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Title: Civil war and vigilantism gripping Mexico
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/88259
Published: Jan 19, 2009
Author: Michael Webster
Post Date: 2009-01-19 21:04:38 by Horse
Keywords: None
Views: 473
Comments: 32

A full scale civil war is underway in Mexico. The Mexican President Felipe Calderon and the powerful drug cartels that operate unmolested throughout Mexico are locked in a battle over control of the country. With tens of thousands of the Mexican army fully deployed and often fighting Zetas´ (ex-Mexican army Special Forces trained in the U.S.) who is now working for the cartels. The Mexican government has not been able to curtail the on going gruesome and erupting new violence and confrontations between the two warring parties throughout Mexico. This relentless fighting with casualties on both sides is in truth and scope a civil war. Mexico try´s to hide that fact and the United States is apparently in total denial.

To date some 7,000 Mexicans have died in this war – all attributable to the government versus the rich and powerful Mexican Drug Cartels war.

During 2008 Mexico´s violent deaths broke historic records raising the death toll to 5,630 execution murders, beating out last years all time record.

In 2008, more people lost their lives in Mexico do to violence then were lost in the war torn countries of Iraq and Afghanistan combined.

Were it not for the fact that the cartels are also frequently at war with one another, they might have won the war by now and would be in complete control of Mexico.

Execution-style murders, beheadings, dismemberings and kidnappings are common now in every state in Mexico on a daily basis. Gun battles are frequent events in Mexico City and in Mexican towns all along the border. On Jan. 5, the body of Jose Ivan Vasquez Lopez, 43, was found in a trash drum with his head cut off. On Jan. 7, the body of Ricardo Arturo Alvarado Contreras, 45, was found dead in a vacant lot with his hands chopped off. Mexican border town officials have crossed into the U.S. seeking asylum, fearing for their lives.

Now a third factor is reported to be getting into Mexico´s civil war as the Mexican border towns are void of tourist. Mexican citizens are getting feed up with not having any business and that is making it very difficult to survive and make ends meet said Jose Lopez a shop keeper in what had normally been a busy typical Mexican border town and we the people are done with the fear and the bloody killings on our streets.

A group calling itself the Juárez Citizens Command is threatening to strike back against lawlessness that has gripped the city for a long time they say that they are striking back by killing one criminal a day until order and piece is restored. A potential rise in vigilante justice in Juárez is expected by some experts to spread throughout Mexico and would raise the steaks and escalate an already dangerous and bloody civil war.

The city's police and the Mexican army together have not been able to stop the plague of killings, beheadings, or the extortion targeted business owners, teachers, medical professionals, or the carjackings, kidnappings, robberies and other crime. Last year, more than 1,600 people were slain in Juárez alone.

"Better the death of a bad person, than that bad person continue contaminating our region," the group, named Comando Ciudadano por Juárez, or CCJ in Spanish, stated in a news release spread on the Internet.

"There is a call for the public to remain calm," said Andres Andreu, a Juárez representative in the Chihuahua state congress.

"In anger, this could start an uncontrollable wave of unjust deaths," Andreu said in a statement condemning vigilantism and urging authorities to do more to stop the violence. "Movements of this nature are directed more by a sense of vengeance than of justice."

The El Paso times reported that Howard Campbell, an anthropology Professor at the University of Texas at El Paso stated: "What (vigilantism) says is people do not think the government can fix the violence, you have to remember, there is the whole history -- the killing of the women and the drug killings. The common person feels there is no one to protect them."

The environment exists for the creation for a group such as the CCJ, Campbell said. If the CCJ is real, Howard said, it could be reminiscent of Los Pepes, assassins who in the early 1990s targeted relatives and associates of drug lord Pablo Escobar in Colombia.

It was rumored that Los Pepes might have had links to rival drug traffickers or government special forces, including those in the United States.

Lynchings, mob beatings and other forms of vigilante justice are not unheard of in Mexico and other parts of Latin America, often because of lack of trust in government and law enforcement authorities.

Not long ago an enraged mob swarmed three federal police officers in the Mexico City suburb of San Juan Ixtayopan, and beat them nearly lifeless then doused them with gasoline and then burned two of them alive while thousands watched live on national television.

Dramatic as it was, the cop killings were not an isolated incident. Vigilantism has taken root in Latin America over the past decade, lending credence to the notion that the region is in the throes of a civil war. From Venezuela and Guatemala to Bolivia and Peru, angry crowds are increasingly taking the law into their own hands, meting out physical punishment for crimes real and imagined. Vigilantes often "lynch" common criminals who, in their view, have escaped justice. More recently they've started attacking public officials suspected of malfeasance. A mob in the Peruvian town of Ilave beat their mayor after accusing him of embezzlement, then dragged him into a public square and left him to die.

"Lynching has grown totally out of control," says Mark Ungar, an expert on Latin American police reform at the Woodrow Wilson International School for Scholars in Washington. "It's spreading in the sense that vigilantes are going after criminals, officials, even governments--and once it starts it's hard to stop."

Mexican civil war is also spilling over into the U.S. Reports of incursions into the U.S. by heavily armed men in Mexican army uniforms (and often driving U.S.-made Humvees) now occurs on a regular basis. Sometimes the "soldiers" are cartel men, probably ex-Mexican army; sometimes they are real Mexican army. In many cases, their purpose is to escort and protect a drug run into the U.S. and back off any lightly armed local sheriff or Border Patrol agent in the way.

The evidence is clear Mexico is in a civil war and this civil war is happening in America´s back yard in a neighboring country of a population of well over 100 million people. A 2000 mile open border and with corrupt officials operating on both sides of the Rio Grande River. There are estimates that the Mexican cartels produce, smuggle and sell some $300 billion worth of drugs into the U.S. annually. These drugs are poisoning our children and violently killing citizens on both sides of the U.S. Mexican border.

Editors Note:

Michael Webster´s Syndicated Investigative Reports are read worldwide, in 100 or more U.S. outlets and in at least 136 countries and territories. He has published articles for Maxims News, which is associated with MediaChannel.org and Globalvision News Network, global news and media information services with more than 350 news affiliates in 135 countries. Many of Mr. Webster´s articles are printed in six working languages: English, French, Arabic, Chinese, Russian and Spanish. With ten more languages planed in the near future.

Mr. Webster is America's leading authority on Venture Capital/Equity Funding. A trustee on some of the nations largest trade Union funds. A noted Author, Lecturer, Educator, Emergency Manager, Counter-Terrorist, War on Drugs and War on Terrorist Specialist, Business Consultant, Newspaper Publisher. Radio News caster. Labor Law generalist, Teamster Union Business Agent, General Organizer, Union Rank and File Member Grievances Representative, NLRB Union Representative, Union Contract Negotiator, Workers Compensation Appeals Board Hearing Representative. Mr. Webster publishes the on-line newspaper the Laguna Journal and does investigative reports for print, electronic and on-line News Agencies. Click on or Google Michael Webster´s other writings.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 20.

#6. To: Horse (#0)

The evidence is clear Mexico is in a civil war and this civil war is happening in America´s back yard in a neighboring country of a population of well over 100 million people.

Holy crap. Mexican civil wars have a colorful history of being exceptionally violent and brutal. The last one was in 1910. They're due for one, no question.

Man oh man.. could it be that the next country the U.S. invades is Mexico? Would be a Trilateralist commission wet dream. Once we had annexed Mexico, we could just quietly incorporate Canada and there you go, the North American Union, complete with the Amero. Wheee....

Elliott Jackalope  posted on  2009-01-19   22:37:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Elliott Jackalope (#6)

Man oh man.. could it be that the next country the U.S. invades is Mexico? Would be a Trilateralist commission wet dream.

They have oil and the SPP Bush signed allows out military to pursue "terrorists" anywhere, anytime. We will annex Mexico, and here I was all worried they were trying to take us over !

Jethro Tull  posted on  2009-01-19   23:17:54 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Jethro Tull (#11)

They have oil and the SPP Bush signed allows out military to pursue "terrorists" anywhere, anytime. We will annex Mexico, and here I was all worried they were trying to take us over !

So do you think we should attack Mexico. Or just shore up our border or what?

Old Friend  posted on  2009-01-19   23:19:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: Old Friend (#12)

The groundwork for a mutual American-Mexican military effort has already been established. I can't think of a nation, anywhere, where once we invaded, we left willingly. We'll be in Mexico shortly.

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:
Mexican defense minister to discuss possible joint North American military force

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   23:24:38 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Jethro Tull (#13)

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.

Old Friend  posted on  2009-01-19   23:28:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: Old Friend (#16)

HERE

Click on the above link - the article u referenced is from '02.

If Mexico is deemed a Narcoterrorist state by our State Dept, we're going in.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2009-01-19   23:33:16 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: Jethro Tull (#17)

So is it a narco state. Should we go in?

Old Friend  posted on  2009-01-19   23:44:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: Old Friend (#19)

Should we go in?

Of course not. Let the rats fix their own problems. But we will go in.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2009-01-19   23:51:20 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 20.

#21. To: Jethro Tull (#20)

I have a friend that for years has been saying we should take over Mexico. I think it to be wrong morally. Just put troops on the border and keep the invaders out.

Old Friend  posted on  2009-01-20 00:02:44 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: Jethro Tull (#20)

I used to live in El Paso. I read that there were 1600 murders in Juarez last year. Which is right across the border. I've been to Juarez a few times.

Old Friend  posted on  2009-01-20 00:06:09 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: Jethro Tull, christine, Cynicom, lodwick, scrapper 2, Lady X (#20)

Should we go in?

Of course not. Let the rats fix their own problems. But we will go in.

Because Los Federales have been caught escorting tons of smoke across the border, what would begin as a police action against civilian narco terrorists would ultimately become a war with Mexico.

And if Mexico started playing hardball, i.e. naming names of corrupt border officials who "streamline the delivery of product" or, seizing CIA aircraft (perhaps forcing them to land in Mexico with fighter jets) then The Company would have to act, and now we're in Nam all over again with The Phoenix Program and other "semi covert" actions plans that ultimately fail, but not before spilling a river of blood to show 'em, "Quien es El Patron?" (Who's the boss?)

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2009-01-20 04:04:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 20.

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