Posted on 06/03/2010 10:53:06 AM PDT by AuntB
On Thursday, Cochise County rancher Bill McDonald testified before two House subcommittees about border issues faced by rural Arizona residents.
He was invited by Democratic U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, whose 8th Congressional District includes all of Cochise County.
In inviting him to testify, Giffords said she wanted members of Congress to hear from a person who lives with security problems caused by illegal activities involving immigrants and drugs on a daily basis.
He testified on a day Democrats in the Senate killed a move by Sen. John McCain to send 6,000 more National Guard troops to the border. President Barack Obama this week agreed to send 1,200 Guard members.
Testimony of William McDonald
I am pleased to have this opportunity to testify at this joint hearing on U.S.-Mexico security. My name is Bill McDonald, and I am the fifth generation on my familys 103-year-old ranch in the far corner of southeastern Arizona. The southern boundary of the ranch lies approximately 5 miles north of the Mexican border while the headquarters lie 7 miles north of the border in Sycamore Canyon, which runs east-west in the Peloncillo Mountains near the New Mexico line.
Border-crossers, going both ways, are not new to our area. As long as I can remember, and long before, ranch hands and cowboys from northern Chihuahua and Sonora have crossed to work in southern Arizona and New Mexico, and some American cowboys periodically went into Mexico to get work as well. The border was casual and the area was peaceful for years.
About 25 years ago, a highway was completed between Agua Prieta, Sonora and Janos, Chihuahua. The highway parallels the border for several miles and gives prospective border crossers much easier access to the area. Still, the numbers of crossers did not become problematic for local residents until 10 years ago or so.
Large amounts of trash, cut pasture fences, floats broken off in water troughs, water lines cut and precious stored water lost, trails made by humans so deep that they start gully erosion, forest fires that are started by campfires or perhaps even deliberately and the corresponding ramping up of the Border Patrol response which has caused a tenfold use of ranch two track roads and the county dirt road; all of this has cost ranchers dearly in repairs, extra cattle work, and destruction of the landscape. Still, most ranchers just continued to try to live with it.
In the last three years to five years, however, the character of the crossers has taken an ominous turn. They often wear black and paint their water jugs black. They pass by our ranch house so close at night that you can hear them talking between the barks of our dogs. We, who live in a deep east-west canyon and had never had a break-in, had two occur in 2009. Neighbors to the north who live in north-south facing canyons, or in the valley, have experienced many more.
A few years ago, Congresswoman Giffords began arranging meetings between the Border Patrol and southern Arizona ranchers. The Border Patrol also began regularly attending meetings of the Malpai Borderlands Group, an organization that was formed by the ranchers and some conservationists 16 years ago to support the beautiful open-space landscape of the area against subdivision and has become a model for cooperation in public and private land management. It was at one of these meetings, when the discussion turned to the fact that some crossers were now armed with automatic rifles, and were becoming increasingly brazen, that Rob Krentz, whose family has also ranched here for 103 years, made the observation that if things continued as they were, it was inevitable that someone would be killed. On March 27, Rob went out on his All-Terrain Vehicle to check the waters in one of his pastures. He never came back. His body was found late that night. The tracks of the killer were followed to the Mexican border.
Since his death, things have hardly slowed down. Recently, a bird watcher trying to enter Horseshoe Canyon in the Chiricahua Mountains, across the valley from the Peloncillos, was turned back by an armed drug smuggler who warned him to stay out. Its public land, but its dangerous for the public to use. The number of such incidents and the actual crimes per capita are enormous considering the small population that resides here. Forest Service employees and many others who work for government agencies now can only go out on the land in pairs.
I, like most ranchers, cant afford to hire someone just to tag along, and so I mostly still work alone, although I try to be careful about who approaches me. My roots are here and I and my wife arent going to be run off. As Rob Krentzs brother Phil said, Im not going to let them whip me down. Im here until something gets done about this or I myself am killed. The question is: Do I want my grandchildren to be raised here as my daughter was and all my family going back to 1907? I dont have any grandchildren yet and Im glad I dont because, yes, I would be afraid for them. A solitary ranch, miles from the nearest neighbor, is very vulnerable.
It is our own governments policy of forcing the illegal crossers into the most rural, most formidable terrain that is responsible for the traffic we are enduring. The crossings, both drugs and people are, of course, being controlled by the Drug Trafficking Organizations and they are not deterred by high mountains, steep canyons, brush, or scarce water, and certainly not by high fences in the middle of nowhere. So what can be done?
There is a real need for better communications. For years we have incredulously pointed out that the Douglas and Lordsburg sectors, working side by side, could not talk to each other because Douglas had digital radios and Lordsburg analog. Since the murder of Rob Krentz, a way has been found to sort of work around that issue but communication remains a challenge. The two forward operating bases that are established in the area cannot be reached by nearby residents, except by physically going there. Cell phone service is patchy everywhere and nonexistent in some places. Communication between the Border Patrol and other law enforcement is a struggle and often isnt possible.
There is a need for more technology that works and the additional necessary personnel to operate it. Especially useful have been the mobile surveillance systems. We need more of them. Months ago I signed an agreement to allow one to be set up on our private land. We still havent seen it. What is not needed is silver bullet, pie in the sky stuff. There is no easy answer or one size that fits all.
There is a need here for more air support. There is also a need for increased horse patrol units. Whether its light helicopters or C-130s, air support working with the horse patrol has been a winning combination in the mountains, but its all too rare.
We believe the bulk of the agents should be on the border, not 10, 20, 30 or more miles from it. Deterrence should be the goal, not capture. Until such time as an appropriate number of agents can be recruited and trained, the National Guard should be called in, and this time with bullets in their guns. The agents need the appropriate training, gear and firepower and authority to use it in order to be able to stay right on the border. In support of this we need many more forward operating bases, approximately one per every twelve miles.
Agents who work in rural areas that are high traffic areas should draw hardship duty pay. Veteran agents should be returned often to areas where they have knowledge of the terrain. We still have too many greenhorns burning up gas just trying to figure out where they are. A few Special Forces agents who can stay out for an extended period of time (as opposed to working in shifts) are currently deployed here, but we dont know for how long. An evaluation of the Border Patrols effectiveness in rural areas using this method, versus the traditional shift method of deployment, would probably a useful exercise.
Funding for Operation Stonegarden needs to be increased. Local and state law enforcement agencies near the border have a hugely disproportionate expense in dealing with criminal aliens compared to their colleagues in other locales.
Streamline the claims process for recovery of damages caused by illegal aliens to ranches and homes. Our neighbor to the south (still in the U.S.) has had their ranch subjected to a campaign of vandalism intended to intimidate them into quitting. In Mexico, where this has happened, it has resulted in persons with connections to drug trafficking obtaining the ranch.
Operation Streamline, which ensures that repeat border crossers serve time in jail, needs full funding and support. Where this has been implemented, illegal crossings have been significantly reduced. To ensure timely prosecution, the funding for State and Federal Attorneys Offices must be funded to the appropriate levels.
It is the opinion of most ranchers here that money spent for high fences or other physical barriers would be better spent on the aforementioned items.
I certainly support the Merida Agreement and believe that working with other countries more effectively and cooperatively to address the criminal activities that plague our border is the long term approach that has the best chance for success.
Some type of immigration policy reform that does not even remotely involve amnesty would also be helpful, but unfortunately appears unlikely to happen soon.
For the present, the federal governments responsibility is to secure our borders and protect our citizens. We need to do it now.
BTW...NAFBPO is considering stopping their M3Foreign news report. Please leave them a message that we get MUCH news from this and please continue it.
http://m3report.wordpress.com/
M3 Report special note: Last Friday night, a group of Mexican citizens was being taken by U.S. Border Patrol Agents to the border crossing point between San Ysidro, CA, and Tijuana, Mexico. All the Mexicans were illegally in the United States, in custody, and were transported to the pedestrian gate for their return to Mexico. When released to go, one of them suddenly bolted northbound and had to be chased and caught by officers. A struggle ensued and a taser gun was used to subdue the individual, who then collapsed; he was then taken to a San Diego area hospital and has since died. A routine review of Mexican periodicals today shows that this event has been given nationwide coverage. Many papers have sensationalized it by alleging the mans death was caused by a brutal beating by a number of agents. Some Mexican federal congressmen are condemning the event as a homicide, and one of them stated this is only a sample of the treatment of detained migrants in the United States. Another one alleges that this is a result of the Arizona law. While the event is currently under investigation by U.S. officials, more objective reports of the incident have been published in TV stations and newspapers of the San Diego area in the last couple of days. [However, not one of the congressmen, news media, or plain citizens of Mexico decried or expressed the same reaction about the continuous, horrific bloodbath and rampant savagery routinely occurring elsewhere, with very few exceptions, around their country.] A current article (in Spanish) in Zocalo (Saltillo, Coahuila) has some of the views expressed by Mexican congressmen, and can be seen through the link below. A preliminary report from one Mexico City paper about this incident also appeared in the M3 Report of 5/31/10.
http://www.zocalo.com.mx/seccion/articulo/asesinato-de-migrante-efecto-de-ley-arizona-diputados/
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El Comercio (Quito, Ecuador) 6/1/10
The two fears [Portions of an op/col. by Carlos Alberto Montaner, titled as shown]
I live between two worlds. I live between two fears. In one, in Europe, where I spend a good part of the year, I am part of the terrorized. In another, in the United States, I belong to the ones who terrorize. Ill explain myself: in Europe, societys mainstream suffers from the growing Islamic presence. Fifty-four million Muslims live in Europe. According to the Dutch congressman Geert Wilders, in 12 years the European population will be 25% Muslim. That is already the proportion in Amsterdam, Holland, in Marseilles, France, and in Malmo, Sweden. According to the demographic projection, those who identify with Islam will be the majority in Europe by the end of the 21st Century.
What do millions of Europeans fear? The growing demographic weight of an ethnic-cultural segment alien to the white and Christian tradition, enemy of the West during the Middle Ages, and one which might end imposing its backward values and its anti-liberal world view.
I cross the Atlantic. An anti-Hispanic sign greets me on the last trip to Miami: Latinos no. Tacos no. Eighty percent of the 45 million Hispanics in the U.S. are Mexican. Many Anglos [sic] and Afro-Americans are suspicious of the Hispanics. They are concerned about this group, the use of Spanish and the different customs. In the year 2050, Hispanics will be the majority ethnic segment. But the most moving issue is another: the presence of the Mexican cartel mafia, with its kidnappings and crimes, has been detected in more than 200 U.S. cities.
Arizona, due to its proximity with Mexico, is one of those battlefields. The anti illegal immigrants legislation it has just approved is related to these violent events, but the spirit of the law (not its wording) is anti-Hispanic. Millions of Americans silently detest that their country may change its cultural profile.
The two great centers of the West, as much in the U.S. as in Europe, perceive that their identity may be in danger. And theyre probably right: the West is changing its skin (color). It seems to be a slow, long, very painful process, and one permeated by fear.
http://www.elcomercio.com/2010-06-01/Noticias/Opinion/Noticias-Secundarias/EC100601P10CMONTANER.aspx
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La Hora (Quito, Ecuador) 6/1/10
Welcome to the country, but
According to Ecuadors Attorney General, Washington Pesantez, theres a lack of control of the entry of Cubans into Ecuador. He stated, Welcome to the country, but theres already too many of you; and if you came in for tourism its time to go back, well, otherwise some neighborhoods are overrun. To Pesantez, not all Cubans arrive with good intentions because some, come to the country to do certain things that are not quite those of good Cubans, many of them are smugglers. He has also asked Ecuadors President to have the entry of Cubans be more selective in order to avoid that those persons, being only tourists, can become naturalized Ecuadorans. (Ecuador currently does not require visas for the entry of tourists from most nations of the world; it has seen a noticeable increase in the number of Chinese and Cuban tourists.)
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Three similar end-of-the-month reports, from three different newspapers.
1) La Prensa Grafica (San Salvador, El Salvador) 6/1/10
Records of El Salvadors National Police show that the month of May ended with 356 homicides, an average of eleven every 24 hours. This years current tally of murders has now reached 1,799. (El Salvador is slightly smaller than Massachusetts.)
2) El Debate (Culiacan, Sinaloa) 6/1/10
In the Mexican state of Sinaloa, this year there have been:
* 230 homicides in January * 200 in February * 194 in March * 202 in April * 149 in May
3) El Diario (Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua) 6/1/10
Ciudad Juarez closed the month of May with 253 victims of homicide. The first five months of the year have seen the murder of 1,087 persons in Juarez, an increase of 61% over last years figures.
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- end of report -
This is totally unacceptable. A nation without enforced borders is, in many ways, simply not a nation anymore. Those who testify before committees need to bring it right to their front door. Ask them how THEY would react if their sacred halls and offices were suddenly deprived of guards and open to the general public. In fact, why do all the government offices in D.C. need detectors and guards anyway? The same principle applies, but undoubtedly they’d be too dumb to see it.
Another good article today.
Badlands: From ground zero of the immigration crisis along the Mexican border
Ping!
I wonder how many owners in that area have instituted a policy of shoot, shovel and shut up? I’d be tempted if it were me.
Good stuff!!
It is a good article.
The value on Mexican life is set way too high.
There must be thousands of Mexicans killed and the crossings will stop. Until there is a fear of death, not just inconvenience or temporary detainment, the crossings will continue.
A fence is a mere inconvenience and a costly futile luxury. Blood on the desert is the solution.
bump
If they are in bad shape, put them on the other side of the border and don't waste American money on a hospital stay.
Border ping
Sometimes I wonder if this is still my country... it's so different now.
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