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National Intelligence Centre (Mexico)
National Intelligence Centre (Mexico)
from Wikipedia

National Intelligence Centre
Centro Nacional de Inteligencia
Official Seal of the CNI
Map
Agency overview
FormedDecember 1, 2018; 6 years ago (2018-12-01)
Preceding agency
  • Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (1989-2018)
HeadquartersCamino Real a Contreras No. 35, Col. La Concepción, Magdalena Contreras, Ciudad de México
19°18′14″N 99°14′10″W / 19.304°N 99.236°W / 19.304; -99.236
EmployeesClassified (estimated around 3,600)
Annual budget2 813 446 355 pesos (2023)[1]
Agency executive
  • Audomaro Martínez Zapata[2], General Director[2]
Parent departmentSecretariat of Security and Civilian Protection
Websitewww.gob.mx/cni

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia or CNI, is a Mexican intelligence agency controlled by the Ministry of Security and Civilian Protection [es].

The CNI replaced the Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN) in December 2018 at the start of the administration of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. The CNI is the primary civilian intelligence service in Mexico.

Formally, the agency is charged with intelligence operations as they pertain to national security, which contribute to the preservation of the Mexican State's integrity, stability, and permanence.[3]

History

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History of CISEN

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CISEN was created on February 13, 1989, replacing the Dirección General de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (DGISN), which assumed its role following the dissolution of the Dirección Federal de Seguridad (DFS) and the Dirección General de Investigaciones Políticas y Sociales (DGIPS). CISEN was the principal intelligence agency of the Secretariat of the Interior (Spanish: Secretaría de Gobernación, SEGOB). The agency was formally charged with generating strategic, tactical, and operative intelligence to ensure the integrity, stability, and permanence of the Mexican state. Article 19 of the National Security Act defined the scope and responsibilities of CISEN.[3] The 1994 Zapatista uprising in Chiapas played a formative role in shaping the scope of the agency's objectives and lead to a significant increase in intelligence operations against all sectors of Mexican society.[4] From its inception, the agency received training and equipment from the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad.[4] CISEN acquired the Israeli spyware Pegasus during the presidency of Enrique Peña Nieto.[5] The spyware was used by the Peña Nieto administration to spy on journalists, human rights activists, and political opponents, including dozens of associates of Andrés Manuel López Obrador in the run-up to his presidential election victory in 2018.[6] Then-Secretary of the Interior Miguel Ángel Osorio Chong publicly denied CISEN's purchase of Pegasus;[7] however, in May 2020 the Secretariat of Security and Civilian Protection (Spanish: Secretaría de Seguridad y Protección Ciudadana, SSPC) confirmed the acquisition of the spyware by CISEN.[8]

Before taking office in 2018, President López Obrador had been critical of CISEN's opacity in its operations and practices, which included wiretapping and surveillance of political adversaries and ideological dissidents.[9] This prompted López Obrador to dissolve CISEN and replace the agency with the Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI). Although mostly regarded as a rebrand (CNI maintains the same faculties, internal structure, and the majority of CISEN personnel),[10] one notable structural change was its placement under the control of the reinstated Secretariat of Security and Civilian Protection.[11] In July 2021, López Obrador announced that all CISEN files would be declassified and made available for public examination at the Archivo General de la Nación.[12]

History of CNI

[edit]

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) was created on November 30, 2018, following reforms to the Organic Law of the Federal Public Administration.[13] The agency maintains the functions established for CISEN in Article 19 of the National Security Law.[3] Audomaro Martínez Zapata was named director of the CNI on December 1, 2018.

Directors of CISEN

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  • (1989–1990): Jorge Carrillo Olea
  • (1990–1993): Fernando del Villar Moreno
  • (1993–1994): Eduardo Pontones Chico
  • (1994–1999): Jorge Enrique Tello Peón
  • (1999–2000): Alejandro Alegre Rabiela
  • (2000–2005): Eduardo Medina-Mora Icaza
  • (2005–2006): Jaime Domingo López Buitrón (1st term)
  • (2006–2011): Guillermo Valdés Castellanos
  • (2011): Alejandro Poiré Romero (temporary)
  • (2011–2012): Jaime Domingo López Buitrón (2nd term)
  • (2012–2018): Eugenio Ímaz Gispert
  • (2018–2019): Alberto Bazbaz

Directors of CNI

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  • (2019): Audomaro Martínez Zapata [14]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI), or National Intelligence Centre, is Mexico's foremost civilian , dedicated to producing strategic, tactical, and operational to preserve state stability, , and governance amid threats like and foreign interference. Established on November 30, 2018, via reforms to the of the Federal , it replaced the longstanding Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN) and reports to the Secretariat of Security and Citizen Protection. The agency's mandate emphasizes investigations contributing to internal security, , and policy support, operating within legal constraints to avoid past abuses associated with predecessor entities. The CNI's formation under President reflected efforts to overhaul structures in response to entrenched dominance, , and inadequate threat assessment that plagued prior administrations. Key functions include monitoring high-risk criminal networks, risks, and potential disruptions to public order, though empirical outcomes remain mixed given persistent levels exceeding 30,000 homicides annually. Controversies have centered on accusations of redirected priorities toward surveilling political opponents and journalists, supplanting career analysts with regime-aligned personnel, which critics argue undermines professional objectivity and erodes trust in the institution. In July 2025, legislative reforms established a National System of Investigation and to bolster interagency coordination against high-impact crimes, potentially expanding data access while raising concerns. Despite operational secrecy, the CNI's role underscores Mexico's causal reliance on enhanced for disrupting illicit economies, though systemic challenges like and resource constraints limit discernible advancements in security metrics.

History

Establishment of Predecessor Agencies

The was founded in 1947 under President (1946–1952) via a presidential agreement, consolidating fragmented federal security and intelligence elements—including the Policía Judicial Federal, narcotics enforcement units from the Secretaría de Salubridad y Asistencia, and investigative branches—under the Secretaría de Gobernación to centralize political surveillance, counter-subversion efforts, and protection of national institutions during the onset of the . This creation addressed prior disorganization in intelligence gathering, which had relied on ad hoc agencies like the Dirección General de Investigaciones Políticas y Sociales (DGIPS, established in the early ), by establishing a dedicated body for internal threats, including communist infiltration and labor unrest, with an initial emphasis on operational fieldwork over analysis. The DFS operated until its dissolution on November 29, 1985, prompted by congressional investigations into systemic abuses, including unauthorized surveillance of citizens, ties to drug trafficking, and involvement in extrajudicial actions during the "" against leftist guerrillas in the 1960s–1970s. In response, the government promptly formed the Dirección General de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (DGISN) in 1985 as a successor entity, merging residual DFS functions with DGIPS remnants to refocus on professionalized amid democratization pressures and scandals eroding public trust. On February 13, 1989, the DGISN was restructured and redesignated as the Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN) through administrative decree under President , shifting toward a civilian-oriented model emphasizing threat assessment, policy advisory, and while detaching from overt policing roles to align with post-DFS reforms aimed at enhancing accountability and analytical capacity. This establishment marked a deliberate pivot to institutionalize intelligence as a supportive function to , inheriting archival and personnel continuity from predecessors but with statutes prohibiting direct enforcement actions.

Creation and Operations of CISEN (1989–2017)

The Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN) was established on February 13, 1989, via presidential decree under President , as Mexico's primary civilian intelligence agency. It succeeded the (DFS), disbanded in 1985 following exposures of systemic corruption, including collaborations with the and involvement in . The decree mandated CISEN to create an investigations system for national safety, gather and analyze data on threats to stability, and produce actionable intelligence, marking a shift toward strategic functions over the DFS's overt policing and coercive tactics. This reform sought to purge corrupt elements while retaining some experienced personnel, though critics noted incomplete breaks from prior abuses. Subordinate to the (Gobernación), CISEN operated with a broad mandate to generate strategic, tactical, and operational safeguarding , institutional governance, and legal order, particularly against internal threats like and drug trafficking organizations (DTOs). Its core functions encompassed collection, signals and technological , threat assessments, and advisory support for secure communications and protective systems. During the 1990s and 2000s, amid rising cartel violence—exemplified by over 300,000 homicides linked to DTOs since 2006—CISEN provided to federal forces, facilitating operations against groups like the Zetas and , though outcomes were hampered by interagency silos and limited external oversight. The agency maintained domestic and limited foreign capabilities, prioritizing to detect , , and infiltration by criminal networks. CISEN's operations evolved under successive administrations, surviving transitions from PRI dominance to the PAN governments of (2000–2006) and (2006–2012), where it supported the militarized anti-cartel strategy amid escalating violence that peaked at 22,000 murders annually by 2011. However, entrenched politicization persisted, with documented surveillance of dissidents, journalists, and opposition figures echoing PRI-era tactics, and a lack of congressional scrutiny fostering opacity. Controversies included indictments of agents for spying on a senator and allegations of controlling "Dirty War" archives from the 1960s–1980s repression, potentially concealing state atrocities through infiltration of the General National Archive. By 2017, under , mounting failures in DTO intelligence—coupled with scandals like the 2014 —underscored coordination deficits and fueled reform debates, setting the stage for CISEN's eventual replacement.

Transition to CNI and Reforms (2017–Present)

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) was created on December 1, 2018, supplanting the Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN) through amendments to the of the Federal , enacted as part of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's initial restructuring of security institutions. This shift relocated the agency from the to the Secretariat of Security and Citizen Protection (SSPC), aligning civilian intelligence more closely with operational security tasks and reducing its prior emphasis on political monitoring. The CNI inherited CISEN's core personnel and infrastructure but adopted a narrower mandate centered on generating strategic, tactical, and operational intelligence to safeguard national stability, governance, and against threats including . Early operations under the new framework prioritized countering internal and activities, though critics, including U.S. analysts, have attributed a pivot toward political adversaries and groups, evidenced by reported military appointments to leadership roles previously held by civilians. By 2019, the agency had integrated with SSPC-led initiatives like the , facilitating joint threat assessments amid rising violence, with homicide rates exceeding 34,000 annually despite these efforts. Budget allocations for intelligence functions grew modestly, reaching approximately 2.5 billion pesos (about $125 million USD) by 2020, reflecting incremental resource shifts toward technology-driven over networks inherited from CISEN. Reforms accelerated in 2025 under President , with Congress enacting the Law on the National System of Investigation and Intelligence in on , following lower chamber approval on June 26. This legislation formalized inter-agency coordination for high-impact crimes, authorizing the SSPC—including the CNI—to access private and public databases such as biometric records, vehicle registries, and fiscal data without prior judicial warrants in security contexts. Complementary amendments to the General Law on the National System empowered the CNI to lead proactive intelligence operations, integrating it further with units for real-time . Proponents argued these measures address intelligence gaps contributing to over 30,000 homicides in 2024, while opponents highlighted risks of expanded state eroding , drawing comparisons to broadened data access in other nations' frameworks. As of October 2025, implementation protocols remain under development, with initial pilots focusing on mapping in high-violence states like and .

Organizational Structure and Governance

Leadership and Key Directors

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) is directed by a General Director responsible for strategic oversight, coordination, and implementation of policies, operating under the authority of the Secretariat of Security and Civilian Protection. The role emphasizes civil gathering while maintaining operational independence, though appointments reflect alignment with the sitting administration's security priorities. Audomaro Martínez Zapata, a career military officer and retired division general born in Cunduacán, Tabasco, in 1948, held the position of General Director from late 2018 until late 2024. A graduate of the Mexican Military College in 1967, Martínez previously served in regional military commands and as security chief for Andrés Manuel López Obrador's presidential campaigns starting in 2006. His tenure marked the CNI's initial phase post-reform, focusing on restructuring from its CISEN predecessor amid criticisms of opacity in operations. Francisco Almazán Barocio succeeded as General Director in late 2024. A civilian with expertise in law enforcement, Almazán previously directed the Police Investigation Agency of the Attorney General's Office from 2019 to 2024 and held roles in international police affairs and anti-kidnapping units. Known as a trusted associate of SSPC Secretary Omar García Harfuch, his appointment signals a shift toward integrating investigative policing with intelligence functions under the Sheinbaum administration.
Director GeneralTermBackground Highlights
Audomaro Martínez Zapata2018–2024Retired ; prior security roles in political campaigns and state public security ().
Francisco Almazán Barocio2024–presentCivilian lawyer; former head of police investigation and anti-kidnapping forces.

Internal Divisions and Operational Framework

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) operates as an administrative body deconcentrated from the Secretariat of Security and Citizen Protection, endowed with technical and operational autonomy to conduct activities in support of . Its internal structure emphasizes streamlined coordination to facilitate efficient gathering, analysis, and response, contrasting with the predecessor agency's more expansive hierarchy of 40 senior positions by reducing to 28 such roles. At the apex, the CNI is led by a , currently General Audomaro Martínez Zapata, supported by a Secretary General, Osmar Saúl Parra Ibarra, who oversees administrative and advisory functions. Below this level, the agency is organized into seven general operational coordinations, each headed by a coordinator responsible for specialized domains:
  • Coordinación de Contrainteligencia: Focuses on detecting and neutralizing threats from foreign or internal .
  • Coordinación de Análisis: Handles the evaluation and synthesis of data into actionable assessments.
  • Coordinación de Operaciones: Manages field-level operations and tactical deployments.
  • Coordinación de Servicios Técnicos: Oversees , including tools and .
  • Coordinación Jurídica: Ensures legal compliance in activities and provides advisory on regulatory matters.
  • Coordinación de Investigación: Conducts in-depth probes into threats such as and security risks.
  • Coordinación Administrativa: Manages logistical, financial, and human resources support for the agency's functions.
These coordinations integrate to form a cohesive operational framework centered on preserving state integrity through intelligence-driven actions, including information processing, threat evaluation, and collaboration with entities like the Armed Forces, , and Attorney General's Office to address criminal threats and safeguard . Core activities encompass operating intelligence tasks within the system, preparing political, economic, and , and maintaining confidentiality as a foundational for operational . Detailed organizational charts and personnel directories remain classified to protect operational , limiting transparency on subunit compositions or inter-coordination protocols.

Mandate, Functions, and Methods

Core Intelligence Responsibilities

The National Intelligence Centre (CNI) serves as Mexico's primary civilian agency, tasked with conducting operations to preserve the integrity, stability, and permanence of the Mexican State, while supporting governability and strengthening the , as defined under of the . This mandate positions the CNI within the broader framework, emphasizing proactive gathering and to identify and mitigate risks to , institutions, and democratic processes. Key responsibilities encompass processing information derived from intelligence operations, evaluating trends, and drawing conclusions to protect interests. The agency prepares specialized studies on political, economic, and to provide early warnings on potential risks and threats, enabling informed by entities. Additionally, the CNI develops general guidelines for the national strategic intelligence plan and the National Risk Agenda, proposing concrete measures for prevention, dissuasion, containment, and neutralization of identified dangers. To fulfill these duties, the CNI fosters interinstitutional coordination with federal, state, and municipal authorities, alongside advocating for international cooperation mechanisms to detect transnational risks. It also manages the acquisition and oversight of technologies for secure communications and data protection, operates specialized systems as needed, and delivers technical support to other governmental bodies in alignment with directives from the . These functions underscore the agency's operational autonomy under the Secretariat of Security and Citizen Protection, with a focus on confidential, evidence-based to address both domestic and external challenges without direct powers.

Counterintelligence and Threat Assessment

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) operates intelligence tasks within Mexico's national security system to preserve the integrity, stability, and permanence of the state, including counterintelligence measures to detect and mitigate subversive activities that could compromise sovereignty or institutions. These activities encompass protecting sensitive information, monitoring potential infiltration by foreign actors, and preventing internal leaks or disloyalty that threaten national interests, as derived from the agency's mandate to process incoming data for threat neutralization. While specific operations remain classified, the CNI's framework aligns with standard counterintelligence practices, such as vetting personnel and countering espionage, to safeguard democratic governance and the rule of law. In threat assessment, the CNI evaluates political, economic, and social information to identify trends, probabilities, and implications of risks to , formulating alerts and conclusions for decision-makers. This involves elaborating general guidelines for the national strategic plan and the Agenda Nacional de Riesgos, which prioritizes vulnerabilities such as those to , , national institutions, and the state of law. The agency proposes preventive, dissuasive, containment, and deactivation measures against such threats, drawing from data shared by federal entities, international partners, and other sources to generate strategic, operational, and tactical intelligence products. These functions emphasize empirical analysis over speculative assessments, with the CNI's outputs informing policy to address causal factors like influence or external pressures, though public details on methodologies or outcomes are limited due to operational . Official evaluations focus on verifiable indicators, such as institutional vulnerabilities, rather than unsubstantiated narratives, ensuring recommendations align with evidence-based risk prioritization.

Collaboration with Military and Other Agencies

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) coordinates with the Secretaría de la Defensa Nacional (SEDENA) and Secretaría de Marina (SEMAR) through interagency mechanisms to integrate civilian with military operational capabilities, particularly in countering and internal security threats. This collaboration involves sharing threat assessments, tactical intelligence, and support for joint task forces, where CNI provides analytical support derived from signals, human, and to inform SEDENA's and SEMAR's deployments. Such coordination is facilitated by the Secretaría de Seguridad y Protección Ciudadana (SSPC), under which CNI operates, ensuring alignment with broader strategies. In practical operations, CNI has directly supported SEDENA-led actions, including the execution of judicial warrants and detentions. For example, in coordination with the Ejército Mexicano and Policía de Investigación de la Ciudad de México, CNI's Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CENFI) component assisted in executing four technical investigation orders, resulting in the detention of five presumed members of a criminal group in the capital. Similarly, SEDENA personnel and the Guardia Nacional, backed by CNI intelligence, collaborated with the Fiscalía General de Justicia de to conduct arrests targeting high-impact crimes in the state. These efforts highlight CNI's role in bridging analytical intelligence with military enforcement. Recent legislative reforms have formalized and expanded this interoperability. The Ley del Sistema Nacional de Investigación e Inteligencia en Materia de Seguridad Pública, enacted in July 2025, establishes the Plataforma Central de Inteligencia—a interconnected technological system linking CNI's databases with those of SEDENA, SEMAR, the Guardia Nacional, and the Fiscalía General de la República (FGR)—to enable real-time data sharing and joint analysis for proactive threat mitigation. This framework addresses prior silos between civilian and military intelligence, as evidenced in a September 2025 operation where the Guardia Nacional, Ejército Mexicano, SEMAR, SSPC, and CNI jointly detained Oscar “N”, identified as a primary financial operator for the Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG). Despite these advancements, reports indicate ongoing tensions over resource allocation and operational primacy between CNI and military intelligence units, potentially complicating seamless integration.

Major Operations and Achievements

Efforts Against Organized Crime and Cartels

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) supports efforts against organized crime by generating strategic, tactical, and operational intelligence on threats posed by drug cartels, including the Cártel de Sinaloa and Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG). This intelligence facilitates targeted operations by coordinating with entities such as the Secretaría de la Defensa Nacional (SEDENA), Secretaría de Marina (SEMAR), Guardia Nacional, and Fiscalía General de la República (FGR). The agency's mandate emphasizes disrupting cartel leadership, financial networks, and trafficking routes through non-covert surveillance and analysis, avoiding direct enforcement roles. A notable contribution occurred on September 11, 2025, when CNI intelligence aided the detention of Oscar "N", designated as the primary financial operator for the CJNG, in a joint operation involving the Guardia Nacional, Ejército Mexicano, , and Secretaría de Seguridad y Protección Ciudadana (SSPC). The arrest targeted the cartel's and logistics in western , yielding evidence of cross-border financial flows. In October 2025, CNI participated in the multinational operation culminating in the handover of Zhi Dong Zhang, a Chinese national accused of coordinating precursor shipments for both the CJNG and Cártel de , to U.S. authorities following his detention in . The effort involved Fuerzas Armadas Mexicanas, FGR, , SEDENA, Guardia Nacional, and Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, highlighting CNI's role in tracing transnational supply chains linked to synthetic opioid production. Earlier instances include CNI's intelligence support for drug trafficking disruptions, such as the 2022 detention of four individuals in for cross-state narcotics movement, in collaboration with the Secretaría de Seguridad Ciudadana (SSC) and Fiscalía General de Justicia (FGJ), which secured drugs, weapons, and vehicles from three properties. These operations underscore CNI's focus on enabling precise interventions against mid-level operatives, though public data on overall impact remains limited due to the classified nature of intelligence work.

Protection of National Stability and Key Events

The Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) operates intelligence tasks within Mexico's framework to preserve the integrity, stability, and permanence of the state, focusing on strategic, tactical, and operational assessments of internal and external threats that could undermine or public order. This includes processing and evaluating information on potential disruptions such as political extremism, social unrest, or foreign influences aimed at destabilization, with outputs informing by the executive branch to mitigate risks before they escalate. In practice, the CNI contributes to national stability through non-publicized threat assessments during periods of heightened vulnerability, such as electoral cycles, where it supports the broader security apparatus in monitoring illicit influences on democratic processes. For instance, as part of the Secretaría de Seguridad y Protección Ciudadana (SSPC), the CNI aligns with the federal security cabinet's coordination efforts for the 2023-2024 federal electoral process, including analysis of risks to candidates and infrastructure amid pressures, though specific CNI outputs remain classified to protect sources and methods. The agency's role emphasizes preventive over reactive measures, prioritizing the maintenance of state continuity amid persistent challenges like cartel-related territorial control that indirectly threaten institutional stability. Key developments underscoring the CNI's stability functions include its integration into post-2017 reforms, which reoriented civilian intelligence toward governance protection, and the July 2025 approval of the Ley del Sistema Nacional de Investigación e Inteligencia en Materia de Seguridad Pública, enhancing inter-agency to counter high-impact threats to public order and state functions. These measures aim to address gaps in prior frameworks, such as those under the predecessor CISEN, by formalizing intelligence coordination to preempt events that could erode public confidence or provoke widespread disorder, as evidenced by reduced institutional silos in security responses since 2018. Specific operational successes, however, are limited in public disclosure due to the classified nature of intelligence work, with official reporting confined to aggregated contributions to overall security outcomes rather than granular event details.

Controversies and Criticisms

Alleged Political and Abuses

The predecessor to the Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI), the Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN), faced multiple allegations of political , including of opposition figures to suppress . In February 2018, presidential candidate publicly accused CISEN of deploying agents to monitor his campaign activities, claiming it diverted resources from criminal threats to electoral interference in favor of the incumbent (PRI). Similar claims emerged from other politicians and journalists, who reported unauthorized interceptions of communications during the lead-up to the 2018 elections, though official investigations yielded no convictions. The CNI was established on December 1, 2018, via decree under President , ostensibly to dismantle CISEN's politicized practices and redirect focus toward countering and external threats. Administration officials, including , asserted that the agency would cease "listening to opponents" and eliminate abusive inherited from prior regimes, reducing senior leadership from 40 to fewer positions and emphasizing transparency. However, in August 2020, four CNI officials faced internal investigation for alleged unauthorized leaks of sensitive information, raising questions about operational controls despite reform pledges. Persistent allegations against the CNI include non-compliance with transparency mandates on past abuses; from 2019 to 2023, it repeatedly failed to deliver archived files on violations—potentially encompassing surveillance records—to the , as ordered by presidential directive, prompting criticism from mechanisms for obstructing accountability. In April 2024, aides to opposition presidential candidate Xóchitl Gálvez reported detaining two individuals photographing her campaign headquarters in , attributing the incident to state-sponsored amid broader claims of government monitoring of electoral rivals, though direct CNI involvement remained unproven. The June 2025 Ley de Inteligencia, which subordinates the CNI to the Secretariat of Security and Citizen Protection, has amplified concerns over potential overreach by authorizing expanded access to geolocation, biometric, financial, and data without individualized judicial warrants in cases. Opposition lawmakers and organizations, such as R3D, argue this framework institutionalizes risks, echoing historical abuses while lacking robust civilian oversight, potentially enabling political targeting under the guise of threat assessment. Proponents counter that such powers are essential for combating cartels, but critics cite Mexico's track record of misuse as evidence of vulnerability to partisan exploitation.

Involvement in Historical Repression

The predecessor agencies to the Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI), particularly the Dirección Federal de Seguridad (DFS), played a central role in Mexico's "dirty war," a campaign of state repression from the mid-1960s to the late 1980s targeting guerrilla groups, student movements, and perceived subversives, which resulted in an estimated 1,200 forced disappearances, widespread torture, and extrajudicial killings by security forces. The DFS, operational from 1947 to 1985 under the Secretaría de Gobernación, conducted surveillance, arbitrary detentions, and coordination with paramilitary units such as the Brigada Blanca, compiling extensive files on over five million individuals and organizations indexed for espionage and neutralization efforts. Upon the DFS's dissolution amid scandals, its archives—totaling 4,223 boxes from 1970 to 1985—were transferred to the Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN) in 2001, which the CNI succeeded in 2017, thereby assuming custodianship of records documenting these repressive operations. CISEN agents embedded in the Archivo General de la Nación (AGN) from around restricted researcher access to these materials, citing data protection laws, while maintaining control over Corridor No. 1, where files are housed. In response to demands for transparency, President ordered the transfer of intelligence archives to public repositories in 2019, yet the CNI has delivered only partial or censored documents, with reports of missing files on key cases, including the assassination of journalist Manuel Buendía in 1984 and detentions of militants from parties like the Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD). The Mecanismo Extraordinario de Apoyo para el Esclarecimiento Histórico (MEH), established in 2021, documented in a 59-page report that intelligence services under CISEN and CNI oversight had stolen, destroyed, or concealed portions of these archives, obstructing investigations into systematic state violence. Judicial intervention followed, with the Juzgado Octavo de Distrito en Materia Administrativa issuing an order on October 3, 2023, prohibiting the CNI from destroying, purging, or hiding Dirty War-related documents after an amparo suit by relatives of victims, such as Alicia de los Ríos Merino, whose mother disappeared in 1978. The CNI failed to provide evidence refuting claims of irregularities, including lost DFS-originated files on politicians and repressed groups, perpetuating debates over institutional complicity in shielding historical accountability despite formal preservation claims.

Debates on Oversight, Effectiveness, and

Critics of the Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) argue that its oversight mechanisms remain inadequate, particularly following the approval of the General Law on the National and the National Investigation and on July 1, 2025, which empowers the CNI to manage a Platform aggregating public and private data—including biometric and geolocation information—without requiring prior judicial authorization or individual notifications. This framework, intended to streamline intelligence sharing among agencies, has been labeled a "spy law" by opposition parties like the PAN, who contend it facilitates unchecked surveillance potentially for political ends rather than solely criminal investigations, though proponents counter that it establishes legal protocols for data security absent in prior fragmented systems like Plataforma México. Experts emphasize the need for secondary legislation to impose robust accountability, such as clear access protocols and citizen oversight bodies, to prevent arbitrariness and ensure the CNI's operations align with constitutional limits on executive power. Debates on the CNI's effectiveness highlight persistent challenges in combating , despite its mandate for threat assessment and coordination with entities like the . While the 2025 law aims to bolster interoperability and generate "intelligence products" for high-impact crimes, analysts question whether centralized platforms will yield tangible reductions in , given implementation hurdles in past initiatives and the CNI's limited attribution to major disruptions since its 2017 inception. Ongoing rates exceeding 30,000 annually underscore skepticism, with some attributing inefficacy to the agency's prioritization of over localized , potentially diverting resources from prosecutorial bodies like the Agency for . Proponents argue that enhanced could close gaps exploited by adaptive criminal networks, but empirical outcomes remain unproven, as coordinated operations have not demonstrably curbed territorial control or trafficking flows. Human rights concerns center on the CNI's expanded surveillance capacities under the 2025 reforms, which critics from organizations like R3D warn could enable mass data collection vulnerable to leaks, discriminatory profiling, or misuse against dissenters, echoing historical government espionage scandals involving Pegasus spyware—though primarily linked to military units rather than the civilian CNI. Jesuit-affiliated human rights groups have highlighted risks of systemic privacy erosion and exclusionary practices, such as denying services based on opaque intelligence assessments, without adequate safeguards like judicial review. While no large-scale CNI-specific abuses have been judicially confirmed post-2017, the agency's opacity—stemming from classified operations—fuels demands for independent audits to mitigate potential violations, balancing security imperatives against verifiable protections for civil liberties.

Recent Developments and Reforms

Shifts Under López Obrador Administration

Upon assuming office on December 1, 2018, the administration of Andrés Manuel López Obrador promptly transformed the Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (CISEN) into the Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) via decree announced on November 30, 2018, positioning it as a decentralized organ under the newly formed Secretaría de Seguridad y Protección Ciudadana (SSPC). This restructuring retained approximately 99% of CISEN's 3,600 personnel while appointing retired General Audomaro Martínez Zapata as director, signaling a blend of civilian oversight with military expertise in leadership. The change aimed to align intelligence functions with the administration's broader security paradigm, emphasizing risk prevention over repressive tactics. The CNI's mandate shifted toward analyzing threats to national sovereignty, institutional stability, economic development, and social cohesion, as outlined in the Ley de Seguridad Nacional and the administration's Plan Nacional de Desarrollo 2019-2024, excluding routine of political opponents or citizens absent specific security risks. Obrador publicly affirmed in November 2020 that the agency had reformed to cease political —practices he attributed to prior governments—and instead prioritize intelligence strategies against to support non-confrontational policies like "abrazos, no balazos." This included declassifying 1,937 archival documents for public access at the Archivo General de la Nación, though broader promises to open historical CISEN files on remained unfulfilled by the term's end. Operational budgets grew substantially, reaching 2,984 million pesos in 2024, funding intelligence processing, interagency coordination, and threat assessments, yet the agency drew criticism for perceived inefficiencies and ties to discredited figures from previous eras, such as . In March 2023, Martínez Zapata resigned, stating that "the rules of the game in the government had changed," amid reports of tensions over the agency's role in civilian intelligence gathering by military branches, which López Obrador defended as judicially authorized and aimed at averting violence rather than . Despite these adjustments, analysts noted limited substantive overhaul beyond symbolic rebranding, with ongoing reliance on prior structures for intelligence.

2025 Intelligence Law and Enhanced Coordination

In July 2025, the Mexican Congress approved the Ley del Sistema Nacional de Investigación e Inteligencia en Materia de Seguridad Pública, establishing a unified framework for intelligence gathering and sharing to address public security threats, particularly organized crime. The law mandates the creation of a Central Intelligence Platform, a digital tool enabling real-time data exchange among federal, state, and municipal agencies, including access to fiscal, biometric, and administrative records generated by public and private entities. This provision directly bolsters the Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI), an entity under the Secretaría de Seguridad y Protección Ciudadana (SSPC), by granting it authority to query the platform for strategic and operational intelligence without intermediaries in urgent cases. The legislation introduces the Consejo Nacional de Inteligencia de Seguridad Pública, chaired by the SSPC head, to oversee policy coordination and standardize intelligence protocols across institutions like the CNI, Fiscalía General de la República, and units. It also establishes a Subsecretaría de Inteligencia e Investigación within the SSPC to integrate tactical data from law enforcement, aiming to reduce silos that previously hindered responses to cartels and high-impact crimes. By July 16, 2025, the law's publication formalized obligations for private sector data holders, such as telecoms and financial institutions, to contribute to the system, thereby expanding the CNI's analytical reach through mandatory . Proponents argue this enhances coordination by embedding intelligence as a core component of preventive strategies, with the CNI playing a pivotal role in fusing multi-source data for proactive threat assessment, as evidenced by initial implementations tying into President Sheinbaum's National Security Strategy announced in late 2024. However, implementation challenges persist, including technical integration of disparate databases and ensuring compliance without compromising operational security, as the law requires annual reports on platform efficacy to .

References

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