Border War: Mexican police join drug lords
Jerry Seper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Part Three of Five
SONOYTA, Mexico — This isolated area of the
U.S.-Mexico border, a 100-mile-wide stretch of wild desert between the
Organ Pipe Cactus National
Monument and Coronado National Forest, has become one of America's
newest drug corridors.
Mexican drug lords, backed by corrupt Mexican
military officers and police officials, will move tons of marijuana, cocaine
and heroin this year over rugged desert
trails to accomplices in Phoenix and Tucson for shipment to willing
buyers throughout the United States.
Most of the smuggling routes pass through
the Tohono O'odham Nation, a sprawling Indian reservation, where undermanned
and outgunned tribal police will
confiscate more than 100,000 pounds of illicit drugs this year, about
300 pounds a day.
"They keep us running like you can't believe,"
said Detective Sgt. David Cray, who heads the Tohono Police Department's
anti-drug unit. "They have two-way
radios, night-vision gear, body armor and carry automatic weapons."
"They've put people on the hills to act as
lookouts and use portable solar panels to power their communications equipment,"
he said. "They have powerful
four-wheel-drive vehicles and are under orders not to stop — to shoot
their way through if they have to."
The smugglers, according to U.S. law-enforcement
authorities, often are protected by heavily armed Mexican military troops
and police, who have been paid
handsomely to escort the drug traffickers and their illicit shipments
across the border and into the United States.
The drug lords are expected to spend more
than $500 million this year in bribes and payoffs to a cadre of Mexican
military generals and police officials to ensure
that the illicit drugs reach their destination, the authorities said.
Mexican smugglers will account for 80 percent
of the cocaine and nearly half the heroin that reaches the streets of America
this year.
Law-enforcement authorities all along the
U.S.-Mexico border are concerned about the involvement of Mexican military
troops and police in the alien- and
drug-smuggling business. Several officials said in interviews that
many Mexican police agencies along the border have been "totally corrupted"
by drug smugglers and
that the corruption included a number of key Mexican generals and other
commanders.
Violence along the border, fueled by the drug
trade, has spiraled out of control, the officials said.
Corruption among Mexican police is so extensive,
they said, that some U.S. law-enforcement agencies refuse to work with
their Mexican counterparts. Mexican
police officials have been tied not only to alien and drug smuggling,
but also to numerous incidents of extortion, bribery, robbery, assault
and kidnapping along the
border.
Border Patrol agents in Douglas, Ariz., were
pulled from their duty stations after police in Aqua Prieta, Mexico, tipped
U.S. authorities of a pending drug
shipment. Supervisors were fearful of putting their agents in the middle
of a shootout between rival drug gangs, each supported by competing Aqua
Prieta police.
About two dozen incursions by the Mexican
military have been documented this year, some of which resulted in unprovoked
shootings, including one recent
incident involving a U.S. Border Patrol agent. Several law-enforcement
authorities along the border questioned why the Bush administration has
not made an issue of
Mexican troops crossing into the United States.
"I'm not sure what other country allows foreign
military troops such willy-nilly access," said one veteran Border Patrol
agent, speaking on the condition of
anonymity. "I've seen them come across the border, heavily armed and
equipped, and I often wonder why we're not doing anything about it."
The Mexican military deployments have occurred
all along the 1,940-mile U.S.-Mexico border, from Texas, where Border Patrol
agents in El Paso were fired on
in March 2000 by people in two Mexican army Humvees, to California,
where 10 Mexican soldiers shot at a Border Patrol helicopter in October
2000.
Many of the incursions have occurred near
this Mexican town, where drug trafficking by Mexican smugglers has reached
new levels.
"There's no doubt Mexican military units along
the border are being controlled by the drug cartels, and not by Mexico
City," said Rep. Tom Tancredo, Colorado
Republican, who recently returned from a tour of the Southwest border.
"The military units operate freely, with little or no direction, and several
of them have made
numerous incursions into the United States."
"Mexican President Vicente Fox may be trying
to take control of his military, but there is a major disconnect between
him and them — particularly among the
units along the U.S.-Mexico border," he said.
Mr. Tancredo, head of the 65-member Congressional
Immigration Reform Caucus, said the amount of drug trafficking in the remote
regions of the Southwest
desert has become so intense that armed confrontations are a constant
threat.
He said the trafficking has been tied to Mexican
drug cartels, and the shipments often are protected — sometimes even delivered
— by Mexican military units.
"There isn't a soul down there on that border,
either the Tohono O'odham police or the Border Patrol, who do not believe
that is exactly what the Mexican
military is doing," he said. "U.S. law-enforcement personnel actually
have watched the Mexican military unload drugs from their Humvees to awaiting
vehicles for
transport into the United States."
Military incursions into America
Over the past five years, U.S. authorities
have documented 118 incursions by the Mexican military. It is not known
how many times Mexican military units have
crossed undetected into the United States.
"I am amazed our government is not up in arms
about this, but I am not surprised," Mr. Tancredo said. "While we have
the resources to actually take control of
our borders, including a combination of the U.S. military and the Border
Patrol, we lack the political will."
"Instead, we continue to send young men and
women in harm's way, to be shot at and, perhaps, killed. We're asking them
to fight a war against an invasion of
illegal immigrants and drugs, but we fail to give them the support
they need to win that war."
The most recent documented Mexican military
incursion occurred on May 17, when a Border Patrol agent was fired on by
three Mexican soldiers in a military
Humvee near what is known as the San Miguel gate on the Tohono reservation,
about 30 miles northwest of Nogales, Ariz. The gunfire, which erupted shortly
after
8:30 p.m., shattered the rear window of the U.S. agent's four-wheel-drive
vehicle.
The unnamed agent, after spotting the soldiers,
had sought to avoid a confrontation and, according to U.S. authorities,
had turned his clearly marked,
green-and-white Border Patrol vehicle away from the Humvee when it
was hit by gunfire. The Mexican soldiers were armed with assault rifles.
One bullet was deflected by the vehicle's
prisoner partition, located directly behind the agent's seat. It then knocked
out the right rear window. The agent involved
has been on the job for about a year, authorities said.
Earlier that day and in the same area, Border
Patrol agents had confiscated 2,200 pounds of drugs from a vehicle that
had crossed into the United States,
although a second vehicle had escaped back into Mexico.
Edward Tuffly, president of the National Border
Patrol Council Local 2544, asked in a message posted online to union members
why the U.S. government was
slow to acknowledge the incident. "The politicians will run like hell
to avoid 'offending' anyone," he wrote.
Local 2544 represents Border Patrol agents
in the Tucson sector. The National Border Patrol Council represents more
than 8,000 nonsupervisory Border Patrol
agents.
The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service,
which oversees the Border Patrol, is investigating the May incident. The
INS has asked the Mexican
government also to investigate the shooting.
In August, U.S. National Park Service ranger
Chris Eggle, 28, was killed on the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument
while trying to apprehend two men
fleeing Mexican law enforcement, who had crossed the border into the
United States. One of the men shot Mr. Eggle just below his bulletproof
vest.
U.S. authorities have since identified the
suspected assailant as Panfilo Murillo Aguila, a Mexican national known
as "El Zarco," a known drug smuggler in the
Sonoyta area. Arrest warrants also have been issued in the case for
two former Mexican soldiers identified as Rogelio Velasquez Jocobi and
Carlos Perez Sanchez.
Helping the drug trade
Questions concerning the Mexican military's
involvement in the drug trade, however, are long-standing.
In 1998, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration
reported an extensive connection between drug traffickers in Mexico and
senior members of the Mexican
army. The DEA said at the time that it avoided cooperating with Mexican
army officers for fear that intelligence would be passed on to drug smugglers.
Former DEA Administrator Donnie Marshall told
a House subcommittee in 1999 that drug traffickers "have long had the ability
to corrupt public officials and
institutions throughout the world," noting that the Mexican military
was not exempt.
At the time, Mexican military officers assigned
to an elite anti-drug smuggling group had been arrested in Mexico City
on charges of drug trafficking and alien
smuggling. Among those arrested were several captains and majors, all
of whom had been assigned to the Mexican Attorney General's Office as anti-narcotics
agents.
Since Mr. Fox's 2000 election there has been
an increase in the number of arrests of Mexican government and military
officials, along with the creation of a
federal drug-enforcement unit that has seized tons of narcotics and
made numerous arrests.
Mexican authorities also have been more willing
to work with their U.S. counterparts, and a number of the leaders and top
lieutenants from all four of Mexico's
major drug cartels have been arrested.
The Mexican government has denied that any
part of its military is working with the drug cartels, saying in a recent
statement that military units along the border
are working the same areas as the U.S. Border Patrol in fighting the
illegal transport of drugs and people into this country.
The statement said that sometimes the troops
"get lost in those areas," noting that there is "no clear marking for the
border" in many regions. Mexican Defense
Department officials have declined to say how many soldiers are patrolling
the U.S.-Mexico border or to comment on the incursions.
Many U.S. law-enforcement authorities doubt
the contention that the units were lost.
"Some of these 'lost' units are carrying drugs,
and we've seen them before," said a second veteran Border Patrol agent,
speaking on the condition of anonymity.
"Besides, if they are lost, why are they shooting at us instead of
asking for directions?"
The politics of immigration
The White House opposes the stationing of
U.S. troops on the Mexican border for "cultural and historical reasons."
President Bush, former governor of Texas,
has sought to appeal to Hispanic voters through such initiatives as promoting
a Western Hemispheric free trade zone,
giving amnesty to 4 million to 7 million illegal immigrants in the
United States and allowing immigrants visas that would be renewable each
year as long as they hold
jobs.
"Some look south and see problems," Mr. Bush
said in a speech last year to State Department employees. "Not me. I look
south and see opportunities."
But Mr. Tancredo said he wants "an explanation
of these 'cultural and historical' reasons why we can't protect our nation's
borders." He said it was "time" for the
U.S. government to order troops to the border to assist in controlling
illegal immigration and drug smuggling, both of which he described as "national
security
concerns."
Earlier this year, some House Republicans
called on Mr. Bush to station military forces along the Southwest border,
citing a need to stop the persistent flow of
illegal immigrants and to combat drug smugglers, who have taken over
several areas of the lengthy border.
The lawmakers said the number of violent encounters
along the border, including incursions involving the Mexican military,
was increasing, "creating a need for
immediate action on the part of our government."
"We are extremely concerned about the porousness
of both our northern and southern borders," said Rep. Jim Ramstad, Minnesota
Republican, who joined in
the call for stationing troops. "It is particularly disturbing that
Canada and Mexico are still not adequately screening immigrant and cargo
traffic in and out of their
countries."
The Bush administration has placed 1,100 National
Guardsmen on the borders with Canada and Mexico after the September 11
terrorist attacks, but those
deployments ended in summer.
Meanwhile, officials at the Border Patrol's
Tucson sector office, which is responsible for 261 miles of international
border, continue to negotiate with the Mexican
military about the problems of drug trafficking, alien smuggling and
incursions.
"We have attempted to maintain an active dialogue
with a number of the generals in the Mexican army," said Carlos X. Carrillo,
assistant sector chief. "There is
no question that when there is an incident, it is of grave concern
to us."
"The safety of our agents and the possible
violation of U.S. law concerns us deeply."
Assistant Chief Carrillo also said Tucson
sector supervisors have a "strong liaison" with Mexico and have been "very
active" in reaching out to their Mexican
law-enforcement counterparts. He said sector officials have "actively
sought an open line of communication in an effort to reduce the potential
of these kinds of
incidents."
But despite the continuing dialogue, there
has been no decrease in the amount of drugs coming out of Mexico into the
United States. Additionally, the number of
illegal aliens crossing annually though the Tucson sector has skyrocketed.
"Things have improved," said a top U.S. law-enforcement
official. "But corruption is so deeply entrenched in Mexico, it will take
years to identify and remove
those who are still involved. Many Mexican military officers operate
with total autonomy, particularly in faraway places like the border."
"The drug smugglers have a ton of money to
persuade them to the dark side."
At the Tohono O'odham Nation, which shares
76 miles of international border with Mexico, the reservation's 75-member
police department will spend more than
$3 million this year on all border-related issues, including the towing
of up to 40 cars a day abandoned by alien smugglers and drug smugglers.
"The problems of illegal aliens and drug smuggling
impacts significantly on the level of service we can provide to our own
community," said acting Assistant Police
Chief Joseph Delgado. "The Border Patrol has pushed the illegal immigrants
out of the cities and towns and to our reservation, where we do not have
the manpower
to deal with the crunch. The community is upset that we can't focus
on them."
Chief Delgado noted that because of the flood
of immigrants and drug smugglers, the reservation has become a violent
place for the 13,000 people who call the
Tohono O'odham nation home. He said alien smugglers and drug smugglers
refuse to stop for police and often race their four-wheel-drive vehicles
over the
reservation's many dirt roads at speeds of up to 100 miles per hour.
"Our children are out in the community, and
every day they have to face these ruthless people," he said. "It is very
frustrating that we have had to divert our
attention and our resources to focus not on our own community but to
deal with this rising immigration and drug problem."
"We're literally the front line of defense
for the United States, and we are doing the best we can," he said. "But
I assure you, it's going to get worse before it gets
better.""