Eduardo Zerón García
Eduardo Zerón García is a Mexican national security and intelligence professional with extensive experience in strategic advisory and public service roles. He holds a B.A. in Communications from Universidad de las Américas–Puebla and a Master’s in Intelligence and National Security from the National Institute of Public Administration (INAP). He has completed specialized training in crisis management at the University of Chicago, nuclear smuggling prevention through Interpol, and transnational organized crime and illicit trade at George Mason University and UPEACE. He also holds a certificate in Terrorism and Counterterrorism from Leiden University. Throughout his career, he has served as a parliamentary advisor on security and justice; spokesperson for the Attorney General’s Office; Director General of Intelligence at the Criminal Investigation Agency (AIC); Director General of the Technical Secretariat of the National Security Council within the Office of the President of Mexico; Deputy Secretary of the State Center for Information, Investigation, and Intelligence in Hidalgo; and senior advisor at the Ministry of Agrarian, Territorial, and Urban Development. He is the co-author of Código Nacional de Procedimientos Penales: La nueva Justicia Penal en México and is currently a PhD candidate in International Security at Universidad Anáhuac Norte in Mexico, a national security consultant, and a columnist for the Mexican media outlet La Silla Rota, where he writes on security and political affairs.
