Posted on 04/03/2009 6:22:34 AM PDT by marktwain
Senior American officials are trooping to Mexico with assurances of support in its drug war. Will warm words be backed up by action?
Reuters ARIZONAS attorney-general, Terry Goddard, says he started to worry about American guns ending up in the hands of Mexican drug traffickers two years ago. That was after a meeting in Cuernavaca with Mexicos attorney-general, Eduardo Medina Mora, who urged him and several of his counterparts from other American states to enforce the law banning the export of assault weapons that can be legally bought north of the border. Keen to help, Mr Goddard spent months building a case alleging that George Iknadosian, the owner of a Phoenix gun shop, had knowingly sold some 700 assault weapons to straw men working for the narcos. It could have been a landmark case. Mr Iknadosian pleaded not guilty, and last month a state judge threw out all the charges against him on a point of law. Prosecutors blamed a clash between federal and state law on arms smuggling.
This is just one example of how hard it will be for the United States to implement its promise to collaborate with Mexico in quelling drug-related violence. But Mexican officials are pleased that at least the promise has been made. During a two-day visit last month, Hillary Clinton, the secretary of state, admitted that Americas insatiable demand for illegal drugs fuels the drug trade and that our inability to prevent weapons from being illegally smuggled across the border to arm these criminals causes the deaths of police officers, soldiers and civilians in Mexico.
Her visit was the clearest sign that the American administration has woken up to what is at stake in the battle unleashed by Mexicos president, Felipe Calderón, against the drug cartels, in which 10,000 people have died since December 2006. She was to be followed on April 2nd by Janet Napolitano, the secretary for homeland security, and Eric Holder, the attorney-general. Barack Obama himself will drop in for talks with Mr Calderón before both attend the Summit of the Americas in Trinidad on April 17th.
They finally started paying attention, says Arturo Sarukhan, Mexicos ambassador in Washington. That is partly because some Americans fear the violence is starting to spread northward, although such worries look exaggerated (see article). But it is also in part owing to a war of words that has raged across the border in recent weeks.
This began with a report in November from the United States Joint Forces Command bracketing Mexico and Pakistan as the two countries most at risk of becoming failed states. Dennis Blair, the new director of national intelligence, then told a Senate committee that the corruption and violence of the drug cartels was hindering the Mexican government from controlling part of its territory. Having largely ignored Mexicos fight against the drug gangs for the past two years, American television has suddenly latched on to it, in sensationalist terms. Spurred on by his own media, Mr Calderón, by instinct an American ally, responded by accusing American officials of corrupt complicity in the drug trade.
So Mrs Clintons comments were welcomed in Mexico. As to whether the words will lead to practical co-operation, Mexican officials say they are getting more help with intelligence on the drug gangs from their American counterparts. But Mrs Clintons promise of Black Hawk helicopters for the Mexican police was undercut by Congresss pruning of funding for the Mérida Initiative, a plan under which Mexico was to receive $1.4 billion in aid over three years. American officials now say they will seek to reverse the cut. But more than aid, Mexico wants the Americans to crack down on drug consumption, as well as the movement of guns and money southward. That is where the big difficulties lie.
The Obama administration promises to send several hundred more agents to the border, both from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and from Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The idea is that they will search southbound traffic and railcars. Mr Calderón wants the Americans to tip off their Mexican counterparts about gun trafficking, and to curb gun sales. Mrs Clinton said she favours the reinstatement of a federal ban on selling semi-automatic assault weapons such as AK-47s. Mexican police claim that since the ban lapsed in 2004, the cartels have become much more powerfully armed: of 30,000 guns they have seized since December 2006, 15,000 are assault weapons, nearly all bought at the 7,500 or so gun shops on the American side of the border.
But the gun lobby opposes the ban. John Barrasso, a Republican senator from Wyoming, said in El Paso this week that violence in Mexico is an argument for more assault weapons, not fewer: Why would you disarm someone when they potentially could get caught in the crossfire? He continued: The United States will not surrender our second-amendment rights for Mexicos border problem.
Facing so many other battles, Mr Obama would surely prefer not to be drawn into this one. Mr Sarukhan says that merely enforcing existing gun laws would be a big help. For Mexico, too, there are dangers in framing its relations with the United States purely around security. Trade, economic integration and immigration are equally vital. For now, however, the drug war has captured the headlines in both countries, leaving the politicians with no choice but to respond.
Many, many outlets for “the big lie”
It has pretty much been debunked that the Mexican drug cartels are using American made weapons.
The only weapons turned over by Mexico to the US are those with serial numbers....most of the weapons the Mexican drug cartels use have no serial numbers...which the Mexicans do not turn over to the Americans.
There is nothing more anti-American, and nothing more pro Hispanic Ku Klux Klan....than to blame America and Americans for that Turd World craphole Mexico sliding ever deeper into the bottom of the world’s Porta Potty....I am tired of the USA getting blamed for Mexico
The Economist long ago went over to the dark side. For years it has been “The Keynesian Economist,” and decidedly anti-American.
Secure the boarder... problem solved... many problems solved.
Hey, any phony excuse to confiscate guns from the American people will do! This is just the latest.
The Cockroach and the Lightswitch: A Spotlight on the Gunshow-Loophole-Mexican-Narco-Nexus Lie
According to an analysis of the DCS reports, some $1 billion in defense hardware was approved for export to Mexico via private U.S. companies between fiscal year 2004 and fiscal year 2007 the most recent year for which data was available. Overall, during the same period, a total of some $3.7 billion in weapons and other military hardware was approved for export under the DCS program to all of Latin America and the Caribbean.
In addition to the military hardware exports approved for Mexico, some $3.8 billion in defense-related services [technical assistance and training via private U.S. contractors] also were approved for export to Mexico over the same four-year period, according to the DCS reports.
That is a small sample of what that article reveals. So, who is arming and training the drug cartels? It looks like Uncle Sam to me.
Here is another article proving the same point.
The Brits are idiots when it comes to guns and knives. Of course guns are out. It is a criminal offense to walk around in London with a Swiss-army knife in your pocket.
You are so right. It is the inevitable failing caused by false assumptions about reality.
When you assume that the problem is in inanimate objects rather than in people and their attitudes, you set yourself up for failure.
The British and their attitude toward inanimate objects are becoming a world level joke.
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