Abolishing America (contd.): Mexican Army, Police Ignore Border
By
Sam Francis
If it's war you want, forget Afghanistan and the
"Axis of Evil" invented by the president's
speechwriters and take a look at our dear
amigo to the south, Mexico.
Last year, according to documented reports of the
U.S. Border Patrol, Mexican troops and police officers
crossed into United States territory at least 23 times.
Since the Bush administration seems to be silent about
and indifferent to these invasions,
Rep. Tom Tancredo, by far the most courageous
critic of mass immigration now in public life, has
demanded an explanation from the Mexican government.
Don't bet your tamales he'll get a serious one.
The explanation Mr. Tancredo does get from Mexico is
that the incursions were in pursuit of drug smugglers.
"The troops are fighting against drugs," a
Mexican government official told the Washington Times
last week, "and sometimes they get lost in
those areas--there is no clear marking for the border."
[Mexican
soldiers in border crossings Washington Times May
13, 2002]
Well, maybe sometimes they do. I guess you can't
count on Mexican troops and police officers knowing
where they are or being able to use maps, compasses and
radios to find out.
But maybe sometimes they're not "fighting drugs" but
smuggling them. That's what Mr. Tancredo, who visited
the border region in April, found out.
U.S. Border Patrol agents "are reporting that they
see people coming through with guns. The concern is that
there are people coming through with arms, M-16s,
protecting drug carriers," Mr. Tancredo says.
"And they are not lost."
Mexicans covering for drug smugglers is not
necessarily the issue, however. For several years now,
Mexican troops seem to have waltzed into U.S. territory
pretty much whenever and wherever they felt like it.
In March, the Border Patrol says, four Mexican troops
carrying submachine guns and automatic rifles were
detained when they encountered Border Patrol agents.
In
October, 2000, 10 Mexican soldiers were reported to
have fired on a U.S. air unit.
In March, 2000, two Mexican military vehicles
allegedly on an anti-drug mission crossed the U.S.
border and actually fired shots at Border Patrol agents.
Some of these incursions may indeed be accidents or
the results of enforcement operations in uncertain
territories. Then again, the fact is that Mexico really
doesn't much care whether it's U.S. territory or not,
since a great many Mexicans think the area
belongs to them anyway. Given the vast immigration
of Mexicans into the region, some day it will.
In 1997, the predecessor of current Mexican President
Vicente Fox, Ernesto Zedillo, told Mexican nationals in
Chicago, "I have proudly affirmed that the Mexican
nation
extends beyond the territory enclosed by its borders
and that Mexican migrants are an important--a very
important--part of this." [RealAudio
Sound Clip]
Just so. By
encouraging the massive migration of its unwanted
nationals into our country, Mexico constructs a
population base that can eventually simply
swallow the regions it lost in the
Mexican-American War. Mr. Tancredo says Mexican
officials told him Mexico
views the Southwest United States and northern
Mexico not "as two countries, but as 'one region.'"
Meanwhile, Mexican cops and troops can act as though
the border doesn't really exist by crossing it whenever
they feel like it and doing whatever they please,
including firing on American government agents.
"These situations can be very difficult," a
Border Patrol officer told the Times. "We are
outgunned in these instances. They have automatic
rifles, and we have
handguns." Mexican military support for illegal
drug smuggling, he said, is "a definite
possibility." Aside from their profound patriotic
attachment to the nation's
lost territories, Mexican
cops and
soldiers are not exactly famous for their honesty.
The border incidents with Mexico are by no means
new--I wrote
columns about
some of them as long as two years ago--but apparently
neither the Clinton nor the Bush administration has done
much about them. Mr. Tancredo has, at least to the
extent that a congressman by himself can.
What should be done, now that the Border Patrol
itself has confirmed that armed Mexican police and
soldiers seem
unable to stay out of a country that isn't theirs
and where they have no business, is to
deploy the U.S. Army to round up the illegal aliens
and drug smugglers on our side of the border and to keep
the Mexican army and police on theirs.
Almost certainly, the ulterior purpose of the
military and police crossings is to habituate the U.S.
government and its officials--not to mention
American citizens--into thinking that areas that
belong to the United States are really Mexican.
If so, a few shots from U.S. troops in the other
direction might inform the Mexican military who it is
who is really
outgunned--and remind them of whose country they
made the mistake of invading.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
May 20, 2002