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Saturday, August 27, 2005

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Unlike Japan, Taiwan politics lags in maturity Taiwan's politicians and political parties should pay closer attention... [Full story]

Opinion

Mexican's drug rings pose real threat


2005-08-25 / Knight Ridder / By Jerry Brewer

Opinion

A pointed question for Bush I've received a huge outpouring of e-mail in response to ... [Full story] Latin America's narcotics industry, coupled with the continuing threat of terrorist attacks, should be an intense wakeup call to the world. These are true threats, global
Perspective

menaces that are clearly on the move and quickly gaining momentum with political dimensions. The feared drug trade of the past is now an ugly monster that has taken on the face and shape of terrorism. A beast that has gotten past knocking at the door on our

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southern borders with a sinister and still secreted agenda. Have we been blinded, with attention diverted to the Middle East intentionally? Have our wide-open spaces in this land of the free become chokepoints for insurgent

China's anti-secession law and ways Taiwan can save itself China passed an antisecession law on March 14, dropping a bombshell on the situation in the ... [Full story]

travel? In 2002, when testifying before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee, State Department officials discussed a link in the Western Hemisphere between various terrorist groups and narcotics traffickers. As well, more recent evidence indicates that

Kabayan

Colombians no longer top the list of the Western Hemisphere's drug trade kingpins. According to John Walters, the White House anti-drug czar, "Colombians have pulled back. Today the Mexicans have taken over and are running organized crime and getting the bulk of the money." And lucrative northbound delivery routes of these traffickers appear to be the leverage. The battles of the Sinaloa versus Gulf cartels (largely over Nuevo Laredo area pathways) are a clear manifestation of the terrorist movement in Mexico. The assassinations of Mexican police and government officials, sightings of paramilitary commandos in Texas and Arizona, and attacks by the latter on U.S. law enforcement personnel show that these terrorists possess sophisticated weaponry, strategic training, battle zone skills, and worrisome daring. Governors Bill Richardson (New Mexico) and Janet Napolitano (Arizona) have both

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declared states of emergency along their borders. Richardson's declaration said the region "was devastated by the ravages and terror of human smuggling, drug smuggling, murder," and related crimes. When confronted with this, along with the temporary closing of the U.S. Consulate in Nuevo Laredo, Mexican President Vicente Fox was quick to remind the United States of its enormous drug habit. Fox is right. Estimates are that consumers in the United States provide the cartels with anywhere from US$10 billion to US $30 billion annually. That will buy lots of leading-edge weapons and hired guns, and allow untold bribes and payoffs as money from the United States paves the cross-border entry routes with gold. More must be done to stem drug demand, use and sales in the United States. Critics are also quick to call for the legalization of drugs, as if this would deter the quest for U.S. dollars. But there will always be a vice or contraband in demand for a heavy price, and that includes human life. And there will always be suppliers on demand. So let's not be fooled - this by no means is just about drugs. It is about power and money, trafficking in humans, the sale of firearms and gunrunning, money

laundering and other financial crimes, and quite possibly terrorist ideology and motive. President Fox states that he wants mutual cooperation in fighting these organized criminals, although Mexicans insist that they alone can be directly involved within their sovereign country. But is it reasonable to think Mexico can sustain a fight on its own against groups that are so well armed, trained and backed? Looking farther south, intelligence reports indicate that President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela may have harbored and aided Colombian guerrillas, reports that should be taken seriously. As well, the relationship and shared agendas of Chavez and Cuba's Fidel Castro suggest the possibility of continued arming of revolutionary cadres throughout Latin America. The Russian media have reported that Chavez recently ordered 100,000 Kalashnikov automatic weapons from Moscow. Other assessments indicate that Venezuela's guard and police are already well armed - making one suspect that the new weapons could be for clandestine distribution and use. Along these lines, former Colombian Justice Minister Fernando Londono wrote in Bogota's El Tiempo, "Chavez and Castro know that there is no dictatorship without arms."

This all indicates that the potential for a Venezuelan alliance with the world's worst criminal organizations - and terrorists - is conceivable. Furthermore, the possibility of further aggression by Chavez against neighboring governments cannot be ignored. And his interest in rallying fellow anti-U.S. ideologues in Latin America to move north, using allies and associates inbetween as they target this country must not be disregarded. Jerry Brewer is a columnist for MexiData. info.

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