Feral Jundi

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Mexico: Could Hamas or FARC Ideas, Inspire Mexico’s Narco-Insurgency?

Filed under: Crime,Mexico — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 3:00 PM

 

   Today I want to look at the situation across the border, and kind of look into the future of the narco war in Mexico.  Also please read General McCaffrey’s After Action Mexico Report, as a good little primer on the situation.  The question I have, is Mexico strong enough to battle these drug cartels, and how will the drug cartels treat the US as we feed the anti-drug war with Plan Merida?

    So with that in mind, let’s for a second explore the possibilities, no matter how ridiculous.  Already tunnels have been used to smuggle people, drugs, and weapons on the US/Mexican border.  Notice how this same tactic is used by Hamas in Israel?  There have also been incidents of criminals engaging with Border Patrol using automatic weapons, and operating more like military units, as opposed to thugs.  Is this not what Hamas does?  Or how about FARC?  We have a deal with Colombia called Plan Colombia, and that support is used to fight a very bloody narco war there.  Imagine if Colombia was right on our border in the US?  Would FARC have crossed the border, and made the US pay for our support of Colombia?  I am positive they would.  

   So where do all of these examples lead us?  With a determined group, they will try everything they can to survive and keep the business going.  These groups will learn from others, and will be inspired by working models of operation.  Mexico’s Narco-insurgency will learn from Hamas and they will learn from FARC, and I am sure they will learn from others, as to the best way to stop the governments of both the US and Mexico from messing with their business.

    One way that I could see these guys going, is launching rockets into the US, much like Hamas did with Israel.  Hell, the FARC even did something similar within Colombia, by using propane lob bombs or IRAM’s.  The idea being, is to piss off the larger neighbor to the north, and force the US to do something violent.  They would want US forces to come into Mexico and try to shut things down.  But once that happens, then the larger picture of Public Relations presents itself, and a US military action in Mexico would make the Mexican military and police seem even weaker and this action could piss off a lot of civilians.  At worse, even civilians could be killed in that scenario.  And if you are to study the FARC in Colombia, civilians have been killed during that narco-war, mostly by FARC, but also by accidents with government reaction to the FARC. 

   Now with an insurgency, when a smaller group attacks an occupier or an invading force, that smaller group actually becomes the good guy in some cases amongst the local populations.  The drug cartels would love for this scenario to present itself.  So if these guys could egg on the US, to become more involved, then they would be happy.  The Plan Merida, much like the Plan Colombia, is our first step in combating these narco-insurgencies.  But we also have to be prepared for some push back from the drug cartels for getting involved like this.  Will these guys start launching rockets into US cities to start a fight?  Who knows, but I do know that the drug cartels in Mexico are getting more brazen and more powerful all the time.  The Mexican government is having a hell of a time fighting this, and my big fear is that a full blown narco war in Mexico could look a lot like the one in Colombia, and that would not be a good thing for the US. –Matt 

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General McCaffrey’s After Action Mexico Report focusing on drugs and crime in Mexico.

Academic Mexico Trip Report – December 2008

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Mexico’s Narco-Insurgency 

 Hal Brands | 22 Dec 2008

World Politics Review

When Barack Obama takes office on Jan. 20, his foreign policy will almost certainly be consumed by the insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan. Yet Obama would do well to pay equal attention to a third ongoing insurgency, one that is currently more violent than the war in Iraq and possibly more threatening to American interests. This insurgency is raging not half a world away in the Middle East, but just across America’s southern frontier in Mexico.

(more…)

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Crime: The ‘Real’ Lord of War, Viktor Bout

Filed under: Crime,Weapons Stuff — Tags: , , — Matt @ 2:59 PM

   This guy is pretty interesting, and has definitely done some amazing things in the field of weapons delivery. But like most who walk the line between legal and illegal weapons delivery, you always face the potential of getting caught one day.  Viktor made things happen out there, but at what price to self and others?  But on the other hand, everyone has done business with the guy, because he could get things done in really crappy places.  The movie Lord of War staring Nicolas Cage was about his exploits, and there are plenty of stories, books, and articles about him.  And after he got caught in Thailand, the Economist wrote this recent article.  –Matt

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International man of mystery

Flying anything to anybody

Dec 18th 2008

From The Economist print edition

The rise and fall of Viktor Bout, arms-dealer extraordinaire, shows a darker side of globalisation

VIKTOR BOUT knew, long before his plane lifted off from Moscow, that they meant to snatch him. For years he had hunkered down in the Russian capital, making only rare forays abroad. Western spies, the United Nations and do-gooder activists were after him. They said that he had smashed arms embargoes and struck deals with a remarkable axis of ne’er-do-wells: supplying weapons and air-transport to the Taliban, abetting despots and revolutionaries in Africa and South America, aiding Hizbullah in Lebanon and Islamists in Somalia. He also found time to supply American forces in Iraq, perhaps al-Qaeda too, and maybe even Chechen rebels.

He denied all wrongdoing and, no doubt, thought his accusers irritating and hypocritical. But until the fuss died away he knew that he was safe only in Russia, from where extradition was impossible.

Yet Mr Bout, a puzzling, amoral and intelligent man, made a poor choice in March, leaving behind his wife and daughter and flying to Bangkok. As a consequence he may end up in New York as the star of a trial that would provoke echoes of cold-war spy games, further chilling relations between the West and Russia.

A shy and plump man, for years his only public image was a grainy, Soviet-era passport photo. That shows a dumpy, youngish face, with drooping eyes peering above a thick, triangular, moustache—the sort one might buy in a joke shop. He was probably born in what is now Tajikistan but, as with the picture, details of his life are fuzzy. American prosecutors say that he uses at least half a dozen passports and more aliases, including “Butt”, “Budd”, “Boris”, “Bulakin” and “Aminov”. A gifted linguist, he slips easily between as many languages as he has names.

(more…)

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Crime: Mexican Beauty Queen Arrested in Gun-filled Truck

Filed under: Crime,Mexico — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:06 PM

     Boy, the first thing I thought with this is what a shame that this woman would hang with these losers? But then the other thing to think of is the diversion this woman provided for this team.  She is famous and pretty, so the last thing any checkpoint team would expect is this woman to be with a bunch of killers. I am sure this gang thought that they could just pass right through the checkpoint. Good on the checkpoint team for using good judgement and catching these guys, despite the Beauty Queen.  –Matt

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Mexican beauty queen arrested in gun-filled truck

By ARTURO PEREZ, Associated Press Writer Arturo Perez, Associated Press Writer Wed Dec 24, 12:52 pm ET

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – A reigning Mexican beauty queen from the drug-plagued state of Sinaloa was arrested with suspected gang members in a truck filled guns and ammunition, police say.

Miss Sinaloa 2008 Laura Zuniga stared at the ground, with her flowing dark hair concealing her face, as she stood squeezed between seven alleged gunmen lined up before journalists. Soldiers wearing ski masks guarded the 23-year-old model and the suspects.

(more…)

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Funny Stuff: Joker Copycats

Filed under: Crime,Funny Stuff,Photo — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:00 AM

I have to laugh at stuff like this.  Let’s just hope that this doesn’t turn into some twisted trend.  The movie had some pretty violent themes in it, and hopefully no one takes it to that level. –Head Jundi  

Cinema larceny suspect no ‘Joker’

Courtesy of Three Rivers Police Dept.

Spencer Taylor of Three Rivers, dressed as the “Joker” after his arrest for attempting to steal movie memorabilia.”The only sensible way to live in this world is without rules!” stated the Joker from this summer’s blockbuster, ‘The Dark Knight,’ and apparently at least one person in the audience took this to heart. Spencer Taylor, dressed in full Joker regalia, stumbled down his path of anarchy.

    July 28, 2008: Kalamazoo Gazette: An overzealous Joker fan was taken into custody Sunday morning after attempting to steal movie posters and other items, police said.

    Spencer Taylor, 20, of Three Rivers, was arrested on felony larceny and malicious destruction of property charges after trying to steal memorabilia of the new Batman movie “The Dark Knight” at the Three Rivers 6 theater.

    He was trying to pull the posters off the walls and take other items when he was restrained by theater staff until police arrived, Three Rivers Detective Mike Mohney said.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Books: Storming Las Vegas, by John Huddy

Filed under: Books,Crime — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:49 AM

     I just read this book and loved it. Hollywood will certainly make a film about Cuban born criminal named Jose Vigoa, that literally robbed Las Vegas. The best part of the book, is that you still couldn’t figure out if he was an agent of Cuba, or just a Cuban gone bad. Robert Baer(former CIA employee) was interviewed about this guy, and he thought that Vigoa was an agent that slipped in during the eighties Cuban boat crisis. A sleeper agent that went off the deep end, so to speak.  Or maybe he had orders to cause havoc in Vegas? 

     Either way, Vigoa makes Tony Montana from “Scar Face” look like a child. True crime, to me, is always more fascinating than the fictional stuff, and this guy was larger than life.  Not only was he a highly trained and experienced warrior from the cold war era, but he also was an effective drug dealer and violent robber that took down the ‘strip’.   

     From a tactical thought process point of view, Vigoa was a fascinating study. Mentally, this guy operated like a soldier behind enemy lines, rather than a criminal. And the various stories about his time in Angola and Afghanistan were really interesting windows, upon the mentality of Vigoa. From his use of top Private Investigators to collect information on enemies and associates, to controlling the meeting places (controlling your battle space) where very telling, as to Vigoa’s background and capability.  What was really frightening about the guy, was his mental kill-switch.  He was not hesitant in this regard, and that is also what made him such a vicious criminal.

 This book also talked about the bravery of the guards that defended their Armored cars to the death, against Vigoa’s crew and their vicious take downs.  It is a stark reminder, of how dangerous transporting money can be and what the worse case scenario for an armored transport professional could be.  I highly recommend this book. –Head Jundi 

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Storming Las Vegas

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Network producer and onetime Miami Herald columnist Huddy tells a gripping story of greed, violence, theft and public relations. Las Vegas had just launched its new blitz of advertising—advancing itself not as Sin City but as a family-friendly vacation destination—when Jose Vigoa (a Cuban-born commando veteran of the Soviet Army) hit town in the late 1990s. Vigoa and a small crew embarked on a violent 16-month crime wave, targeting some of the Strip’s most prominent (and, as Vigoa showed, vulnerable) institutions. A 23-year veteran of the Las Vegas Police Force, Lt. John Alamshaw was charged with finding and capturing the men behind the crime spree—without allowing the robberies to become national news and spoil Vegas’s new image. Huddy traces Vigoa’s personal history from his childhood in Castro’s Cuba to fighting for the Red Army in Afghanistan, his return to Cuba and eventual resettlement in the United States. Then he chronicles the Cuban’s increasingly audacious grabs for Vegas riches and his ultimate sentencing to more than 500 years in prison with no possibility of parole. This debut is a must for true-crime enthusiasts. B&w photos.  

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/product-description/0345487451/ref=dp_proddesc_0?ie=UTF8&n=283155&s=books
 

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