All posts tagged Mexico

Mexican Jihad

Via: The New Media Journal, Raymond Ibrahim

As the United States considers the Islamic jihadi threats confronting it from all sides, it might do well to focus on its southern neighbor, Mexico, which has been targeted by Islamists and jihadists, who, through a number of tactics — from engaging in da’wa, converting Mexicans to Islam, to smuggling and the drug cartel, to simple extortion, kidnappings and enslavement — have been subverting Mexico in order to empower Islam and sabotage the US.According to a 2010 report, “Close to home: Hezbollah terrorists are plotting right on the US border,” which appeared in the NY Daily News:

Mexican authorities have rolled up a Hezbollah network being built in Tijuana, right across the border from Texas and closer to American homes than the terrorist hideouts in the Bekaa Valley are to Israel. Its goal, according to a Kuwaiti newspaper that reported on the investigation: to strike targets in Israel and the West. Over the years, Hezbollah — rich with Iranian oil money and narcocash — has generated revenue by cozying up with Mexican cartels to smuggle drugs and people into the US In this, it has shadowed the terrorist-sponsoring regime in Tehran, which has been forging close ties with Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, who in turn supports the narcoterrorist organization FARC, which wreaks all kinds of havoc throughout the region.

Another 2010 article appearing in the Washington Times asserts that, “with fresh evidence of Hezbollah activity just south of the border [in Mexico], and numerous reports of Muslims from various countries posing as Mexicans and crossing into the United States from Mexico, our porous southern border is a national security nightmare waiting to happen.” This is in keeping with a recent study done by Georgetown University, which revealed that the number of immigrants from Lebanon and Syria living in Mexico exceeds 200,000. Syria, along with Iran, is one of Hezbollah’s strongest financial and political supporters, and Lebanon is the immigrants’ country of origin.

A jihadist cell in Mexico was recently found to have a weapons cache of 100 M-16 assault rifles, 100 AR-15 rifles, 2,500 hand grenades, C4 explosives and antitank munitions. The weapons, it turned out, had been smuggled by Muslims from Iraq. According to this report, “obvious concerns have arisen concerning Hezbollah’s presence in Mexico and possible ties to Mexican drug trafficking organizations (DTO’s) operating along the US — Mexico border.”

As far back as 2005, an article entitled “Islam is gaining a Foothold in Chiapas” showcased the inroads of Islam in Mexico:

Long a bastion of Catholicism, southern Mexico is quickly turning into a battleground for soul-savers. Islam, too, is gaining a foothold and the indigenous Mayans are converting by the hundreds. The Mexican government is worried about a culture clash in their own backyard… Muslim women in headscarves have become a common sight…

“Life is cheap” in impoverished Mexico. You want a job? Fine, pray five times a day, etc…

Kidnappings, as part of a drug cartel or as part of a jihadist operation, which legitimizes crimes such as kidnapping and child slavery, have become increasingly common. To convert non-Muslims to their cause, Islamists also whip up — and then exploit — a sense of “grievance” against the “white man.”

In addition, according to counterterrorism experts in this report, Islamic terrorists blend in better with Mexicans than with Europeans, thereby enabling them to sneak into the US across the southwest border. This Muslim cleric, for example, discusses how easy it is to smuggle a briefcase containing anthrax from Mexico into America, thereby killing at least some 330,000 Americans in a single hour.

Similarly, Michael Braun, formerly assistant administrator and chief of operations at the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), said that the Iran-backed Lebanese group has long been involved in narcotics and human trafficking in South America; however, it is relying on Mexican narcotics syndicates that control access to transit routes into the US Hezbollah relies on “the same criminal weapons smugglers, document traffickers and transportation experts as the drug cartels.”

Only a few months ago, Washington announced that FBI and DEA agents disrupted a plot to commit a “significant terrorist act in the United States,” tied to Iran with roots in Mexico. The increased violence — including beheadings, Islam’s signature trademark — is even more indicative that Islamists are well ensconced in Mexico’s drug cartel.

The threat is not limited to Hezbollah; back in 2006, according to an ISN, “Mexican authorities investigated the activities of the Murabitun [a da'wa, or missionary-outreach, organization named after historic jihadists along Spain's borders] due to reports of alleged immigration and visa abuses involving the group’s European members and possible radicals, including al-Qaeda.”

Even innocuous reports, such as this Muslim article, are cause for concern: “Today, most Mexican Islamic organizations focus on grassroots da’wa. These small organizations are most effective at the community level, going from village to village and speaking directly to the people.” Although this may not sound problematic, the strain of Islam being spread by many of these da’wa organizations is the radical, “Salafist,” anti-American variety. Here, for instance, is a popular Egyptian TV cleric saying that while Muslims must never smile to non-Muslims — who, as “infidels,” are by nature the enemy — they are free to do so if the Muslim is engaged in da’wa, trying to win over the infidel into the fold of Islam, especially if the potential convert can help empower Islam in any way.

These are but a few of the many reports on Islam in Mexico. The evidence that many Islamists in Mexico are plotting against the US, using all means — such as drug trafficking, which is not forbidden in Sharia law if it serves to empower Islam — is overwhelming.

Under various methods — from the violent to the subversive to the exploitative — Islam allows Muslims to lie and commit other duplicitous acts in the furtherance of Islam. Taqiyya [dissimulation] permits Hezbollah and other Islamists To engage in Mexico’s drug cartel, just as “pious” members of the Taliban in Afghanistan pursued the heroin trade. Aside from sheer violence, justified as “jihad,” or holy war, tactics pursued by Mexico’s Islamists include:

▪ Kidnappings and enslavement, for which Mexico is already notorious. Sharia permits kidnapping, and even enslaving the infidel, in this situation, any non-Muslim in Mexico. The Quran not only approves of this, but allows male jihadists to have sex with female captives of war (Sura 4, verse 3). Here, for example, is a Muslim politician trying to legalize the institution of “sex-slavery.”

▪ Extortion and blackmail, features of the Mexican landscape, are also permissible in Islam. According to Sharia, during jihad, Muslims are permitted to hold for ransom infidels to be sold back for large amounts of money. Here, for instance, is a popular Egyptian sheikh saying that the Islamic world’s problem is that it has stopped plundering and enslaving its infidel neighbors. He even boasts that under true Sharia, he could go to the local market and “buy” a female “sex-slave.”

In using subversive elements for da’wa, Muslims might comfortably use false arguments to turn Mexicans against their northern neighbors. They might, for instance, argue that Islam is a religion of “racial equality,” whereas Christianity is the “white man’s” religion, imposed on their ancestors by racist whites who sought to keep them “impoverished” beyond the border. Islamist strategies in Mexico amount to trying to win the unbelievers over to their side, whether through conversion or just cooperation. For those who refuse to cooperate, they are infidels to be used in any way that seems fit.

This article was originally published at the Gatestone Institute.

Raymond Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

The BasicsProject.org informational and educational pamphlet series is now available for Kindle and iPad. Click here to find out more…


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Mexico Threatens U.S. For Absolving BP In Illegal Alien Shooting

Via: Judicial Watch

Mexico has issued the U.S. government what amounts to a diplomatic threat for exonerating a Border Patrol agent who shot an illegal immigrant near the Texas border nearly two years ago after being assaulted with rocks.

The shooting occurred in the summer of 2010 when the federal agent, Jesus Mesa, spotted a group of Mexicans crossing the Rio Grande near El Paso. U.S. authorities say Mesa fatally shot a teen (Sergio Hernández-Guereca) traveling with the group in self-defense after the teen and his friends threw rocks at the agent.

Last year a Texas judge dismissed a wrongful death lawsuit against the U.S. government but allowed a lawsuit against the agent to proceed. The Obama Department of Justice (DOJ) has spent the last two years conducting a “comprehensive and thorough investigation into the shooting” in an effort to file federal criminal charges against the Border Patrol agent.

But a few days ago the DOJ conceded that there is “insufficient evidence” to pursue federal criminal charges against Mesa. “The U.S. government regrets the loss of life in this matter, and the Civil Rights Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas, the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security devoted significant time and resources into conducting a thorough and complete investigation,” the DOJ says in a statement.

The lengthy probe was conducted by an army of federal officers from the FBI, Homeland Security Inspector General and top prosecutors from the DOJ’s bloated Civil Rights Division. They interviewed dozens of law enforcement and civilian witnesses and collected, analyzed and reviewed evidence from the scene of the shooting. This included civilian and surveillance video, police radio traffic, emergency recordings and volumes of Border Patrol agent training and use of force material.

Agent Mesa’s training, disciplinary records and personal history were also scrutinized. The team of experienced DOJ prosecutors examined the shooting as a possible violation of U.S. criminal and civil rights laws, but the incident did not meet the standard. Evidence indicated that the “agent’s actions constituted a reasonable use of force or would constitute an act of self-defense in response to the threat created by a group of smugglers hurling rocks at the agent…” the feds concluded.

They further determined that no federal civil rights charges could be pursued in this matter since applicable statutes require prosecutors to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that a law enforcement officer willfully deprived an individual of a constitutional right. That means with the deliberate and specific intent to do something the law forbids. Again, after a thorough review, the experienced federal prosecutors and FBI agents concluded that the evidence was insufficient.

The decision has been met with anger among Mexican government officials who have threatened to launch an international investigation. The Spanish-language news media presented the story as the exoneration of the American agent who assassinated a Mexican youth. In a diplomatic note from its secretary of foreign relations, Mexico’s government chastised the DOJ’s decision not to criminally charge the Border Patrol agent.

Mexico has also threatened to conduct its own investigation into the DOJ’s handling of the case and has warned the U.S. to assure that Mexicans’ fundamental rights are being respected. The teen’s family, which lives in Mexico, has sued Agent Mesa despite the DOJ’s decision not to criminally charge him.

Read more about Border Patrol, DOJ, illegal immigration

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High-Speed Chase Suspect in the Country Illegally

Loaded AK-47, 4-year-old child were in the car

Carlos Munoz-Parra

Via: My Fox Phoenix MARICOPA – An illegal immigrant from Mexico has been arrested after a high speed chase in Pinal County Monday evening. A deputy tried to pull over the speeding vehicle near Meadow View and Green Road. The suspect wouldn’t stop. After about 4 miles, the suspect stopped the vehicle and ran into the desert. The deputy found a loaded AK-47 next to the truck. There was also a female adult passenger and a 4-year-old child. The woman and her daughter are both U.S. citizens. The woman identified the driver of the truck as Carlos Munoz-Parra, 33, of Sinaloa, Mexico. The passenger said Munoz-Parra was giving her a ride. A search was conducted and he was found hiding in the desert. Munoz-Parra admitted he had been drinking and was an illegal immigrant. Marijuana and drug paraphernalia were also found in the vehicle. PCSO says Munoz-Parra has a history of unlawful entry into the United States and has been involved in numerous human smuggling cases. He is facing charges of carrying a deadly weapon in furtherance of a felony, possessing a deadly weapon during chapter 34 offense, possession of a deadly weapon by a prohibited possessor, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, and unlawful flight from law enforcement.

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‘FAST AND FURIOUS’ EXPOSES WHITE HOUSE ANTI-GUN AGENDA, COVERUP

Katie Pavlich’s new book, “Fast and Furious,” assembles the devastating evidence that implicates the Obama administration for its botched gun-walking operation and ensuing coverup to mislead Congress and the American people.

Few journalists have devoted as much time reporting on Fast and Furious as Pavlich. As the news editor of Townhall, she has asked questions the mainstream media ignored. Now her book pieces the story together for a complete picture of how a government-run operation turned deadly.

She’ll speak on Tuesday at noon ET at The Bloggers Briefing. Breitbart TV, in partnership with The Heritage Foundation, will air it live.

Operation Fast and Furious began in 2009 as an effort to eliminate high-level arms trafficking networks. Guns were allowed to “walk,” and rather than arresting straw purchasers and cartel buyers, hundreds were used to commit crimes in the United States and Mexico. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry was killed with one in 2010, and an estimated 1,400 guns remain missing.

As previously documented by Breitbart News Network, Pavlich’s book contains new information questioning Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano’s testimony to Congress as well as the media’s efforts to shield the Obama administration from criticism.

The book details President Obama’s lifelong mission to subvert the Second Amendment, long before he was seeking federal office. Pavlich also documents how Fast and Furious plays into his administration’s anti-gun agenda. She cites a Washington Post story from Dec. 15, 2010, before details of Fast and Furious had emerged, in which federal authorities attempt to blame the rise in gun violence on U.S. gun shops.

The Post story referred to Project Gunrunner as an operation to inspect, interdict, and seize guns from straw purchasers. It did not mention an ATF operation to allow straw purchasers to buy guns for the Mexican drug cartels. Some of the very same ATF and Justice Department officials who blamed American gun shops for the spike in Mexican gun crime had in fact been helping the drug cartels to help themselves for over a year.

The book provides information from sources and whistleblowers who offer a behind-the-scenes perspective about the botched operation. One of them, ATF agent John Dodson, was punished for his decision to question why arrests weren’t made before the guns fell into the hands of ruthless criminals in Mexico.

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Sentencing reset in case tied to Zapata’s death

By EMMA PEREZ-TREVINO, The Brownsville Herald

The sentencing of a man who has been tied to a weapon used in the fatal attack on ICE Special Agent Jaime J. Zapata has been pushed back. Otilio Osorio of Lancaster had been scheduled for sentencing Monday, but it was reset for May 7 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas in Dallas. The sentencing will be before U.S. District Judge Sam A. Lindsay, court records show. Osorio pleaded guilty this past Oct. 25 to weapons violations.

Murdered Border Agent Jamie Zapata

Federal authorities found last year that Osorio bought a gun that resembles an AK-47 from a business in Joshua, Texas. The weapon was later found in Mexico in February 2011 tied to Zapata’s murder and the attempted murder of fellow Special Agent Victor Avila, also with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Zapata, of Brownsville, and Avila, of El Paso, were traveling in thestate of San Luis Potosi on government business when they were ambushed by two hit squads of the Zetas criminal organization, according to federal officials. The Osorios, Kelvin Leon Morrison, Angel Pablo Monroy, Rosendo Quinones, Luis Carbajal, Eder Talamantes and Kevin Bueno were indicted in the Northern District of Texas last year, charged with conspiring to make false statements to firearms dealers, and possessing firearms with obliterated serial numbers, beginning June 2010 through February 2011. In February this year, Ranferi Osorio, Morrison and Carbajal were sentenced. Osorio was sentenced to 120 months in jail, Morrison got 30 months in prison, and Carbajal received two-year probation. Talamantes and Monroy will be sentenced June 4 while the sentencing date for Bueno and Quinones is June 18, court records show.

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Guardian to host exhibition about Mexican journalists’ murders

Via: US Open Borders

Readers of this blog will be aware how often I write about the killing and intimidation of journalists in Mexico.

In the overwhelming majority of murders there has been no worthwhile investigation let alone any arrest. Most of them have died at the hands of drugs cartels.

The figures show that, since the start of this century, Mexico has been one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists to operate.

To highlight that fact, and to raise awareness of the problem of impunity, an exhibition is to be staged at The Guardian‘s headquarters from 3 May, world press freedom day.

It is being mounted by the Catholic overseas development agency (CAFOD), a British-based charity.

Organisers expect to show the photographs of the 67 journalists killed in Mexico since 2000 – a wall of silenced voices. This will be accompanied at the launch by the reading of extracts from their articles.

There will also be a panel discussion in The Guardian’s offices on 3 May.

I’ll have more details closer to the event. Meanwhile, a little more detail on the situation in Mexico…

According to the latest press freedom index compiled by Reporters Without Freedom (RSF), Mexico is ranked 136th (out of 178) in the world. The accompanying explanation states:

“Drug cartels and corrupt officials are implicated in most of the crimes of violence against journalists, which almost always go unpunished. As a result, journalists often censor themselves and some have to flee into exile.”

Both RSF and the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists point out that journalistic deaths (and the deaths of thousands of other people) have increased since Mexico’s president, Filipe Calderon, launched an offensive against the cartels in 2006.

The situation has worsened for journalists working near the US border, especially around Chihuahua.

There has been one positive political step. Earlier this month, the Mexican senate approved a constitutional amendment that, if passed by a majority of states, would mean that all anti-press crimes would become a federal offence.

This might lead to proper investigations into murders by the special federal prosecutor. At present, there is a 90% impunity rate for journalists’ murders.

The International Press Institute’s “death watch” shows that 10 journalists were murdered in Mexico last year and 12 the year before, giving it by far the worst record in Latin America.

I’ll provide more information about the exhibition in coming weeks.

Sources: CAFOD/CPJ/RSF/IPI

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Prime gunwalking suspect was held by ATF but released, documents show

Badge of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firea...

Via: CBS News

The prime suspect in the botched gun trafficking investigation known as “Fast and Furious” — Manuel Acosta — was taken into custody and might have been stopped from trafficking weapons to Mexico’s killer drug cartel early on. But the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) let him go, according to new documents obtained by CBS News.

An ATF “Report of Investigation” obtained by CBS News shows Border Patrol agents stopped Acosta’s truck on May 29, 2010. Inspectors said they found illegal materials including an “AK type, high capacity drum magazine loaded with 74 rounds of 7.62 ammunition underneath the spare tire.” They also noted ledgers including a “list of firearms such as an AR15 short and a Bushmaster” and a “reference about money given to ‘killer.’”

ATF “Report of Investigation”

The Border Patrol ran a check and found Acosta was already “under investigation for firearms trafficking” in Fast and Furious, so they called in the lead ATF case agent Hope MacAllister. Under questioning, Acosta allegedly described his contacts with a Mexican cartel member nicknamed “Chendi,” and admitted going to Chendi’s house for a shipment of narcotics.

More gunwalker questions for Attorney General Holder
PICTURES: ATF “Gunwalking” scandal timeline

But ATF knew even more about Acosta’s alleged illegal activities than what he described in the interview. ATF trace records showed “a large number of the weapons purchase by the Acosta organization are AK type rifles or FN Herstal pistols” which Acosta referred to as “cop killers” and said were preferred by drug cartels.

Instead of pursuing charges, Agent MacAllister asked Acosta if he’d be willing to cooperate with federal agents. He agreed and was released. Apparently, the promised cooperation never materialized. The report notes that 17 days after Acosta was let loose, he still had “not initiated any contact with Special Agent MacAllister.”

In a letter today, Congressional Republicans investigating Fast and Furious asked the Justice Department why Acosta wasn’t arrested in May of 2010. They also want to know why the Justice Department failed to turn over the documents on Acosta’s detainment and release, which were covered under a longstanding subpoena.

Documents: ATF used “Fast and Furious” to make the case for gun regulations

Memos contradict Holder on Fast and Furious
Agent: I was ordered to let guns “walk” into Mexico
Gunwalking scandal uncovered at ATF

One law enforcement source calls the Acosta report “completely embarrassing.” “He’s exporting ammunition, which is a violation of law,” says the source. “But they let him go.”

Before releasing Acosta, MacAllister wrote her contact information on a $10 bill at Acosta’s request, gave it to him, then warned him “not to participate in any illegal activity unless under her direction.”

Acosta wasn’t arrested until Feb. 2, 2011, more than eight months after the Border Patrol stop. By then, ATF had allowed more than 2,000 weapons to “walk” into the hands of Mexican drug cartels, and two of the rifles had turned up at the murder scene of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.

The Justice Department and ATF had no immediate comment. ATF officials who approved of Fast and Furious have said they were trying to get to the “big fish” in a drug cartel.

In a related case also run by ATF’s Phoenix office, CBS News has reported a grenade parts trafficker named Jean Baptiste Kingery was caught smuggling 114 disassembled grenades in a tire in 2010, but was released. The same prosecutors faulted in Fast and Furious allegedly refused to bring charges saying grenade parts are “novelty items” and the case “lacked jury appeal.” Mexican authorities arrested Kingery a year later at a stash house with enough materials for 1,000 grenades.

The Inspector General has been investigating Fast and Furious for more than a year. Attorney General Eric Holder, who’s denied knowing about any gunwalking, has said use of the “inappropriate tactics is neither acceptable nor excusable.”

The Justice Department had no immediate comment. ATF told CBS News: “The criminal case is still ongoing in federal court, and there is also inspector general’s investigation looking at the overall case. Therefore, ATF cannot comment about the investigation.

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Latin Americans seek US-style electioneering

With his family by his side, Barack Obama is s...

CANCUN, Mexico — On a recent February morning, as sleet darkened Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., three prominent Obama strategists gathered near the sparkling, turquoise waves of the Caribbean and opened their playbooks to hundreds of Mexican candidates and campaigners, each of whom had paid $900 for an insider peek at their most successful tactics.

“People tell me, ‘We’d like you to do an Obama for us,’” said veteran Democratic media consultant Jim Margolis.

Mexicans are running this year for everything from mayor to president and are turning to American-style electioneering in hopes of generating the kind of excitement that shot an underdog into the White House four years ago. And with $1 billion estimated to be spent on Mexico’s elections, U.S. political consultants see a lucrative opportunity.

“Doing an Obama” can be tricky in a democracy that has banned negative campaigning and fundraising, and where only one in three voters has Internet access, but the fundamentals remain the same: Candidates must win the trust of voters, and they will need technology to woo them.

“In order to effectively push through the clutter, you have to have a message that is real and true, authentic and credible,” Margolis told the crowd. “And voters must be targeted and reached on their terms.”

In Mexico’s last presidential election six years ago, Twitter was preparing to launch, Facebook was open mostly to a few thousand Ivy League students and the iPhone was just a rumor.

This year, presidential candidates are developing phone applications, writing Wikipedia pages and launching YouTube channels.

 

But with low Internet penetration in Mexico, compared with about 80 percent in the U.S., traditional tactics also endure. Sweaty supporters wield bullhorns hollering slogans, bright plastic campaign flags line the streets, and rallies feature the essential political ingredients: spicy chicken tacos, steaming pork tamales and sugared cakes.

“We’ve learned from the U.S. in a big way, but we’ve still got to do things our way,” said Alejandro Gonzalez, a Mexico City consultant whose creative campaign is credited with helping Mexico’s first female presidential candidate, Josefina Vazquez Mota, win her primary in February. Now, as Vazquez Mota heads toward the July 1 general election, Gonzalez said they’re mirroring President Barack Obama’s 2008 social media strategy, offering a warm, carefully managed image that is constantly scrutinized: Too soft? Too tough? Too sharp?

Like Obama’s video announcements emailed directly to supporters, Vazquez Mota also has exclusive YouTube videos viewable only by registering at her website. On her Facebook page, a digital application automatically makes clicking on her face a “like.” Visitors also can download “I’m going with JVM” files to print onto T-shirts or buttons. She has spent much of her campaign pledging to make Mexico safer.

Her opponent, front-runner Enrique Pena Nieto, who is promising to build the economy and bring new jobs to Mexico, blogs about murder rates and his love of country and responds directly to Twitter messages.

Pena Nieto is the most digitally engaged right now, with 1.6 million “likes” on Facebook, but Vazquez Mota is closing on him, with 1.2 million – up from just a few hundred thousand in January. Those “likes” may turn into votes, as Vazquez Mota has gained significant ground in one recent poll. In a country where candidates need about 18 million votes to win the presidency, those Facebook followers alone could swing the vote.

The third major party candidate, leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who trailed with 17 percent support in a recent poll, is also getting creative online: During major speeches, his website now streams the event live, and with a click of a mouse, viewers can forward the video to friends or embed it in their own websites.

___

Exporting U.S. electioneering began in the 1980s, long before politics had moved online, and now at least 110 U.S. political consultants are competing for an estimated $5.3 billion worth of overseas campaigns, mostly in developing countries. Among those at the Cancun conference were visitors from Brazil, Argentina and Colombia.

“It’s an export business. We are imprinting our way of doing things on countries around the world,” said Tom Edmonds, who heads the International Association of Political Consultants.

But they don’t always get it right.

U.S. consultants learned a painful lesson in 2000 after the incumbent Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) hired President Bill Clinton’s political strategist, James Carville, to help run its presidential campaign.

A Carville-influenced slogan, “It’s the right kind of change, stupid,” was plastered nationally on billboards, street banners and bumper stickers. But something was lost in translation.

“Unlike Americans, Mexicans had difficulty with being called ‘stupid’ by a politician. They took it literally, and it wasn’t funny,” said Portland State University political scientist Gerald Sussman, who believes it underscores what’s wrong with growing U.S. influence on elections abroad.

“Democracy has never been ideal, never pure, but these days it’s become an enormous spectacle,” he said. “There isn’t a deep-seated engagement of issues.”

The PRI lost the presidency that year for the first time in 70 years for a number of reasons, and Mexican consultants said American-style electioneering lost its luster.

That changed in 2008, says Anita Dunn, a Democratic operative who served as Obama’s White House communications director.

“After our win, we started getting a lot of interest from Mexico,” she said. “People here wanted the nuts and bolts, how did we do it?”

Even consultant Daniel Paredes Tuyo, working for the PRI, said he’s turning back to U.S. consultants this year, at least for advice.

“Americans, they really know how to circumnavigate the mass media and get their message directly to the voters,” he said.

In Mexico this became crucial after election reforms in 2007, prompted by a vote-counting fiasco a year earlier that included a court-ordered recount and charges of fraud. The tough new laws limit campaigning before March 30 and ban candidates from buying advertisements. Instead, radio and television stations must now provide millions of free 20-second spots to candidates. In addition, fundraising is largely prohibited, and the government pays for 90 percent of campaign expenses.

As if those rules aren’t mystifying enough for American consultants, negative advertising is forbidden, and can provoke steep fines.

“Banning negative ads? Come on, are these people supposed to win an election by out-complimenting each other?” said Washington D.C.-based consultant John Aristotle Phillips, whose current clients include presidential and parliamentary candidates and referendums in Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America.

And like all government rules, there are technicalities. In the case of Mexico, authorities imposed controls on billboards, radio, TV, magazines and newspapers but left a loophole of infinite proportions: the Internet.

Thus in Mexico today, YouTube videos and Facebook pages already are launching harsh attacks that would be banned in any other Mexican media. After Pena Nieto couldn’t name the three important books of his life at the Guadalajara International Book Fair, satirical bloggers cut and pasted new digital campaign posters that said: “First, learn to read.” Twitter rants have accused Vazquez Mota of lightening her skin and a YouTube channel dubbed VazquezMota says she hid one of her daughters from family photos because the girl is “too fat.”

“Come on, man! Her daughter! We just don’t answer that,” said her adviser, Gonzalez.

In contrast, television advertisements vetted by federal election officials feature upbeat politicians and pithy slogans: “Today we are building a new future. Unite!” says Pena Nieto. “Real change is on its way!” says Obrador. There’s no mention of opponents.

Ravi Singh recently opened a Mexico City office for his Washington, D.C.-based ElectionMall.com to pitch his online campaign packages.

“These are our golden days, with the rise of YouTube, Facebook, Twitter,” said Singh. “We sell tactics to both sides, and let the political consultants worry about strategy.”

His goal this year is to launch Mexico’s first digital war room similar to one he set up two years ago in Colombia for President Juan Manuel Santos’ successful bid. Singh said that in just a few days, they set up network servers, BlackBerrys or iPhones for the 80 campaign staffers, video streams from live events, websites, Twitter and Facebook accounts and “an abundant supply of Red Bull, potato chips, candy and anti-bacterial soap.”

But not too much Red Bull. While Mexican candidates are eager for the information, they don’t want anyone in this deeply nationalistic country to accuse them of being partial to the U.S.

“Typically American consultants are something you want to hide,” said Republican strategist Michael Caputo in North Miami, Florida. “Everyone’s got them, but they keep them in the doghouse.”

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Thirteen suspected criminal gangs members were killed in Nuevo Lared

Thursday afternoon heavy gunfire was reported in the city Laredo (Texas, United States), , no casualties reported bygovernment forces

Thirteen suspected criminal gangs members were killed in Nuevo Laredo

Thirteen suspected criminal gangs members were killed in Nuevo Laredo

 

NUEVO LAREDO, March 1. – Thirteen suspects were killed during a shootout with the Mexican Army and police in the border city of Nuevo Laredo, the military said.

This afternoon, heavy gunfire was reported in that city, on the border with Laredo (Texas, United States), on the southern bank of the Rio Grande and where several areas of the town were blocked.

The sources corresponding by telephone said, the military zoned off the area and that thirteen suspected criminal gangs members were killed in the fighting, and added that government forces had no casualties. They did not specify whether anyone was arrested during the operation.

The state of Tamaulipas, Nuevo Laredo has been one of the most affected by the violence generated by drug cartels in the country.

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The Deadliest Place In Mexico

Who’s killing the people of the Juarez Valley?

The Deadliest Place In MexicoPhotos by Julian Cardona

TO REACH THE DEADLIEST PLACE IN MEXICO you take Carretera Federal 2, a well-paved stretch of highway that begins at the outskirts of Juarez, east for 50 miles along the Rio Grande, passing through cotton and alfalfa fields until you reach the rural Juarez Valley, said to have the highest murder rate in the country, if not the world.

The Juarez Valley is a narrow corridor of green farmland carved from the Chihuahuan desert along the Rio Grande. Farmers proudly say it was once known for its cotton, which rivaled Egypt’s. But that was before the booming growth of Juarez’s factories in the 1990s left farmers downstream with nothing but foul-smelling sludge to irrigate their fields. After that, the only industry that thrived was drug smuggling. Because of the valley’s sparse population and location along the Rio Grande’s dried up riverbed, a person can easily drive or walk into Texas loaded down with marijuana and cocaine.

For decades, this lucrative smuggling corridor, or “plaza,” was controlled by the Juarez cartel. In 2008, Mexico’s largest, most powerful syndicate—the Sinaloa cartel, run by Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman—declared war on the Juarez cartel and moved in to take over the territory. The federal government sent in the military to quell the violence. Instead the murder rate in the state of Chihuahua exploded. The bloodshed in the city of Juarez made international news. It was dubbed the “deadliest city in the world.” So much blood was being shed in Juarez that few outside the region noticed the violence spilling into the rural valley to the east, where killings and atrocities began to occur on a daily basis. Police officers, political leaders and community activists were shot down in the streets. By 2009, the valley, with a population of 20,000, had a shocking murder rate of 1,600 per 100,000 inhabitants—six times higher than its neighboring “deadliest city in the world”—according to government estimates. In one particularly gruesome stretch in 2010, several valley residents were stabbed in the face with ice picks, and a local man aligned with the Juarez cartel was skewered with an iron bar, riddled with bullets, then roasted over an open fire. The Juarez newspapers began to call the rural farming region the “Valley of Death.”

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