from Anonymous Mexico 
stating that Rosario is a Zeta. Rosario has long 
been accused in the Mexican and international 
media of protecting Los Zetas, and videos long 
have circulated on YouTube making the same 
charge. The hacking of his website thus did not 
provide any startling revelation; Anonymous will 
have to uncover and publish original and timely 
information if it hopes to do much damage to Los Zetas.

The determination by some activists to continue 
the operation against Los Zetas also was 
reflected in the tone of the Oct. 31 message. 
Some activists associated with Anonymous clearly 
feel compelled to continue with the campaign over 
what they have characterized as an outpouring of 
public support in the wake of the media coverage. 
According to their Oct. 31 video statement:

"We received many expressions of support and 
solidarity as well as the voices of people crying 
for help. We must remember that we are on the 
side of the people, and we cannot let down the 
people, especially in critical moments like the one they currently live in."

We therefore anticipate that some Anonymous 
activists will continue the campaign. We also 
believe that Los Zetas will respond.

Blowback

Mexico's various cartels long have used the 
Internet to trumpet their triumphs on the 
battlefield and to taunt and even degrade their 
enemies. The cartels have posted videos of the 
torture, execution and desecration of the corpses 
of rivals. They also frequently monitor 
narcoblogs and sometimes even post on them. As 
demonstrated by the September blogger killings in 
Nuevo Laredo, Los Zetas appear to possess at 
least some rudimentary capability to trace online 
activity to people in the physical world. They 
are known to employ their own team of dedicated 
cyber experts and to have sources within the Mexican government.

In addition to technical intelligence, the Zetas 
can use old-fashioned human intelligence to track 
down their online enemies. People sometimes 
discuss their online identities with family and 
friends, and such information can be overheard 
and passed to Los Zetas in return for money. This 
danger was recognized in the Oct. 31 video from 
Anonymous that urges participants in their 
campaign not to discuss their activities with anyone.

In past Anonymous actions, like the December 2010 
attack against PayPal after the WikiLeaks scandal 
broke, the U.S. and British governments arrested 
numerous individuals associated with Anonymous 
who allegedly participated in the attacks. In 
June 2011, Turkey arrested dozens of activists 
associated with Anonymous actions conducted 
against the Turkish government in response to its 
plan to establish a national Internet-filtering 
system. This indicates that some activists 
associated with Anonymous are not nearly as 
anonymous as they would like to be. Every action 
on the Internet leaves some sort of trail, making 
it very difficult to be truly anonymous.

Like other Mexican cartels, Los Zetas do not take 
affronts lightly. Even if Anonymous cannot 
provide information that damages Los Zetas 
smuggling operations, the very fact that the 
collective has decided publicly to challenge Los 
Zetas will result in some sort of response. The 
big question is whether the Zetas possess the 
capability to trace the organizers of the Anonymous action?

One challenge with tracking an entity such as 
Anonymous is that it is intentionally amorphous. 
It is also as transnational as the Internet, and 
it would be unsurprising if many of those chosen 
to participate in the operation against Los Zetas 
are located in the United Sates, Europe and other 
areas that are outside the Zetas' immediate reach.

The amorphous nature of Anonymous can also cut 
the other way, however. If Los Zetas abduct and 
execute random patrons at an Internet cafe, 
behead them and place Guy Fawkes masks on their 
heads, it will be very difficult to prove that 
they were not associated with Anonymous. Los 
Zetas also could execute random people and claim 
they had provided Anonymous with information in 
order to intimidate people from actually 
cooperating with Anonymous. As Anonymous noted in 
its Oct. 31 video, this is dangerous business indeed.

The Big Picture

How the Mexican public reacts to the Anonymous 
operation must be watched. The criminal cartels 
and their violence have deeply affected many 
people in Mexico's middle and upper classes. 
STRATFOR talks to many people in Mexico who fear 
that they or a family member will be kidnapped. 
In many communities, especially places like 
Ciudad Juarez, Torreon, Monterrey and Veracruz, 
businessmen find themselves in a terrible bind. 
They face ever-increasing extortion demands from 
the cartels while their business revenues dwindle 
because the violence associated with those same 
cartels has frightened people into not going out. 
This is forcing many small businesses to close. 
It also is creating a great deal of frustration and resentment.

At the same time, Mexico has become one of the 
most dangerous countries in the world for 
journalists, and many media organizations 
practice heavy self-censorship to protect 
themselves. In the wake of the September blogger 
killings, some of the narcoblogs, like Blog del 
Narco, have exhibited strong signs of 
self-censorship inspired by fear. As a result, 
many Mexicans believe the mainstream media are 
not of any real assistance in the face of cartel violence.

Mexican citizens also are frustrated with their 
government, which, as noted, is well-known for 
corruption. This sentiment is feeding Anonymous' 
original campaign in Veracruz. This frustration 
even has led some people to begin discussing the 
creation of vigilante groups to fight the cartels 
— though this has been attempted before in 
Mexico. As we saw in the case of La Familia 
Michoacana, which began as such a vigilante 
group, vigilantism frequently does not end well.

This is where Anonymous may fit in. With Mexican 
citizens unable to rely on their government, the 
media or even armed vigilante groups for 
assistance, they may embrace Anonymous, coming to 
view its form of cybervigilantism as an outlet 
for their frustration. If Anonymous is perceived 
as a safe way to pass information pertaining to 
cartel activities, we may see people from all 
over the country begin to share intelligence. 
Such human intelligence could very well prove to 
be far more damaging to the cartels than any 
information Anonymous activists can dredge up 
electronically. As this operation is becoming 
more widely publicized, the pool of people 
outside Mexico who might wish to participate will 
likely grow. The number of people inside Mexico 
who wish to provide information might grow as well.

Anonymous has taken on many powerful entities in 
the past, such as major transnational 
corporations and governments. But the 
repercussions from participating in such 
operations were never as grave for online 
activists as they are in this case. Being 
identified and detained by Scotland Yard or the 
FBI is a far different situation than being 
identified and detained by Los Zetas.

http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20111102-anonymous-vs-zetas-amid-mexico-cartel-violence?utm_source=freelist-f&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=111103&utm_
term=sweekly&utm_content=SECtitle&elq=55ed
00ee593045b897d703f49c751894



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