The report appears in Sunday’s editions of Proceso,
The interview did not reveal new or surprising information but was remarkable for simply having taken place. What Zambada’s motives were is unclear.
Scherer says he was summoned to the interview through an anonymous note that set a time and place where he would be picked up to be taken to the drug boss’ hide-out. He describes a series of long drives with switching-off chase cars and hours of waiting in a safe house. He finally ends up in a remote, mountainous location where Zambada appears, flanked by well-armed bodyguards. The author and narco then sit down to a lunch of orange juice, meat and beans.
Zambada and
Asked if he thinks he will ever be caught, Zambada says: “”At any moment, or never.””
Despite suspicions among some Mexicans that the government is not making a serious effort to capture Zambada, the 60-year-old trafficker claims in the interview the army has closed in on him four times. He fled through the mountainous countryside that he knows down to the stones, he says.
“”I don’t know if I would have the guts to kill myself”” if captured, he says. “”I want to think that yes, I would kill myself.””
The Proceso article is accompanied by a photograph of Scherer with Zambada, who had one of his bodyguards take it, the writer said. The narco wears a big white hat and thick black mustache. Scherer describes him as standing about 5 foot 9, built like a “”fort”” with a small paunch and very well-pressed jeans.
Scherer attempted to draw out Zambada on the arrest of his son Vicente, who was extradited to the U.S. in February. But he declined to discuss the matter, saying it hurts too much. Scherer also doesn’t have much luck in getting Zambada to talk about the scope of his empire and wealth. The narco says the lists that put him or Guzman in the ranks of the world’s top billionaires, as well as the tales of their living the high life clandestinely, are “”foolishness.””
Zambada criticizes the government’s military-led offensive against his and other cartels, saying it’s too little, too late if the goal is really to hurt the drug trade.
“”The problem with the narco business is that it involves millions. How do you dominate that?”” Zambada said. “”As for the bosses, locked up, dead or extradited, their replacements are already standing by.””
The government’s drug war, he says, is lost. Why lost? asks Scherer. The narcotics trade and everything that goes along with it, Zambada responds, are inside the society “”as deeply rooted as the corruption.””