Mexican Military Incursion Update

The incident where a U.S. Border patrol agent was held at gunpoint has been making the rounds and new information is coming out. Gateway Pundit points to this Washington Times article which notes that there have been more than 200 armed incursions into the United States by Mexican Military personnel since 1996 and noted that this incursion is suspiciously similar to other incidents in the same area:

Sunday night’s incident bears similarities to other incursions by armed men in Mexican military gear in recent years:

cThe incident occurred in the same area where heavily armed Mexican soldiers riding in a Humvee shot at a Border Patrol agent in 2002. A .50-caliber bullet ripped through the agent’s rear window as he sped away.

Mexican officials denied at the time that the shooters were Mexican soldiers, saying they were criminals using military uniforms. It is a position they steadfastly have maintained.

But the agent who reported encountering the gunfire was certain he saw soldiers, said Mr. Tuffly. He said at the time that the agent was able to identify their attire “down to a T, and it matched exactly what they [Mexican soldiers] wear.”

That purported incursion began after a Tohono O’odham Indian Reservation police ranger reported being chased by men in a Humvee.

cA year ago, U.S. law enforcement authorities were confronted by gunfire from automatic weapons as they chased and caught a drug-smuggling suspect in Texas trying to flee back into Mexico, the Hudspeth County (Texas) Sheriff’s Office said.

No one was hurt in that incident, and the gunmen were not identified, although the area has been the scene of similar incidents over several months, including a confrontation in January 2007, when heavily armed men in Mexican military uniforms fired on Texas officers with a .50-caliber machine gun mounted on a camouflaged Humvee.

The men were identified at the time by Hudspeth County Sheriff Arvin West as “soldiers.”

In that incident, Hudspeth County deputies pursued three sport utility vehicles back to Mexico after spotting them driving north from the Rio Grande. The pursuit ended on the U.S. side of the border when the deputies encountered 10 heavily armed men in what they described as battle-dress uniforms.

At that time, deputies found 1,400 pounds of marijuana in one of the vehicles abandoned after it blew a tire early in the pursuit. Another made it into Mexico and a third got stuck in the Rio Grande and was burned by the “soldiers” after it was unloaded.

Robert J. Caldwell just had an interesting article in this month’s Soldier of Fortune magazine where he examines what’s at stake in Mexico’s war on the Cartels, the biggest of which is whether or not Mexico will become a failed state with a large, corrupt and well armed military sitting on our border. Don’t be squeamish, subscribe to SOF and you’ll get a lot of stories the MSM doesn’t cover.

Juarez, Mexico continues to devolve into lawlessness as Cartel soldiers murder the senior homicide investigator for Chihuahua state. The violence in Mexico is so bad home businesses that armor personal vehicles have sprung up. The San Diego Weekly Reader has a great article on how Tijuana is a hellhole.

Republicans and Democrats have both failed to secure our border and worse have failed to acknowledge how vital helping the Mexican government defeat the Cartels is to our national security. If Mexico cannot control its military now, what will happen when the Cartels completely destabilize the government? The mass migration of illegals into America is in part driven by the desire to escape these lawless regions, and unless we can help Mexico regain control of its now disputed territory there is no measure we can take that will secure our borders, and protect the brave men and women who guard it.

Mexican Military Holds Border Patrol Agent at Gunpoint

The report is from Local 2544 which is the Union representing Tuscon area Border patrol agents and support personal. They report that this is just the latest in a string of incidents in which Mexican soldiers have attacked or detained our Border Patrol agents:

A Tucson Sector Border Patrol agent was held at gunpoint by the Mexican military last night south of Ajo. Mexican military personnel crossed over the border and pointed rifles at him. Backup units arrived from the Ajo Border Patrol station, and the Mexican military personnel eventually returned to Mexico. Unfortunately, this sort of behavior by Mexican military personnel has been going on for years. They are never held accountable, and the United States government will undoubtedly brush this off as another case of “Oh well, they didn’t know they were in the United States.” A few years ago the Mexican military went a step further and put a .50 calibre rifle round through the rear window of a Border Patrol agent’s patrol vehicle south of Ajo. Nothing was ever done. Nobody was ever held accountable. Particularly galling is the fact that the Mexican military often pulls these stunts in Humvees donated to them by the American taxpayers (although they were apparently on foot this time). We note that Border Patrol agents have historically driven worn-out, junk vehicles.

We will withhold further comment on this incident until we see how our leaders handle it. We don’t have much confidence in most of them.

It is fortunate that this incident didn’t end in a very ugly gunfight.

Indeed. h/t Immigration Watchdog

Communist Cuba Uses Slave Labor to Pay Off Its Debts

Viva La Revolution, right lefties?

Each Cuban worker got two pairs of overalls, a set of sturdy boots, a helmet and food commensurate with how hard he worked.

Their labor fixing up American cruise ships at a Curacao dry dock was valued at $6.90 an hour. But the 108 Cuban shipyard hands who worked double shifts in a joint venture between the Cuban government and the Curacao Dry Dock Company did not get to spend their wages. Their earnings were applied to the Cuban government’s debt with the company, court records show.

Documents reviewed Wednesday by The Miami Herald in an ongoing 2006 lawsuit filed in Miami by the workers offer a rare glimpse at employment terms normally kept secret between the Cuban government and the firms with which it does business. The documents appear to offer proof that the government’s joint ventures abroad sometimes involve unpaid labor.

Instead of a salary, the men got money for food and 400 Cuban pesos a month — about $18 at the current exchange rate.

Three former dry-dock workers eventually escaped what their attorneys call a ”forced labor camp” in Willemstad, Curacao, and filed the suit in U.S. District Court in Miami, alleging the Cuban government offered them up as slave labor to pay off its debts.

Alberto Justo Rodríguez, Fernando Alonso Hernández and Luis Alberto Casanova Toledo — who now live in the Tampa Bay area — sued the Curacao Dry Dock Company, saying it forced them to work against their will while Cuban agents kept an eye on their every move.

Their boss at the docks: Fidel Castro’s nephew.

I’m sure Michael Moore and Code Pink will be releasing statements lambasting the oppression of these poor workers very soon. But as evidenced by this video I found linked to by the excellent site The Real Cuba, forced labor has been a part of Castro’s regime since the beginning:

[youtube]LdjsWTtLevc[/youtube]

20 People Murdered in 36 Hours in Mexican Border Town

Ready for that fence, yet?

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) – Police say 20 people have been killed in less than three days in this crime-ridden border city’s latest wave of violence.

State police spokesman Cesar Ramirez says a father and son who were killed at their home while sleeping were among the victims. A third victim was a man whose body was cut up in pieces and dumped in an empty lot.

Ramirez says that this year alone more than 500 people have been killed in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas. The city is home to the powerful Juarez drug cartel and has been among the hardest-hit cities in an explosion of violence across Mexico.

Arm yourselves El Paso.

Cartel Boss Arrested in San Diego

Ready for that fence, yet?

A 24-year-old man who was wanted on suspicion of running an organized crime ring in Baja California is being held in San Diego pending extradition to Mexico.

FBI agents from San Diego and Riverside arrested José Manuel Garibay Félix on Friday morning at a Department of Motor Vehicles office in Riverside County.

Garibay Félix had been living in Riverside with a sister.

Mexican authorities said Garibay Félix, who was born near Yuma, Ariz., frequently crossed between the United States and Mexico.

“It is a very important arrest,” said Agustín Pérez, a spokesman for the Baja California Public Safety Secretariat. “He is a very violent person.”

The Los Garibay organization used to be closely affiliated with the Arellano-Félix drug cartel, Pérez said. It now works for the Sinaloa drug cartel, he said.

Mexican authorities have requested Garibay Félix’s extradition on kidnapping and murder charges, Pérez said.

An 11-page complaint on file in U.S. District Court says Garibay Félix and his relatives ran the organization out of the Los Garibay Ranch in the Mexicali Valley of Baja California.

At the ranch, they grew, packaged and shipped marijuana, the complaint says. They also made and sold methamphetamine.

The organization kidnapped and killed a police officer from the Public Prosecutor’s Office, according to the complaint.

The Sinaloa Cartel is the criminal organization that is pretty much defeating the Mexican government militarily these days, and will soon be the de facto government of large swaths of the country if Calderon can’t push them back. The fact that one of their underbosses is crossing into America means they’re organized enough here to make a big wig comfortable. The unprecedented power of the Cartels is a good argument for not only a fence but for the government to start putting more troops-on the border and maybe even helping the Federales with combat operations.

The alternative is to share a border with a country controlled by a criminal empire with access to military arms.