Feral Jundi

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Mexico: Drug War Refugees And Comparisons To Colombia

   Could we have a situation where violence gets so bad in Mexico, that we will actually see war refugees gathering at the border?  Imagine thousands of people, all trying to get on the US side of the border, all because things have gotten so bad in Mexico that the people no longer trust that their government can protect them. Things are already bad enough economically there, that people are willing to risk illegal immigration to cross into the US.  If you add the fear of violence caused by the drug war to the mix, well then now you can see how this is something we need to look at.

   At this point, we are just seeing the political asylum cases increase.  The next stage if things got really bad, is just camping out at the border.  If cartels are taking over entire towns, and the Mexican military is having to retake those towns, then you could see why people wouldn’t want to live there.

  And to follow this train of thought, where would we put them all?  Well, if things got that bad, I am afraid that my tent city idea that I brought up for illegal immigrants, would more than likely turn into refugee camps. When you start thinking about the problems in Mexico in this way, it really puts into perspective as to what the potential is and why we should care. I also think that looking at other drug wars like in Colombia are particularly helpful, just to get an idea of where it is all going.

   Finally, check out the last story I posted.  It is about a coordinated attack on Mexican army bases, by cartel henchmen.  That is a new chapter in this drug war, and I am sure we will see more of this.-Matt

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Will we see this in the U.S., in order to deal with a humanitarian crisis caused by the drug war in Mexico?

Worse Than Colombia

by Brandi GrissomMarch 31, 2010

The violence raging in Mexico’s drug war is worse now than the terror that enveloped Colombia during the 1980s and 1990s ever was, Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw told state lawmakers Tuesday.

“Colombia was never threatened like the government of Mexico is with the level of violence,” McCraw told the House Select Committee on Emergency Preparedness at a Capitol hearing.

The committee and its chairman, state Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, focused many of their questions about the state’s emergency preparedness on the current violence just across the border in northern Mexico, particularly in Juárez. “Each and every day we hear about killings, shootings, assassinations, kidnappings,” said Peña, whose hometown is about 10 miles from the Mexican city of Reynosa. While McCraw said the violence will get worse before it gets better and has already outpaced the scariness of Pablo Escobar’s Medellín cartel in Colombia, at least one border expert disagreed, saying that the United States would never let the situation in its neighboring country devolve into the lawlessness that plagued Colombia. “I think maybe he’s exaggerating,” said University of Texas at El Paso professor Howard Campbell.

Peña asked McCraw to compare the violence in Mexico to that during the drug war in Colombia. McCraw said the situation in Mexico is worse. The United States eventually intervened to help the Colombian government quell the violence and take down Pablo Escobar in 1993. “That hasn’t happened in Mexico,” McCraw said. Though Mexican President Felipe Calderón is trying to control the violence, McCraw said those efforts so far have not worked. “There has never been a more significant threat as it relates to cartels and drug and human smuggling on the border today,” he said. Juarez alone has seen more than 4,800 drug war deaths since 2008, according to recent reports in the El Paso Times, including at least 600 killings this year.

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Sunday, May 10, 2009

Bounties: John Miller and the Race For Scarface’s Millions

Filed under: Bounties,Colombia — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 6:26 PM

 “Pablo was earning so much that each year we’d write off ten per cent of the money because rats would eat it in storage or it would be damaged by water or lost.

“We had so much money we would spend as much as $2,500 on rubber bands just to hold it together. We’d holiday in Las Vegas, where we’d have dinner with Frank Sinatra, on petty cash.”

   This story will be interesting to watch and I wish Mr. Miller and his crew all the luck with their mission to recover this money.  By the way, I have not read the book, nor do I know the locations of this stuff.  I guess if you want a shot at Scarface’s Millions, you will have to pick up a copy of this book and do some research.  Although it sounds like Mr. Miller’s team is pretty much at the lead for this race. –Matt

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RACE FOR SCARFACE’S MILLIONS

DAILY STAR SUNDAY

ABOVE: Pablo Escobar, left

3rd May 2009

By Mike Parker

A DESPERATE race is on to find a fortune stashed in secret locations by dead drug baron Pablo Escobar.

And at least one team of British mercenaries is joining the hunt in the Colombian jungle.

It was triggered by astonishing claims over the whereabouts of Escobar’s evil earnings in a new book.

Escobar’s surviving brother, Roberto – a former cartel “accountant” – claims the drug baron left millions salted away in Swiss bank accounts.

The accounts were known only to Escobar – whose rise inspired the 1983 Al Pacino film Scarface – and the untold wealth deposited in them is likely to be lost forever.

But in his book Escobar: The Untold Story Of The World’s Most Powerful Criminal, Roberto tells how more cash was simply buried before Escobar died in a bloody shoot-out with troops and US drug agents in December 1993.

So far only $10million and an arsenal of weapons has been recovered from underground vaults at a sprawling complex called La Catedral, built in the jungle by Escobar.

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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Crime: Drug-Sub Culture

Filed under: Colombia,Crime,Maritime Security — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 8:12 PM

“You ever try to build something in your backyard? They’re building these in the jungles.” 

   This is a building snowmobiles concept, and very innovative.  I give them high marks for working the problem and coming up with something like this, but it is still criminal.  

     Perhaps the counter to something like this could be the good ol’ Letter of Marque?  I have talked about it before for land operations, and this problem is a prime opportunity to use the LoM for a sea based operation.  We would have to break out all the old U-Boat hunting ‘lessons learned’ from WW2 for this one.  I also think this would be an excellent task for a private naval company, and this stuff along with the piracy deal, could keep companies very busy. –Matt

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Drug-Sub Culture

By DAVID KUSHNER

April 26, 2009

THE CRAFT FIRST surfaced like something out of a science-fiction movie. It was November 2006, and a Coast Guard cutter spotted a strange blur on the ocean 100 miles off Costa Rica. As the cutter approached, what appeared to be three snorkels poking up out of the water became visible. Then something even more surprising was discovered attached to the air pipes: a homemade submarine carrying four men, an AK-47 and three tons of cocaine.

Today, the 49-foot-long vessel bakes on concrete blocks outside the office of Rear Adm. Joseph Nimmich in Key West, Fla. Here, at the Joint Interagency Task Force South, Nimmich commands drug-interdiction efforts in the waters south of the United States. Steely-eyed, gray-haired and dressed in a blue jumpsuit, he showed me the homemade sub one hot February afternoon like a hunter flaunting his catch. “We had rumors and indicators of this for a very long period beforehand,” he told me, which is why they nicknamed it Bigfoot.

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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Industry Talk” U.S. Honors Contractors Held Hostage by Colombian Rebels

Filed under: Colombia,Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 1:53 AM

   I hope the company of these guys pays them a huge bonus as well. Good on these guys, and I am glad they are getting recognized. –Matt 

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U.S. honors contractors held hostage by Colombian rebels

By JACK DOLAN

Mar. 13, 2009

Three U.S. defense contractors who were held hostage by Colombian terrorists for more than five years received the Medal of Freedom, the civilian equivalent of the Purple Heart, on Thursday.

Speaking before a packed room at the U.S. Southern Command headquarters in Doral, former hostage Tom Howes, 56, fought back tears as he said, “You never forgot us, thank you very much.”

The three men — Howes, Marc Gonsalves and Keith Stansell — suffered injuries and brutal treatment at the hands of their captors, the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces, known by the Spanish acronym FARC. The men still bear scars from the chains used to bind them on long, forced marches between jungle camps.

The Department of Defense created the Medal of Freedom after the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon. The honor goes to civilian employees killed or injured while working for the DOD. Thirty-seven have been awarded so far.

The three contractors, all of whom worked for a subsidiary of Northrop Grumman, were part of a five-man crew on a drug surveillance plane brought down by engine trouble in February 2003. FARC rebels captured them and executed two others, American pilot Thomas Janis and a Colombian Army Sgt. Luis Alcides Cruz.

`WE’RE NOT FORGOTTEN’

Howes told the mostly uniformed audience on Thursday that, at his lowest point, Stansell risked a beating to pass him a note that said: “We’re not forgotten. People are trying to get us out. We have families to go home to.”

The U.S. and Colombian governments flew 3,600 reconnaissance flights searching for the men, according to a statement released by the U.S. Southern Command before the ceremony. They logged 17,000 flight hours and spent $250 million searching for them, the report said.

Gonsalves, 36, said his greatest fear was being forgotten. ”We were isolated in the middle of the jungle,” he said, but every now and then, “we’d hear a buzz. We could never see it, because it was up so high, but we knew what it was.”

Gonsalves said his low point came after an unusually vivid dream about his 9-year-old daughter. ”I was holding her in my lap. I could smell the shampoo in her hair,” he said. “Then when I woke up I was locked in a box in the jungle.”

Unexpected salvation came for the trio on July 2, 2008, their 1,967th day in captivity.

Colombian soldiers posing as humanitarian workers arrived in a Russian built helicopter and persuaded the FARC guards to climb aboard with a group of 11 hostages, including the three Americans and Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt.

”I saw a blur of bodies as soon as we broke ground,” Howes said, ‘in the middle of it all somebody shouted, `Colombian Army’ ”.

Within seconds, the FARC captors were disarmed and buried on the floor of the chopper beneath a pile of bodies. Stansell, a 44-year-old ex-Marine built like a linebacker, was one of those bodies, Howes added with a chuckle.

CONTROVERSY

A book the three wrote, Out of Captivity, sparked international controversy over critical comments made about Betancourt. Stansell reportedly accused her of stealing food, hoarding books, and endangering the three Americans’ lives by telling the guards that they were CIA agents.

But on Thursday, the three focused on their gratitude for the rescue, and urged the audience not to abandon 22 other hostages still held by the FARC in the Colombian jungle.

Story Here

 

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Books: Out of Captivity, Surviving 1,967 Days in a Colombian Jungle

Filed under: Books,Colombia — Tags: , , , , , , , — Matt @ 4:42 PM

Out of Captivity

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

On February 13, 2003, a plane carrying three American civilian contractors—Marc Gonsalves, Keith Stansell, and Tom Howes—crash-landed in the mountainous jungle of Colombia. Dazed and shaken, they emerged from the plane bloodied and injured as gunfire rained down around them. As of that moment they were prisoners of the FARC, a Colombian terrorist and Marxist rebel organization. In an instant they had become American captives in Colombia’s volatile and ongoing conflict, which has lasted for almost fifty years.

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