U.S. Taxpayers Funding Mexican Military And Incursions

Started by Varmit, March 25, 2010, 11:27:20 AM

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Varmit

U.S. Taxpayers Funding Mexican Military And Incursions
Written by CT News
Breaking News, Commentary & Analysis, Featured, Headlines Mar 25, 2010
Conspiring Times

- As millions of  American constituents were outraged by the passage of national socialized healthcare legislation, a high-level meeting between U.S. and Mexican officials was taking place to focus on long-term cooperation strategies for security that would be funded by American tax dollars.

Barack Obama spoke with Mexican President Felipe Calderon to "underscore his administration's commitment to the strong bilateral relationship between the United States and Mexico," National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said in a statement earlier this week.

They discussed their "mutual desire to work together for the benefit of the safety and security of citizens on both sides of our shared border," he added. Calderon's crackdown, which includes the deployment of some 50,000 troops nationwide is evident in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico's most violent city and Acapulco as corrupt police officers are replaced with soldiers.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pledged support for the Mexican government in March of 2009 by purchasing Blackhawk helicopters for Mexican military and police saying, "I'm pleased to announce that the Obama administration working closely with Congress intends to provide more than 80 million dollars in urgently needed funding for Mexican law enforcement." "These aircraft will help Mexican police respond aggressively and successfully to the threats coming from the cartels," Clinton said.

Recently a U.S. incursion on March 9th, 2010 by a Mexican Blackhawk helicopter was witnessed by Zapata County, Texas Sheriff Sigifredo Gonzalez transporting armed personnel above a residential area known as Falcon Heights-Falcon Village near the border split Falcon Lake,  south of the Starr-Zapata county line. Gonzalez said the helicopter appeared to have the Mexican navy insignia.

"It's always been said that the Mexican military does in fact ... that there have been incursions," Gonzalez said. "But this is not New Mexico or Arizona. Here we've got a river; there's a boundary line. And then of course having Falcon Lake, Falcon Dam, it's a lot wider. It's not just a trickle of a river, it's an actual dam. You know where the boundary's at."

"My understanding is the U.S. military were informed," he said. "I don't know what action was taken, if any."

According to National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer that during Obama's telephone conversation with Calderon, he "highlighted the importance he places on fulfilling our responsibility in the effort against Mexican drug trafficking organizations as well as our sustained commitment to support Mexico's efforts," Hammer said.

As millions of  people flee from the violence in Mexico immigration becomes a major concern for America. The influx of illegals is creating a demand for a new national identification card as Sen. Charles Schumer (D-New York) and Sen. Lindsay Graham (R-South Carolina)are now working to develop "high-tech, fraud-proof Social Security cards" that will be required for all employees in the United States.

The Mexican Army is known for brutal treatment of suspects which raises a question about why their military or police are continually making clearly visible incursions into the United States and why American taxpayers are footing the bill. 1.3 billion dollars earmarked for Mexico under the Merida Initiative have been delivered to date. A majority of program funds are due to expire in 2011, that will be allocated to Mexico, with the remainder distributed to countries in Central America.
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Any coincidence that there are illegals swarming on washington to demand citizenship after the passage of obamacare?  And what do you wanna bet we see immigration Amnesty bill real soon?

It is high time we eased the drought suffered by the Tree of Liberty. Let us not stand and suffer the bonds of tyranny, nor ignorance, laziness, cowardice. It is better that we die in our cause then to say that we took counsel among these.

Teresa

I like to gamble.. but I want the odds to be a little bit on what I place my bets on..

I'm not biting... or betting on that one..  :police:
Well Behaved Women Rarely Make History !

Warph

Varmit's going to really love this one.  This should issue a comment or two:

Mexico, if left alone, would be a reasonably successful and stable country of the upper Third World. It isn't Haiti, isn't Bangla Desh, isn't a dying patient with multiple tubes in every orifice. If not strong-armed into chaos, it would be all right.

But the United States won't leave it alone. Washington is pushing it to wage Washington's "war on drugs." As usual, Washington has no idea what it is doing. Nor does it care. Should untoward consequences follow, it will be surprised, this being the characteristic condition of American foreign policy.

Untoward consequences are quite available. The narcotraficantes that Mexico is supposed to fight for Washington are a formidable armed force. They have unlimited money, which they use to buy heavy weapons. They have unlimited money, which they use to corrupt the government of a comparatively poor country. Mexico does not have the wherewithal to fight them. The army here is small and poorly armed. This is reasonable since Mexico has neither territorial ambitions nor enemies. Except, certainly in effect, the United States.

The government is outgunned by the narcos. Further, the traffickers have the advantage of being dispersed and invisible. The situation is, or quickly could be, exactly that faced by the US in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan: narcos can appear from nowhere, blow up police stations, assassinate judges, or kill a dozen teenagers at a party. Then they disappear.

Thus they can destabilize the nation and hold the population hostage. This doesn't bother Americans, who barely know where Mexico is. It bothers Mexicans, who know their people are dying in an exported American war.

Bear in mind that anti-Americanism thrives here and throughout Latin America. Much of it is justified; some of it isn't. The US population, the most comprehensively ignorant of the advanced world, knows nothing of the reasons or of the countries. But the hostility is real. Shrugging it off could prove a mistake.

If Mexicans had to choose between the drug lords, who are often seen as counter-culture heroes, and the US, seen as an enemy too dangerous to be openly called an enemy, many would go with their compatriots in the drug trade. A repertoire of narco-corridos, songs glorifying the narcos, exists. Los Tigres del Norte in Sinaloa have specialized in these.

Although Mexico doesn't have America's festering antagonisms--blacks hate whites hate browns hate men hate women hate Jews— there are groups, particularly in Chiapas, who are potential insurgents. If they should ally themselves with the narcos and go to the mountains, or set up cells in the cities, the result would be a long, bloody civil war: Afghanistan on the US border. This is not Freddian fantasy. Thoughtful Mexicans worry about it.

The Mexican army cannot handle an uprising of any magnitude. The Pentagon would then intervene to "help" Mexico. Que dios nos ayude.

The Pentagon is working toward toward intervention, whether it know that it is or not. There is something called the Merida Initiative, ( http://www.state.gov/p/inl/merida/ ) in which the US supplies money and advice to transform Mexican society to combat the narcos. The colonels in the Five-Sided Squirrel Cage really believe they can reform the Mexican judiciary and infuse the police with virtuous fervor for American ideals. I spoke to a field-grade American officer about this. He had taken a six-month intensive course in Spanish at the Defense Language Institute and spoke less Spanish than my daughter did after two weeks here. The money would be used to reform the Mexican government, he said, which would then make short work of the narcos. He explained this with the earnest mission-orientedness that officers display when they are about to do something senseless.

I didn't say, "Give me a freaking break," because I knew it would accomplish nothing. You don't "reform" countries you don't understand by solemn brainless enthusiasm. The money would vanish like water in dry sand. Mexico does not want to be remade in the image of the United States, for remarkably good reasons. The more the US meddles, the less legitimate the government that permits it will be. Not a good idea.

Why does the military regularly misestimate the nature of the Third World? Because soldiers live, and think, in a rigid, conformist, orderly world in which good (us) and evil (them) are starkly distinct, in which one gives orders and things happen, in which all are on the team and working toward a common goal. Officers are insular, self-righteous, ruthless (after all, they are fighting Evil) and clueless. The workings of the Third World are the polar opposite of orderliness of the military. The colonels are instantly lost in the complex relationships, informal arrangements, family loyalties and invisible politics of Latin America. And they do not understand that when they intervene, they are not the good guys.

This is why we hear again and again from some buzz-cut horse's ass with stars on his shoulders about how we are trying so hard to "help the Afghan people."

One might ask: Why are drugs Mexico's problem? Americans, huge numbers of them, want drugs. If they didn't want drugs, the narcos couldn't sell the stuff. But the American government doesn't want its citizens to have drugs. Fine. Let the government attack its own citizens. Leave others out of it.

Washington isn't going to rid the US of drugs any more than it rid the country of alcohol. Popular demand is far too great. The US crawls with crank labs, open-air crack markets, meth cookers, fields of marijuhweenie too large not to have been noticed by state authorities. California talks of legalizing grass in defiance of the Feds. All God's chillun loves drugs—good ol' boys, Ivy League students, their professors, high-school kids, middle-class suburbanies, congressman, musicians, and several Republicans and Democrats. Mexico is going to change this? They must be smoking something good in DC.

A friend recently told me of being in a boat off Florida with several honeys in bikinis aboard. A Coast Guard cutter pulled alongside because the guys wanted to look at the babes. My buddy, being sociable, hollered, "What are you guys doing?"

"We're looking for drugs."

"Oh. We'll follow you."

Whereupon the Coast Guardies broke out laughing. Even the cops don't really care.

Mexico can't fix things, if indeed they are broken. Leave the place alone....Fred
"Every once in a while I just have a compelling need to shoot my mouth off." 
--Warph

"If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at all."
-- Warph

"A gun is like a parachute.  If you need one, and don't have one, you'll probably never need one again."

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