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Title: America may intervene in Mexico
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/265421
Published: Jan 17, 2009
Author: by Naved Akhtar.
Post Date: 2009-01-19 16:36:02 by DeaconBenjamin
Keywords: None
Views: 162
Comments: 13

US Army report states that America may be forced to intervene in Mexico to prevent the country from collapsing at the hands of organised crime and drug cartels.

The report compiled by the army’s highest command has placed Mexico alongside Pakistan as possible failed states of the future. The report states: “Two large and important states bear consideration for rapid and sudden collapse: Pakistan and Mexico.”

Mexico has a population of 110 million and shares a two thousand mile border with America. It also is next to the smuggling routes linking the US with the drug-growing areas of South America such as Columbia, which is still the world’s biggest source of cocaine.

Mexico already provides America with more migrants than any other country and would be the obvious destination for massive refugees if the country descended into civil war. The report states: “Any descent by Mexico into chaos would demand an American response based on the serious implications for homeland security alone.”

President of Mexico, Felipe Calderon has already deployed Mexico’s army in a new offensive against organised crime mainly focusing on four major drug cartels. Last year, this battle against these drug cartels and some local syndicates claimed 5,367 lives of members of the security forces or suspected criminals.

In a controversial election in July 2006, Mr Calderon won Mexico’s presidency by a tiny margin of less than 1%. Despite this minor win, Mr Calderon has made his fight against organised crime the central goal of his leadership.

In Mexico, there is wide spread corruption with many police officers and security officials accepting bribes from the drug rings. This corruption may reach into the highest levels of the government itself and obstruct Mr Calderon’s campaign, ultimately destroying the state itself.

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#1. To: DeaconBenjamin (#0)

In Mexico, there is wide spread corruption with many police officers and security officials accepting bribes from the drug rings

Personal corruption by individuals is just as widespread as organized corruption in Mexico. Always has been and will never change.

It is a part of their culture.

Cynicom  posted on  2009-01-19   16:44:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Cynicom, NAU, all (#1)

Mexican defense minister to discuss possible joint North American military force

Article from:
AP Worldstream
Article date:
April 10, 2002
Author:
document.writeln("WILL WEISSERT, Associated Press Writer"); document.getElementById('lnkAuthor').title='WILL WEISSERT, Associated Press Writer'
More results for:
american military intervene in Mexico

00-00-0000


Dateline: MEXICO CITY Mexico's defense minister was flying to Washington on Thursday to discuss military cooperation that might link U.S., Mexican and Canadian forces against terrorism in a way that NAFTA has linked North America' s economies.

The plan apparently is based on a U.S. Army War College report in 1999 that suggested a North American peacekeeping force that would be headquartered in the United States but include command posts that would rotate between Mexico and Canada.

"One of the programs the general will discuss in the United States is a continental command that would use the North American Free Trade Agreement as a basis," a Defense Department spokesman said. Department policy required him to speak on condition of anonymity.

The newspaper El Sol de Mexico reported on Tuesday that such talks were part of Vega's agenda and quoted U.S. officials as saying discussion of the idea was "a positive step."

Mexico has not committed to such a plan, which would imply a historic shift in the country's military policy. It would also face enormous domestic political opposition.

While Mexican pilots participated on the Allied side in World War II, the country since then has shied away from most multilateral military programs, refusing to let its soldiers serve in U.N. peacekeeping missions, for example.

Many Mexican politicians also remain profoundly wary of increasing ties to their powerful northern neighbor, particularly military ties.

"Trilateral initiatives have always been welcome in Mexico but our country cannot become a land of Rambo or Arnold Schwarzenegger," said Congressman Jaime Alcantara, a member of the lower house's Defense Commission.

Alcantara, of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which has a plurality in Congress, said that "Mexico does not intervene in the affairs of other countries and that is an important reason it has not suffered the terrorist attacks the United States and Canada want to guard against."

President Vicente Fox and his conservative National Action Party have worked to move Mexico toward greater cooperation with the United States on border security, free trade and migration concerns.

"The fight against terrorism is an international one and I think Mexico understands how important cooperation is," said National Action legislator Benjamin Mucino. "Any plan that will allow Mexico to work together with its neighbors is a step in the right direction."

But when Foreign Secretary Jorge Castaneda condemned the attacks of Sept. 11, Mexican lawmakers spent hours grilling him about the possibility Washington might force Mexico to send troops to Afghanistan.

"Mexico's people are not interested in building a command that will force Mexican soldiers to take orders from American soldiers," said Mucino, also a member of the lower house's Defense Commission.

"We do not have the military resources, the political interest or the public support to become a launch pad for U.S. and Canadian forces that want to keep watch on Central America, South America or anywhere else."

Jethro Tull  posted on  2009-01-19   16:47:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: All (#2)

THE BUSH PUSH TO MILITARIZE NORTH AMERICA: U.S. ready to intervene militarily anywhere on continent

Article from:
CCPA Monitor
Article date:
September 1, 2007
Author:
document.writeln("Corsi, Jerome"); document.getElementById('lnkAuthor').title='Corsi, Jerome'
More results for:
american military intervene in Mexico

Under the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America, or SPP, the military of the United States and Canada are advancing NORTHCOM into a domestic military command structure, with authority extending to Mexico, even though Mexico has not formally joined with the current United States-Canadian NORTHCOM command structure.

Connecting a number of recent developments, President Bush appears to have positioned the U.S. military and the National Guard acting under presidential authority to intervene in a wide range of domestic incidents that could occur anywhere in North America.

On April 17, 2002, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld announced the establishment of NORTHCOM as responsible for a "homeland defense" area defined to include the U.S., Canada, Mexico, parts of the Caribbean, and waters in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans contiguous to the United States. NORTHCOM also serves as the head of the North American Aerospace Defense Command, a U.S.-Canadian command.

Section 1076 of the John Warner Defense Appropriation Act for Fiscal Year 2007 grants the president the right to commandeer federal troops or state National Guard and to use them domestically. The language of that legislation allows the president to use federal troops or the National Guard in federal service in a wide range of emergencies, including natural disasters, epidemics or other public health emergencies, terrorist attacks, insurrections, or domestic violence, including conspiracies to commit domestic violence.

The new National Security (NSPD-51) and Homeland Security (HSPD-20) Presidential Directives, signed by the president May 6 and posted to the White House website May 9, give the president unprecedented, almost dictatorial, powers should the president declare a national emergency.

NSPD-51 and HSPD-20 make no specific reference to the National Security Act under U.S.C. Title 50 or the requirement of that Act that the president bring a declaration of a national emergency to Congress immediately and publish the declaration in the Federal Register.

With the new legal authority granted under Section 1076 of the John Warner Defense Appropriation Act for 2007, as well as the emergency powers of the president as specified in NSPD-51 and HSPD-20, President Bush could avoid having to wait for a decision by the state of Louisiana to mobilize the National Guard - in a hurricane scenario, for example - before he could declare martial law and send in U.S. troops or the National Guard acting under the authority of the president.

Under USNORTHCOM, the United States command of the continental NORTHCOM, the U.S. military has been conducting a variety of domestic exercises aimed at using the Armed Forces and National Guard under the president's control to be involved in a wide range of U.S. homeland emergencies, including health emergencies, natural disasters, terrorist events, and even domestic violence.

Extensive USNORTHCOM field drills have been conducted under a variety of exercises, including ARDENT SENTRY- NORTHERN EDGE 07 (AS-NE 07), VIGILANT GUARD, ALASKA SHIELD, INDIANA SENTRY, BLUE FLAG, and POSITIVE RESPONSE.

AS-NE 07, conducted April 30 to May 17, included the Canada Command as a full partner and was the largest exercise to date in terms of the number of personnel, the length of the drill, the cost and the complexity of the exercise series. The exercise took place in New England, Alaska, as well as Ohio, Illinois and Indiana, with cross-border deployments staged in the Indiana part of the exercise.

National Planning Scenario One of AS-NE 07 involved the detonation of a 10- kiloton improvised nuclear device by terrorists. A second scenario involved a hurricane impacting the New England states, including New York.

On May 16, Gen. Victor E. Renuart, commander of NORAD and USNORTHCOM, told the press that AS-NE 07 "allowed us to validate the incredible amount of planning that has gone on since Hurricane Katrina, not only to respond to things like a hurricane, but also to ensure that the agencies responsible for homeland security and homeland defense really can work together under a series of demanding scenarios."

Last year's exercise, ARDENT SENTRY '06, tested a variety of scenarios, including a chlorine gas terrorist attack, the crash of an airplane into a bridge in Michigan, a sulfuric acid leak at a rail yard, and multiple radiological dirty bombs going off in American cities. A southern scenario in Arizona involved an act of biological terrorism in Mexico, with pneumonic plague spreading in northern Mexico and causing a mass migration of Mexicans across the U.S. southern border as people sought medical assistance.

KBR, formerly a Halliburton subsidiary, has in place a $385 million Department of Homeland Security contract to build on a contingency basis detention facilities that could be utilized for domestic emergencies, including sudden mass immigration from Mexico.

The SPP 2006 "Report to Leaders" identifies under "Health Initiatives" the following agreements the SPP trilateral working groups are tasked to complete:

* draft and complete a North American influenza plan by 2006;

* complete Canada-U.S. and Mexico-U.S. joint assessments of the stockpiling of vaccines and antidotes within nine months (March 2006) and on an on-going basis; and

* within the next 9-24 months (March 2006-June 2007) improve Canada-U.S.- Mexico infectious diseases surveillance systems, training and response systems.

The SPP 2006 "Report to Leaders" report also identifies under "Bioprotection" the following agreements the SPP trilateral working groups are tasked to complete:

* share plans within nine months (March 2006) for isolation and quarantine during a trans-border infectious disease outbreak;

* within 12 months (June 2006), examine the feasibility of a tracking and control system for monitoring the movement of dangerous human pathogens within North America; and

* within 12 months (June 2006), develop a North American plan to address pandemic influenza.

While these agreements are mentioned and tasked in the SPP 2006 "Report to Leaders," none of these agreements are documented, linked, or printed on the SPP.gov website. Conceivably, any of these agreements might define emergency situations where U.S. federal troops or National Guard under the direction of the president could be mobilized to intervene in the U.S. or elsewhere on the continent of North America.

Judicial Watch, in documents obtained from a Freedom of Information Act request, has reported that Admiral Tim Keating, commander of USNORTHCOM, as well as NORTHCOM political advisor Deborah Bolton and NORAD-NORTHCOM director of plans policy and strategy Major-General Mark Volcheff, attended the secret North American Forum meeting in Banff, Alberta, last September. The Banff meeting involved a closed-door élite discussion of advancing the North American integration objectives currently being implemented under the rubric of SPP.

In the "Rapporteur Notes" taken at the conference, as released through the Judicial Watch FOIA request, mention was made that "Mexico has not participated in NORTHCOM as there has not been great understanding of the differentiation from NORAD." The notes suggest the subsequent discussion focused on "confidence-building measures" that might be taken to prompt Mexico to join NORTHCOM.

The conference further suggested an exchange of military personnel and cadets with Mexico as a means of gaining Mexican involvement in NORTHCOM, as well as regular talks about cooperation, perhaps focusing on disaster relief.

According to the notes, the problem integrating Mexico into NORAD and NORTHCOM involved organized crime and the drug trade in Mexico. "Internal security in Mexico is an issue that can only be tackled with help from the U.S. and Canada," the conference notes recorded.

The conference notes suggest U.S.-Canadian military integration in NORAD and NORTHCOM is much more advanced, with some 80 formal treaties and 240 agreements in place between the two countries and a Canada Command firmly established within NORTHCOM.

During Adm. Keating's command of NORAD and NORTHCOM, the U.S. and Canadian commands were integrated into a single command centre.

[Sidebar]

"U.S.-Canadian military integration in NORAD and NATO are much more advanced, with some 80 formal [military] treaties and 240 agreements in place between the two countries."

[Author Affiliation]

(Jerome R. Corsi received a Ph.D. from Harvard University in political science in 1972 and has written many books and articles, including co-authoring with John O'Neill the No. 1 New York Times best- seller, "Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry." Corsi's most recent book was authored with Michael Evans: "Showdown with Nuclear Iran." Dr. Corsi's other recent books include "Black Gold Stranglehold: The Myth of Scarcity and the Politics of Oil," which he co-authored with WND columnist Craig. R. Smith, and "Atomic Iran."

Jethro Tull  posted on  2009-01-19   16:49:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: DeaconBenjamin (#0)

And so it begins..

Refinersfire  posted on  2009-01-19   16:58:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Cynicom (#1)

Cyni,

The term narcoterrorism is used intentionally. Under the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America, the military of the United States can now enter Mexico uninvited. The NAU is nearly complete. Next comes the financial ingredient, the Amerio.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2009-01-19   17:02:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Jethro Tull (#5)

I gave up going to Mexico long ago. Everyone had their hand out for the bribe, including the police.

It was a human cesspool way back then and it seems not to have improved. It was a disgusting country.

Cynicom  posted on  2009-01-19   17:07:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: DeaconBenjamin (#0)

We should have kept Mexico when we conquered it and pushed all the Mexicans into South America.

In politics there is no murder.

Turtle  posted on  2009-01-19   17:07:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: DeaconBenjamin. all (#0)

Mexico has a population of 110 million...

30 million, who live illegally in the US...

What a horse-shit article, and idea.

When we are going to have more 'officers' to protect bHO from being capped tomorrow, than are in Afghanistan, what does that say about our wonderful country?

Let's face it - we suck.

Iran Truth Now!

Lod  posted on  2009-01-19   17:57:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: lodwick (#8)

What a horse-shit article, and idea.

Now, now, calm down, remember our blood pressure?

Just because O bongo has hinted he may cede Texas to Mexico is no reason to be upset. I am sure it is just a vicious rumor, I think.

Cynicom  posted on  2009-01-19   18:05:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Jethro Tull, everyone here (#3)

Last year's exercise, ARDENT SENTRY '06, tested a variety of scenarios, including a chlorine gas terrorist attack, the crash of an airplane into a bridge in Michigan, a sulfuric acid leak at a rail yard, and multiple radiological dirty bombs going off in American cities. A southern scenario in Arizona involved an act of biological terrorism in Mexico, with pneumonic plague spreading in northern Mexico and causing a mass migration of Mexicans across the U.S. southern border as people sought medical assistance.

This is just insane.

All the gaming and bs that goes on is so stupid.

Fedgov couldn't even respond, worth a shiite, when a forecasted hurricane was coming to our country - hell, we could watch it approaching on our monitors - and they weren't able to do squat to 'protect' the people.

It is past time, Claire.

Iran Truth Now!

Lod  posted on  2009-01-19   18:05:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Cynicom (#9)

Now, now, calm down, remember our blood pressure?

Just because O bongo has hinted he may cede Texas to Mexico is no reason to be upset. I am sure it is just a vicious rumor, I think.

Thanks for the reminder - the doc, this afternoon, said that we may have to adjust the dosages...

Fact.

Iran Truth Now!

Lod  posted on  2009-01-19   18:08:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Turtle (#7)

We should have kept Mexico when we conquered it and pushed all the Mexicans into South America.

My understanding is that Baja California was very upset that it was not annexed, and that Mexico City's residents wanted Winfield Scott for president (or at least jefe).

The U.S. Constitution is no impediment to our form of government.--PJ O'Rourke

DeaconBenjamin  posted on  2009-01-19   19:21:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: DeaconBenjamin (#0)

ok just to see if im all caught up on world events we are in afganistan and iraq and we we will probably be in pakistan iran and syria within the next couple of years and nowthe military wants us to go into mexico is that it ?

hell you know where we havent been in a while vietnam and grenada i say as long as we are shooting our wad in damn near every continent across the globe anyhow lets go back there too. At least this time we will have the element of suprise on our side and now that im thinknig about it we have several battalions of military on the south korean borders no need to let them sit there twiddling there thumbs hell go for it lets reunify that country and give the north koreans some democracy hell its free to any country that doesnt ask for or want it anyway and we got a shitload of ink and rectangular pieces of paper to print more money to fund all these milatary adventures. getting the manpower without drafting 13 year olds of both sexes might be a problem or perhaps not wit the phychopaths in the joint cheifs of staff we got now i can actually see them recommending just that at some point soon

the american government is a disease masquerading as its own cure

freepatriot32  posted on  2009-01-19   23:38:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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