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SOURCE FOR CALIFORNIA, NATIONAL & GLOBAL BREAKING NEWS
Mexico's National Security Cabinet
expected to declare a state of emergency
US covert
operations underway in Mexico
Michael Webster:
Investigative Reporter
May 12, 2008
9:00 PM PDT
Mexico's National Security Cabinet is holding an emergency
meeting and is expected to declare a state of emergency. They
will also discuss President Felipe Caldron’s current strategies
against the Mexican war on drug cartels. Analysts say they
expect the death toll nation wide among the security forces to
climb, because the traffickers, under assault both from the
government and rival gangs, believe they have nothing to lose.
“I know that organized crime reacts like this because they
know we're hitting their criminal structure,” said President
Felipe Calderon of Mexico. “We must join together to fight this
evil. We must all come together in saying a categorical, ‘enough
is enough.'”
Calderon is reported to be rushing more Mexican Army troops
to the border cities of Juarez, Tijuana, Mexicali, Palomas and
others. Its believed that Mexico has 36,000 troops fighting the
Mexican drug cartels and their para-military.
Calderon is seeking U.S. military aid under the provisions of
the Merida Initiative, a multiyear $1.4 billion anti-narcotics
package proposed by President Bush.
Many of the leaders of the cabinet say that the Caldron
administrations effort to curb the violence is failing and that
is putting the country in danger. Mexican newspapers report
some attendants were Secretary of Government, Juan Mourino and
his counterpart in Sinaloa, Jesus Aguilar. Also present was the
Secretary of Defense, Guillermo Galvan and the Attorney General
Eduardo Medina, plus the Secretary of Federal Public Security,
Genaro Garcia, Genaro Garcia Luna, the federal security
secretary, the Secretary of
the Navy and the Director of National Investigations and
Security Center among other leaders.
As the death toll rises in the bloody war on drugs in Mexico
with more police officers, soldiers and other officials being
unmercifully slaughtered the violence remains unabated. The
death toll is more than 3600 which is attributed to the Mexican
drug cartels which is ravaging the country. The deaths have
included some innocent Americans.
Edgar Millan, the federal police commissioner who was
gunned
down while entering his Mexico City condo early Thursday. Millan
oversaw the civilian wing of the anti-narcotics offensive.
Acting police chief Edgar Millan was
shot nine times at his home
“These are difficult hours for the Federal Police,” said
Genaro Garcia Luna, the federal security secretary. “The nation
has lost three of its best men, heroes who gave their lives in
the conscious pursuit of an ideal: to build a better country for
all Mexicans.”
Federal investigators believe the Sinaloa drug cartel killed
Millan in revenge for his recent arrests of several of the
organization's top brass. The cartel, which leads an alliance of
drug gangs known as the Federation, is fighting the Juarez
cartel for control of Mexico's smuggling routes into the United
States. But the killer must have had help from inside the police
agency, because he had keys to Millan's condominium, officials
said. Check or Google
Juarez police chief resigns for fear of his life
Mexico's National Security Cabinet is expected to ask for
more help from the Americans, even though Mexico has a history
of resisting U.S. military aid, a kind of old fashioned notion
of maintaining her independence, her sovereignty is expected to
be put aside as they ask not only for more money than the 1.4
billion Bush has promised but on the ground training for Mexican
military by the U.S. Special Forces. And U.S. training for
Mexican national and local police forces. Both overt and covert
operations are the new strategies Mexico will be advocating.
Mexico has in the past sent their soldiers to Fort Bragg and
other US bases for special training.
Some Mexican legislators claim there is already
clandestine covert action taking
place in Mexico by the Americans and has taken many different
forms reflecting the diverse circumstances in which it is being
used.
However the circumstances have eroded to such a point that many
Mexican leaders that have no ties with the cartels are desperate
and are encouraging an out right overt U.S. military boots on
the ground operation, and accelerate training using U.S.
military, CIA, DEA, FBI and U.S. Police advisers.
According to a high ranking Mexican official who
wants to remain anonymous indicated that the U.S. Mexican border
is a primary focal point for military operations. “There are
U.S. Army Special Forces secret operation bases both in Mexico
and the United states, run by the California National Guard, who
are on temporary border reconnaissance missions and are due to
end within the next month or so.”
The Mexican cartels are challenging the Mexican government. They
have huge amounts of money available to bribe officials, and
they do, and currently have covert armies (para-military) that
are better equipped, trained and motivated than national police
and military forces, the cartels are becoming the government —
if in fact they didn’t originate in the government. Getting the
government to deploy armed forces against the cartels can become
a contradiction in terms. In their most extreme form, cartels
are already running much of the government. So many ask why
would America provide the questionable Mexican Government 1.4
Billion?
It is important to point out that U.S. law
enforcement agencies have many different types of support
missions already operating in Mexico. The U.S. government admits
that they ccurrently have more than 50 federal agencies
working on the U.S. Mexican border. The
Department of Homeland Security's Bureau of Customs and Border
Protection (BCBP), which includes the U.S. Border Patrol; United
States Attorneys; and state and local law enforcement agencies
continue to work together to reduce the amount of illicit drugs
entering the United States through the U.S./Mexico Border. But
they are not successful ether. The law biding Mexicans want our
strategy to be to attack major Mexican-based trafficking
organizations on both sides of the border simultaneously by
employing enhanced intelligence and enforcement initiatives and
cooperative efforts with the Government of Mexico.
In recent months, and after Mexican president Caldron
dispatched the Mexican army and federal police to many interior
cities and to Mexican cities on the Mexican U.S. border the
level of violence has risen substantially, with some of it
spilling into the United States. In the last few weeks, the
Mexican government began military operations on its side of the
border against Mexican drug cartels and their gangs who are
engaged in smuggling drugs into the United States. The action
apparently pushed some of the gang members north into the United
States in a bid for sanctuary. But while not without precedent,
movement of organized, armed cadres into the United States on
this scale goes beyond what has become accepted practice. The
dynamics in the borderland are shifting and must be understood
in a broader, geopolitical context.
Bush policy is to not disrupt the trade with Mexico and not
raising its cost has been a fundamental principle of
U.S.-Mexican relations. Leaving aside the contentious issue of
whether illegal immigration hurts or helps the United States,
the steps required to control that immigration would impede
bilateral trade. The United States therefore has been loath to
impose effective measures, since any measures that would be
effective against population movement also would impose friction
on trade. It is a popular belief by people on both sides of the
border that politicians from both governments are benefiting
from the out of control but lucrative milti - billion dollar
drug trade.
The United States has been willing to tolerate levels of
criminality along the border. The only time when the United
States shifted its position was when organized groups in Mexico
both established themselves north of the political border and
engaged in significant violence. Thus, in 1916, when the Mexican
revolutionary Pancho Villa began operations north of the border,
the U.S. Army moved into Mexico to try to destroy his base of
operations. This has been the line that, when crossed, motivated
the United States to take action, regardless of the economic
cost. The current upsurge in violence is now pushing that line
but just where that line is today is not clear. It appears the
two governments keep moving the goal posts.
The United States has built-in demand for a range of illegal
drugs, including heroin, cocaine, methamphetamines and
marijuana. Regardless of decades of efforts, and billios of
dollars, the United States has not been able to eradicate or
even qualitatively reduce this demand. As an advanced industrial
country, the United States has a great deal of money available
to satisfy the demand for illegal drugs. This makes the supply
of narcotics to a large market attractive. In fact, it almost
doesn’t matter how large demand is. Regardless of how it varies,
the economics are such that even a fraction of the current
market will attract sellers.
The Houston Chronicle
reports that
because they are involved in an illegal business,
drug dealers cannot take recourse to the courts or police to
protect their assets. Protecting the supply chain and excluding
competition are opposite sides of the same coin. Protecting
assets is major cost of running a drug ring. It suppresses
competition, both by killing it and by raising the cost of entry
into the market. The illegality of the business requires that it
be large enough to manage the supply chain and absorb the cost
of protecting it. It gives high incentives to eliminate
potential competitors and new entrants into the market. In the
end, it creates a monopoly or small oligopoly in the business,
where the comparative advantage ultimately devolves into the
effectiveness of the supply chain and the efficiency of the
private police force protecting it.
That means that the Mexican drug cartels have evolved in
several predictable ways. They have huge amounts of money
flowing in from the U.S. market by selling relatively low-cost
products at monopolistic prices into markets with inelastic
demand curves. Second, they have unique expertise in covert
logistics, expertise that can be transferred to the movement of
other goods. Third, they develop substantial security
capabilities, which can grow over time into full-blown
paramilitary forces to protect the supply chain. Fourth, they
are huge capital pools, investing in the domestic economy and
manipulating the political system.
A Mexican college professor who wants to be nameless said
“cartels can challenge — and supplant — governments. Between
huge amounts of money available to bribe officials, and covert
armies better equipped, trained and motivated than national
police and military forces, the cartels can become the
government — if in fact they didn’t originate in the government.
Getting the government to deploy armed forces against the cartel
can become a contradiction in terms. In their most extreme form,
cartels are the government.”
He went on to say, “the drug cartels have two weaknesses.
First, they can be shattered in conflicts with challengers
within the oligopoly or by splits within the cartels. Second,
their supply chains can be broken from the outside. U.S. policy
has historically been to attack the supply chains from the
fields to the street distributors. Drug cartels have proven
extremely robust and resilient in modifying the supply chains
under pressure. When conflict occurs within and among cartels
and systematic attacks against the supply chain take place,
however, specific cartels can be broken — although the long-term
result is the emergence of a new cartel system.”
In the 1980s, the United States manipulated various Colombian
cartels into internal conflict. More important, the United
States attacked the Colombian supply chain in the Caribbean as
it moved from Colombia through Panama along various air and sea
routes to the United States. The weakness of the Colombian
cartel was its exposed supply chain from South America to the
United States. U.S. military operations raised the cost so high
that the route became uneconomic.
The main route to American markets shifted from the Caribbean
to the U.S.-Mexican border. It began as an alliance between
sophisticated Colombian cartels and still-primitive Mexican
gangs, but the balance of power inevitably shifted over time.
Owning the supply link into the United States, the Mexicans
increased their wealth and power until they absorbed more and
more of the entire supply chain. Eventually, the Colombians were
minimized and the Mexicans became the decisive power.
The Americans fought the battle against the Colombians
primarily in the Caribbean and southern Florida. The battle
against the Mexican drug lords must be fought in the
U.S.-Mexican borderland. And while the fight against the
Colombians did not involve major disruptions to other economic
patterns, the fight against the Mexican cartels involves
potentially huge disruptions. In addition, the battle is going
to be fought in a region that is already tense because of the
immigration issue, and at least partly on U.S. soil.
The likely course is a multigenerational pattern of
instability along the border. More important, there will be a
substantial transfer of wealth from the United States to Mexico
in return for an intrinsically low-cost consumable product —
drugs. This will be one of the sources of capital that will
build the Mexican economy, which today is 14th largest in the
world. The accumulation of drug money is and will continue
finding its way into the Mexican economy, creating a pool of
investment capital. The children and grandchildren of the Zetas
will be running banks, running for president, building art
museums and telling amusing anecdotes about how grandpa made his
money running blow into Nuevo Laredo.
One of DEA's main functions is to coordinate drug
investigations that take place along America's 2,000-mile border
with Mexico; this is an effort that involves thousands of
federal, state, and local law enforcement officers. Mexican drug
groups have become the world's preeminent drug traffickers, and
they tend to be characterized by organizational complexity and a
high propensity for violence. To counter this threat, federal
drug law enforcement has aggressively pursued drug trafficking
along the U.S./Mexico border. The DEA; Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI);
Today, the El Paso Intelligence Center (EPIC) serves as the
principal national tactical intelligence center for drug law
enforcement. EPIC is multidimensional in its approach to
intelligence sharing. It has a research and analysis section as
well as a tactical operations section to support foreign and
domestic intelligence and operational needs in the field. It is
staffed by representatives from the DEA; FBI; U.S. Coast Guard;
BCBP; the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (BICE);
U.S. Secret Service; Federal Aviation Administration; U.S.
Marshals Service; National Security Agency; Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; Internal Revenue Service; and
the Department of the Interior. Although the immigration and
customs functions were recently incorporated into the Department
of Homeland Security, representatives from BCBP and BICE will
retain their participation in EPIC.
DEA reports that they also are maximizing the use of
technology to combat drug trafficking organizations. The DEA's
Special Operations Division (SOD) is a comprehensive enforcement
operation designed specifically to coordinate multi-agency,
multi-jurisdictional, and multi-national Title III
investigations against the command and control elements of major
drug trafficking organizations operating domestically and
abroad. The investigative resources of SOD support a variety of
multi-jurisdictional drug enforcement investigations associated
with the Southwest Border, Latin America, the Caribbean, Europe,
and Asia.
Drug trafficking organizations operating along the
Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, California and Mexico Border
continue to be one of the greatest threats to communities across
this nation. The power and influence of these organizations is
pervasive, and continues to expand to new markets across the
United States.
Mexican narcotraffickers and other
criminals easily obtain their firepower north of the border.
Effectively reducing the flow of illegal arms would mean
tightening laws on gun sales and ownership in the US.
Not just the police are coming under fire. Thousands of
Mexican citizens are getting caught in the crossfire. According
to the US Centers for Disease Control, Mexico has one of the
highest firearm homicide rates in the world, about 20 for every
100,000 people. (The rate for the United States is 7 per 100,000
people. In addition, there has been a spate of recent
high-profile political and narco-assassinations, many of them
carried out with guns purchased illegally in the US.
Many of the arms used by Mexico's insurgencies were supplied
by Washington either through massive military aid programs or as
part of US covert operations that left enormous arsenals behind.
Click on or Google
Merida Initiative Will It Work?
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