Posted on 07/17/2005 5:25:28 PM PDT by archy
FBI bulletin outlines possible terrorist plot at Texas border
BY ALFREDO CORCHADO AND JASON TRAHAN
The Dallas Morning News
DALLAS - (KRT) - Dirt roads trace pale lines across a desolate landscape of bald peaks and plunging canyons near Texas' Big Bend and bridge the international boundary at dozens of improvised crossings. For decades, these routes have been used to smuggle drugs and humans. Now there is growing concern they could become deadly conduits for terrorism.
The concern is buttressed by a confidential but unclassified FBI intelligence bulletin, obtained by The Dallas Morning News, that contains the vague outlines of a possible terrorist plot.
Officials from both sides of the border downplayed the possible threat but acknowledged that it is the sort of scenario they have to guard against. The prospect of terrorists crossing the southern border has been a rising concern among officials in Texas and Washington.
The plot, according to uncorroborated information provided by an FBI informant, involves a man, described as an Arab who goes by the nickname "El Espanol," and Ernesto Zatarin Beliz, also known as El Traca, a reputed Mexican drug trafficker and member of the Zetas, the feared enforcers of the notorious Gulf cartel.
"El Espanol is gathering truck drivers with knowledge of truck routes in the United States and explosive experts" in the state of Coahuila, according to the March 11 memo, which originated in the San Diego FBI office and was made available by a U.S. attorney's office. The informant "believes that the activity in Coahuila, Mexico, is terrorist related."
In exchange for the Zetas' help in recruiting drivers, the memo says, the Arab - who barely speaks Spanish - promised to help them fund and execute a plan to free Gulf cartel leader Osiel Cardenas from prison. The Gulf cartel is embroiled in a bloody turf war with rival traffickers for control of Nuevo Laredo, a key drug smuggling route into the United States.
According to the FBI memo, Traca was attempting to recruit a security guard at a Mexican government explosives factory in Cuatro Cienegas, Coahuila, to assist with the Arab's plan. The region is known for producing nitric acid and ammonium nitrate, materials that are used for industrial and agricultural purposes and can also be ingredients for explosives.
The informant has "provided reliable narcotics intelligence in the past," the bulletin says, but adds that the informant also flunked two polygraph tests.
The San Diego FBI analyst who wrote the document declined to comment. The division's spokeswoman said publication of such sensitive information would undermine the bureau's mission.
"We are trying to protect national security," said Special Agent Jan Caldwell. "We can't do that when things like this are put in newspapers."
A senior Mexican intelligence official said the information in the memo had not been corroborated.
"The informant paved a road that led nowhere," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. He added that Mexican federal agents spent "literally weeks chasing down the information, only to come up empty-handed."
However, the Mexican intelligence official confirmed the identity of El Traca as Zatarin and said that El Espanol was a known human trafficker, specializing in smuggling Middle Easterners and South Americans, particularly Brazilians and Paraguayans.
Mexican authorities have been unable to track down El Espanol, the official said.
According to the March FBI bulletin, Mexican authorities arrested Zatarin in September 2003 and found an arsenal of assault rifles in his residence, described by Mexican authorities as a "bunker utilized by Los Zetas." Zatarin later escaped, however, and his picture and name are now on a poster listing Mexico's most wanted criminals.
"FBI intelligence indicates that Los Zetas are becoming increasingly involved in systematic corruption as well as alien smuggling ... (including) special interest aliens to the U.S.," the bulletin concludes.
Since the 2001 terrorist attacks, the Bush administration and members of Congress from both parties have viewed the southern border as a weak link in efforts to keep terrorists out of the United States, even though the Sept. 11 terrorists entered the country with visas, some legal, others forged.
"That's been the concern all along, that there would be a bargain struck between al-Qaida or some (other) terrorist organization and these organized crime networks that would allow terrorists to be smuggled into the country," U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said in an interview. "I think that's a very real concern."
At a hearing Tuesday of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the chairman, Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., said: "Given the threat of international terrorism, there is great concern that our land borders could also serve as a channel for international terrorists and weapons of mass destruction. The threat of terrorist penetration is particularly acute along our southern border."
Senior U.S. officials added that other criminal groups such as the Mara Salvatrucha - the Central American gang that has moved into several U.S. cities and has a growing presence along the U.S.-Mexico border - also are a top concern for U.S. authorities.
Lugar said that 3,000 to 4,000 of the 119,000 non-Mexican immigrants apprehended so far this year trying to cross illegally into the United States were from "countries of interest" like Somalia, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. That number is up from 75,371 for all of 2004 and is expected to reach 148,000 by year's fiscal end.
Adm. James Loy, former Homeland Security deputy secretary, declined to comment on the specific plot outlined in the FBI memo, but earlier this year he suggested that such a threat is real.
"Entrenched human-smuggling networks and corruption in areas beyond our borders can be exploited by terrorist organizations," Loy said in written testimony at a congressional hearing in February. "Several al-Qaeda leaders believe operatives can pay their way into the country through Mexico and also believe illegal entry is more advantageous than legal entry for operational security reasons."
But law enforcement officials discounted the suggestion that terrorists would use the rugged Big Bend area to transport explosives - especially in a tractor-trailer that would glaringly stand out.
"I think there would be easier ways to get explosives inside the United States," said Benjamine Carry Huffman, assistant chief patrol agent for U.S. Customs & Border Protection in Marfa, Texas.
But the intelligence bulletin noted that the alleged terror plot, as relayed by the informant, was still a work in progress, leaving open the possibility that less conspicuous vehicles might be employed. And the FBI memo said that "one possible smuggling route Traca wanted to use was through Big Bend National Park."
The border patrol's Marfa sector is its largest, covering 510 miles of border with Mexico, including part of Big Bend National Park, and bordering the Mexican states of Chihuahua and Coahuila. With some 200 agents, it has the smallest force of any sector along the Mexican border, according to Bill Brooks, the sector spokesman.
Much of the area is desert and mountainous terrain, dotted by at least a dozen informal crossings known as Class B ports of entry. These consist of makeshift bridges capable of carrying foot and some lighter vehicle traffic. Authorities tried to seal them off after Sept. 11, 2001, but several have been re-established. Officials acknowledged that agents cannot regularly police the informal crossings.
"Who ever imagined that terrorists would use passenger planes to crash into tall buildings?" Hoffman said. "After September 11, we have to operate on a different mindset, one in which we take absolutely nothing for granted. Is it possible terrorists can come across this border with explosives or a dirty bomb? Absolutely."
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(Dallas Morning News correspondent Michelle Mittelstadt in Washington contributed to this report.)
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© 2005, The Dallas Morning News.
Visit The Dallas Morning News on the World Wide Web at http://www.dallasnews.com
Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.
Another question comes to mind: How many American citizen drug addicts would be willing to hike a nuclear device across from Mexico if the payment was in uncut drugs?
Bumping your links.
Thank you Brad's Gramma.
:-)
I'm sure Bush sits back, relying on the fact his own policy got him elected twice, and he doesn't have to run again.
Policy positions for Republican presidential candidates are their own business. Tancredo first out of the blocks.
Unfortunately, we are likely to have our next terrorist attack well before the 08 election cycle gets into full swing. There are only one or two potential candidates that have ANY interest in persuing the illegal immigration issue(Tancredo). The Republicans will be discredited and will find themselves swimming uphill. Hillary doesn't for a minute believe in stemming the flow, but has advocated that she will, knowing full well that MANY pubbies want it. The country will suffer severely from the attack and the Republican party will be blamed for not protecting us. I just can't see how they can continue to ignore it.
The wide world of wonders on the web...amazing at times.
Most excellent!
It's not "my" fencing, and it's still faster to put up than poured in place or standard brick. [shrug]
As promised.
Good night now.
Yes it is. Mainly because the forms aren't required. I like the idea too, but I doubt if we will ever see fruition of it.
Walmart's using a lot of their products these days.
Thanks for the ping. It's great but unsurprising news to hear that our government is addressing the threat.
BTTT
Use captured illegals to build ours as punishment. Sentence them to 6 mo. labor on the new 30 ft high wall from Tijuana to Brownsville. It would be built in 6 months.They couldn't come back and I'm not sure they would want to.
ping
Good find archy. Thanks for posting this!
And they are just now deciding to state the obvious???
My Dad used to take us camping out in the Big Bend area between Ruidosa/Presidio and BB every year between Christmas and New Years...It was chilly, but it was fun...
Never was a time that we didn't have a "group" trapes around our camp...
We used to camp right off the border highway, sometimes on private property (always with permission and knowledge of the owner) and could see from the higher ground from those campsites all the activity going on right across the border...
Thats when it was not "really" a problem back in the late 70's and early 80's...
Now, I would have a hard time camping in that area...Neve know what will "trapes" through your camp...
But hey...The government doesn't seem to be bothered by the intrusions on our border...So why should we???
(disclaimer: I might say that my post is sarcasm...But I'm afraid it is more of a reality check...Its a jaded position that may, or may not, change in the future...I apologise if my post has offended anyone... )
I went skinny dipping in the hot springs, but that's for another thread.
And Condi Rice and the team. She was lying before that committee. Not that I blame her. Of course they had thought about it. They couldn't predict they would do it that day, or that the hijackers would be ID'd by the system and that the system would let them go.
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