War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby JackRiddler » Tue Jun 07, 2011 10:37 pm


http://www.narconews.com/Issue67/article4442.html

The National Caravan To End Mexico's Drug War Begins

“This Is a Lesson in Democracy. It Is Proof That You Can Live in Solidarity, United,” Says Javier Sicilia

By Erin Rosa
Special to the Narco News Bulletin

June 6, 2011


SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2011: The Caravan for Peace with Justice and Dignity, part of the nation-wide social movement to end the “war on drugs” in Mexico, has departed on a tour of eleven cities to join other movements in backing a national pact to end the violence that has killed more than 40,000 people.

The caravan (also known as the Caravan of Solace) left on June 4 from Cuernavaca, Morelos, where the movement to end the drug war began after the death of the son of Mexican journalist and poet Javier Sicilia, who was found murdered outside of the city on March 28, along with six other young people. The pact will be signed in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico’s most violent city, on June 10. Participants gathered onto 13 buses at 7 a.m. and began their journey to the caravan’s first stop, which is about an hour away in Mexico City. At the Angel of Independence monument, supporters went on a stage with Sicilia, holding flowers.

Image
Javier Sicilia speaks to a crowd at the caravan stop in Mexico City. DR 2011 Erin Rosa.

“With these flowers, we are taking on the pain in our heart that is going to march throughout the week to the heart of the most hurt city in the country: The symbol of our pain, the symbol of what the country could become if there is no reorientation of the institutions that are the political life of the nation,” Sicilia said. “We’re going to Juárez. We’re going with a heart that leaves flowers in the middle of the night. Thank you very much. Keep your heart open throughout this process.” Sicilia was joined by farmer and rancher Julián LeBaron, from the state of Chihuahua, whose brother and brother-in law have been murdered in drug war related violence. Olga Lidia Reyes Salazar, who has seen six family members killed in the last three years, also spoke about the need to end the drug war.

“The violence is so large,” said Citlaly Alfaro Morelos, a university student from the city of Texcoco in the state of Mexico who came to show support for the caravan. “I think it comes down to jobs. People in society aren’t doing anything. I think the government should do more to create more opportunities for work.” Jessiel López Martínez, another student, said “I’m really interested in the Sicilia caravan. I feel it’s very good that they’re promoting peace throughout the country. I think that means everything.”

Morelia, the capital city of the state of Michoacán, was the stop for the first night of the caravan. The choice by organizers to go to Michoacán is fitting, since it is where the war, which has now led to tens of thousands of casualties and countless disappeared persons, began. It was the first state where the military occupied the streets as a police force against drug traffickers under Mexican President Felipe Calderón’s “war on drugs.” In December 2006, the newly elected president announced Operativo Conjunto Michoacán (Joint Operation Michoacán), a plan which brought 4,000 troops into the state to supposedly disband organized crime.

Since then, hundreds of people have died in drug war violence in the state, and more than two hundred people have gone missing. At 7:30 p.m., the caravan arrived and left their buses to march approximately five blocks to the zócalo, the city’s main square. Leading the march was a pick-up truck with a large bell hanging from its back. Every few seconds, members of the group Ni Una Más Chihuahua would ring the bell, calling out to the people of Michoacán to join and support the caravan to Ciudad Juárez.

When the march was half-way to the zócalo, Maria Lupita Dulcero, who lives in the state, came running up to the front lines of the march asking press and participants, “Is this the caravan from Cuernavaca?” When she was told that it was, she found a megaphone that was being used and shouted to the front of the march, “Welcome! Welcome! We welcome you with opens arms!”

The marchers entered the zócalo with hundreds of supporters waiting for them outside of the baroque Morelia Cathedral. The zócalo, officially named the Plaza de los Martires (Plaza of Martyrs), was transformed into the Plaza de Los Daños Colaterales (Plaza of Collateral Damage), according to signs posted by supporters of the caravan.

Women with Ni Una Más Chihuahua ring a bell calling for residents of Morelia to joing the caravan. DR 2011 Erin Rosa.

Throughout the crowd, observers could see numerous signs showing pictures of people who had been killed or disappeared during the drug war. “Pamela Leticia Portillo Hernández, Forcibly Disappeared,” said one. “Jaime López Carlos, disappeared in Veracruz,” said another. On a stage, Sicilia entered and gave the cheering crowd a thumps-up. Those who have had enough with the drug war in Michoacán began to speak and explained why they were supporting the caravan, often referring to Sicilia as “el señor poeta.”

To a crowd of 1,000 people, indigenous representatives from the Purepecha peoples in Cherán, Michoacán voiced their support for the caravan and told the audience about beatings and deaths from state authorities and organized crime to hinder efforts to stop logging and other development projects on their lands. Organizers with the Committee of Relatives of Disappeared Prisoners in Michoacán talked about the toll the drug war has taken in their home state: “We are here because we know of the state’s irresponsibility over the disappearance of our family members,” said Janahuy Paredes Lachino. “We are demanding that the two hundred disappeared appear here alive in the state of Michoacán, because we are sick of this war against narco-trafficking.”

In a moving testimony, Morelia resident María Hernández de Trujillo talked about how four of her sons had been disappeared in the last three years. Jesús and Raúl went mising in the town of Atoyac, Guerrero in 2008, as did their siblings Gustavo and Luis somewhere on a highway between the states of Puebla and Veracruz last year. “I am the same as Javier Sicilia,” she said, holding back tears. “I am the mother of four disappeared sons…It must be known that my sons are good people, clean people, who were dedicated to working. We’re asking the media to help us, to publicize the cases of my children.”

When Sicilia approached the stage he said, “We are not alone. This is a lesson in democracy, it is proof that you can live in solidarity, united. But we’re not going to build it if the politicians and the criminals continue to fight for privileges. The only thing that we want is to be left to live in peace.” He later quoted Ghandi, saying, “There is no way to peace, peace is the way.”

The first night of the caravan ended where the pain and the violence from Calderón’s drug war took root. It served to amplify the voices of the numerous social movements that have been eye-witnesses to the suffering wrought from the drug war. While, as Sicilia says, not every movement agrees with one another on every political issue, there is a common goal that unites them: the war and the violence must end, and they must end now.

We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby hanshan » Wed Jun 08, 2011 11:35 am

JackRiddler wrote:

http://www.narconews.com/Issue67/article4442.html

The National Caravan To End Mexico's Drug War Begins

“This Is a Lesson in Democracy. It Is Proof That You Can Live in Solidarity, United,” Says Javier Sicilia

By Erin Rosa
Special to the Narco News Bulletin

June 6, 2011


SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2011: The Caravan for Peace with Justice and Dignity, part of the nation-wide social movement to end the “war on drugs” in Mexico, has departed on a tour of eleven cities to join other movements in backing a national pact to end the violence that has killed more than 40,000 people.

The caravan (also known as the Caravan of Solace) left on June 4 from Cuernavaca, Morelos, where the movement to end the drug war began after the death of the son of Mexican journalist and poet Javier Sicilia, who was found murdered outside of the city on March 28, along with six other young people. The pact will be signed in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico’s most violent city, on June 10. Participants gathered onto 13 buses at 7 a.m. and began their journey to the caravan’s first stop, which is about an hour away in Mexico City. At the Angel of Independence monument, supporters went on a stage with Sicilia, holding flowers.

Image
Javier Sicilia speaks to a crowd at the caravan stop in Mexico City. DR 2011 Erin Rosa.

“With these flowers, we are taking on the pain in our heart that is going to march throughout the week to the heart of the most hurt city in the country: The symbol of our pain, the symbol of what the country could become if there is no reorientation of the institutions that are the political life of the nation,” Sicilia said. “We’re going to Juárez. We’re going with a heart that leaves flowers in the middle of the night. Thank you very much. Keep your heart open throughout this process.” Sicilia was joined by farmer and rancher Julián LeBaron, from the state of Chihuahua, whose brother and brother-in law have been murdered in drug war related violence. Olga Lidia Reyes Salazar, who has seen six family members killed in the last three years, also spoke about the need to end the drug war.

“The violence is so large,” said Citlaly Alfaro Morelos, a university student from the city of Texcoco in the state of Mexico who came to show support for the caravan. “I think it comes down to jobs. People in society aren’t doing anything. I think the government should do more to create more opportunities for work.” Jessiel López Martínez, another student, said “I’m really interested in the Sicilia caravan. I feel it’s very good that they’re promoting peace throughout the country. I think that means everything.”

Morelia, the capital city of the state of Michoacán, was the stop for the first night of the caravan. The choice by organizers to go to Michoacán is fitting, since it is where the war, which has now led to tens of thousands of casualties and countless disappeared persons, began. It was the first state where the military occupied the streets as a police force against drug traffickers under Mexican President Felipe Calderón’s “war on drugs.” In December 2006, the newly elected president announced Operativo Conjunto Michoacán (Joint Operation Michoacán), a plan which brought 4,000 troops into the state to supposedly disband organized crime.

Since then, hundreds of people have died in drug war violence in the state, and more than two hundred people have gone missing. At 7:30 p.m., the caravan arrived and left their buses to march approximately five blocks to the zócalo, the city’s main square. Leading the march was a pick-up truck with a large bell hanging from its back. Every few seconds, members of the group Ni Una Más Chihuahua would ring the bell, calling out to the people of Michoacán to join and support the caravan to Ciudad Juárez.

When the march was half-way to the zócalo, Maria Lupita Dulcero, who lives in the state, came running up to the front lines of the march asking press and participants, “Is this the caravan from Cuernavaca?” When she was told that it was, she found a megaphone that was being used and shouted to the front of the march, “Welcome! Welcome! We welcome you with opens arms!”

The marchers entered the zócalo with hundreds of supporters waiting for them outside of the baroque Morelia Cathedral. The zócalo, officially named the Plaza de los Martires (Plaza of Martyrs), was transformed into the Plaza de Los Daños Colaterales (Plaza of Collateral Damage), according to signs posted by supporters of the caravan.

Women with Ni Una Más Chihuahua ring a bell calling for residents of Morelia to joing the caravan. DR 2011 Erin Rosa.

Throughout the crowd, observers could see numerous signs showing pictures of people who had been killed or disappeared during the drug war. “Pamela Leticia Portillo Hernández, Forcibly Disappeared,” said one. “Jaime López Carlos, disappeared in Veracruz,” said another. On a stage, Sicilia entered and gave the cheering crowd a thumps-up. Those who have had enough with the drug war in Michoacán began to speak and explained why they were supporting the caravan, often referring to Sicilia as “el señor poeta.”

To a crowd of 1,000 people, indigenous representatives from the Purepecha peoples in Cherán, Michoacán voiced their support for the caravan and told the audience about beatings and deaths from state authorities and organized crime to hinder efforts to stop logging and other development projects on their lands. Organizers with the Committee of Relatives of Disappeared Prisoners in Michoacán talked about the toll the drug war has taken in their home state: “We are here because we know of the state’s irresponsibility over the disappearance of our family members,” said Janahuy Paredes Lachino. “We are demanding that the two hundred disappeared appear here alive in the state of Michoacán, because we are sick of this war against narco-trafficking.”

In a moving testimony, Morelia resident María Hernández de Trujillo talked about how four of her sons had been disappeared in the last three years. Jesús and Raúl went mising in the town of Atoyac, Guerrero in 2008, as did their siblings Gustavo and Luis somewhere on a highway between the states of Puebla and Veracruz last year. “I am the same as Javier Sicilia,” she said, holding back tears. “I am the mother of four disappeared sons…It must be known that my sons are good people, clean people, who were dedicated to working. We’re asking the media to help us, to publicize the cases of my children.”

When Sicilia approached the stage he said, “We are not alone. This is a lesson in democracy, it is proof that you can live in solidarity, united. But we’re not going to build it if the politicians and the criminals continue to fight for privileges. The only thing that we want is to be left to live in peace.” He later quoted Ghandi, saying, “There is no way to peace, peace is the way.”

The first night of the caravan ended where the pain and the violence from Calderón’s drug war took root. It served to amplify the voices of the numerous social movements that have been eye-witnesses to the suffering wrought from the drug war. While, as Sicilia says, not every movement agrees with one another on every political issue, there is a common goal that unites them: the war and the violence must end, and they must end now.





Operation Condor (Spanish: Operación Cóndor, also known as Plan Cóndor, Portuguese: Operação Condor), was a campaign of political repression involving assassination and intelligence operations officially implemented in 1975 by the right-wing dictatorships of the Southern Cone of South America. The program aimed to eradicate alleged socialist and communist influence and ideas and to control active or potential opposition movements against the participating governments.[1] Due to its clandestine nature, the precise number of deaths directly attributable to Operation Condor is highly disputed. It is estimated that a minimum of 60,000 deaths can be attributed to Condor,[2] possibly more.[3][4][5] Condor's key members were the governments in Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia and Brazil. The United States participated in a supervisory capacity, with Ecuador and Peru joining later in more peripheral roles.[6]


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Condor

c'est la vie, c'est la guerre; successful strategies are rarely abandoned, they simply morph into another form. It's always the innocents who suffer.
The WoD is brilliant agit-prop, narco-terrorism the gift that keeps on givin'


“There is no way to peace, peace is the way.”...


....
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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Jun 08, 2011 12:30 pm

.

There actually is a Condor thread that I believe AD started and I wonder if we should ask to consolidate that in here too, because it does belong. The US-led "War on Drugs" in the Latin American theater represents the extension of the neoimperial hegemony once covered by Cold War anti-communist campaigns and coups (and before that by the Monroe Doctrine, Manifest Destiny and the rest of that rot).* (below see note that got too long to put here)

From the intro to a pretty hot-looking article I haven't read properly:


McSherry, J. Patrice. "Operation Condor: Clandestine Inter-American System." Social Justice, Winter 1999 v26 i4 p144.

SNIP!

This article shows that Condor
was a parastatal system that used criminal me thods to eliminate "subversion,"
while avoiding constitutional institutions, ignoring due process, and
violating all manner of human rights. Condor made use of parallel prisons,
secret transport operations, routine assassination and torture, extensive
psychological warfare (PSYWAR, or use of black propaganda, deception, and
disinformation to conquer the "hearts and minds" of the population, often by
making crimes seem as though they were committed by the other side), and
sophisticated technology (such as computerized lists of suspects).


Condor must be understood within the context of the global anticommunist
alliance led by the United States. We now know that top U.S. officials and
agencies, including the State Department, the Central Intelligence Agency, and
the Defense Department, were fully aware of Condor's formation and its
operations from the time it was organized in 1975 (if not earlier). The U.S.
government considered the Latin American militaries to be allies in the Cold
War and worked closely with their intelligence organizations. U.S. executive
agencies at least condoned, and sometimes actively assisted, Condor
"countersubversive" operations. Although evidence is still fragmentary, it is
now possible to piece together information from numerous sources to understand
Operation Condor as a clandestine inter-American counterinsurgency system.

This article draws on a wide variety of data: the "Archives of Terror" in
Paraguay; [1] testimonies of victims in the files of Centro de Estudios
Legales y Sociales [CELS, Argentina]; declassified U.S. documents; Argentine
military documents; reports of the Comision Nacional sobre la Desaparicion de
Personas [CONADEP, Argentina] and the Comision Nacional de Verdad y
Reconciliacion [the Rettig Commission of Chile]; interviews in Chile,
Argentina, and Paraguay carried out between 1996 and 1998; newspapers from
Latin America, Europe, and the United States; and works by scholars and former
CIA agents. The evidence demonstrates that Operation Condor was a
supranational structure of organized state terrorism that went far beyond
targeting "communists."

The article first examines the (scanty) literature on Condor and on state
terrorism to situate the discussion in a theoretical context. Condor's
structures and operations are reviewed and briefly compared with the
"stay-behind" projects in Europe, secret programs designed by the West for
guerrilla warfare and covert operations aimed to undermine Communist and
leftist advances. Finally, the article's conclusion reflects upon the
ideologies and doctrines that gave rise to Condor and the question of ends and
means.

SNIP!

http://larc.sdsu.edu/humanrights/rr/PLA ... herry.html




More gloves-off:


http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Plan_Condor

SNIP

The United States' determination to destroy opposition to its domination in Latin America stemmed from its defeat in Vietnam. The 1972 team in Paris helping Henry Kissinger negotiate with the Vietnamese included current US ambassador to the UN John Negroponte and Vernon Walters, later a key adviser to Ronald Reagan, then Army Attache at the U.S. Embassy in Paris. In those days George Bush Sr. was ambassador to the UN.

By 1975, Bush Sr. was head of the CIA and working together with Kissinger and Vernon Walters to develop Plan Condor--a coordinated operation against opposition movements throughout Latin America.[4] Plan Condor involved using illegal covert means such as the assassination team coordinated between the Chilean DIN security service and Miami Cuban terrorists like Orlando Bosch, Guillermo Novo and Luis Posada Carriles.[5] It also meant supporting brutal government policies of mass repression in countries throughout South America. Plan Condor was an ambitious and successful attempt to coordinate that repression.
4.The same team helped set up in 1975 the Committee on the Present Danger, in which Paul Dundes Wolfowitz was a leading figure.
5.Hernando Calvo Ospina, "Pinochet, la CIA y los terroristas cubanos", 23 de agosto del 2003, www.rebelion.org.

Plan Condor--alive and well

The progression from Chile, Argentina and Uruguay through Central America to present day Venezuela and Colombia is clear. The same actors appear time after time. Elliott Abrams, John Negroponte, Colin L. Powell, Richard Armitage, John Maisto Roger Noriega and Otto Reich all move between comfortable jobs in US government and the corporate plutocracy that dictates US government policy.

The United States and the European Union are in Latin America for the same reasons as the Spanish, Portuguese, British, French and Dutch colonialists before them--natural resources and cheap labour, compounded these days by neo-colonial extraction of forcibly contrived "debt". The methods are privatisation, dismantling of domestic agricultural economies, and open markets imposed by the IMF and World Bank through local clients to favour multinational corporations like BP-Amoco, Monsanto, Cargill and other all too familiar names.

The principal architects of Condor were General Pinochet and Colonel Manuel Contreras. The program was formally inaugurated in October 1975, when Contreras convened a meeting in Santiago, Chile of the leading heads of the military intelligence services of Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina. An accord was crafted formalizing the already existing coordination efforts of member countries.

SNIP





http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Herma ... erman.html

Operation Condor (Latin America)
excerpted from the book
The Real Terror Network
by Edward S. Herman
South End Press



In 1976 six National Security States of Latin America- Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay- entered into a system for the joint monitoring and assassinating of dissident refugees in member countries. The program was directly initiated under the sponsorship of Chile and its head of the secret police (DINA), Manuel Contreras. Chile provided the initial funding, organized a series of meetings in Santiago, and provided the computer capacity and centralized services. However, the United States deserves a great deal of credit for this important development, partly as the sponsor and adviser to DINA and other participating security services, but also because Operation Condor represented a culmination of a long sought U.S. objective-coordination of the struggle against "Communism" and "subversion." In 1968, U.S. General Robert W. Porter stated that "In order to facilitate the coordinated employment of internal security forces within and among Latin American countries, we are...endeavoring to foster inter-service and regional cooperation by assisting in the organization of integrated command and control centers; the establishment of common operating procedures; and the conduct of joint and combined training exercises." Condor was one of the fruits of this effort.

Under Operation Condor, political refugees who leave Uruguay and go to Argentina will be identified and kept under surveillance by Argentinian "security" forces, who will inform Uruguayan "security" forces of the presence of these individuals. If the Uruguayan security forces wish to murder these refugees in order to preserve western values, Argentine forces will cooperate. They will keep the Uruguayans informed of the whereabouts of the refugees; they will allow them to enter and freely move around in Argentina and to take the refugees into custody, torture and murder them; and the Argentinians will then claim no knowledge of these events. Under this system, two former Uruguayan Senators, one a former President of the Senate, Zelmar Michelini and Hector Gutierrez Ruiz, were kidnapped and murdered in Buenos Aires. We also note, just to keep the reader abreast of the quality of this cooperative enterprise, that both Michelini and Ruiz were tortured before being murdered, and that Michelini's daughter Margarita was also seized and "disappeared.

SNIP





Condor: another international hidden organization (largely formalized) of world order. You don't hear it mentioned with things like the NATO or Mercosur, but for its time in that form it was just as real. Much more formal than some other known Spook International orgs, such as the Pinay Circle and the Safari Club, not to mention Echelon and the Stay-Behinds. Many of these use the tactic of cooperation by trading each other's dirty work, so that domestic deniability is maintained: We might call it "Strangers on a Train," I'll kill your target while you have your alibi, and vice-versa.

.

Note

* Across South Asia and North Africa the extension of the Cold War finally found a new name as the "War on Terror" or struggle against violent Islamic extremism. In Africa it's looking for a snappy brand name but is covered as "humanitarian intervention and aid." The extension of the Western European role in the "Cold War" or attempts at neo-imperialist hegemony over the former "third world" is still compactly known as NATO. In the former Soviet Republics it's about "spreading democracy." China is the perpetual new superpower threat candidate in waiting, and as I've explained a few times, the end-game necessarily will be our North American neighbors. But enough of trying to stretch this exercise in terms probably too far.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby hanshan » Wed Jun 08, 2011 4:33 pm

...



The United States' determination to destroy opposition to its domination in Latin America stemmed from its defeat in Vietnam. The 1972 team in Paris helping Henry Kissinger negotiate with the Vietnamese included current US ambassador to the UN John Negroponte and Vernon Walters, later a key adviser to Ronald Reagan, then Army Attache at the U.S. Embassy in Paris. In those days George Bush Sr. was ambassador to the UN.

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Plan_Condor




The progression from Chile, Argentina and Uruguay through Central America to present day Venezuela and Colombia is clear. The same actors appear time after time. Elliott Abrams, John Negroponte, Colin L. Powell, Richard Armitage, John Maisto Roger Noriega and Otto Reich all move between comfortable jobs in US government and the corporate plutocracy that dictates US government policy.



What is little understood is the rabid, murderous, vindictiveness of American foreign policy
& it's key actors. As it's out-of-sight, out-of-mind (literally in another country, hemisphere)
only the on the ground players know what's happening. Then, the press, if in fact there even is any, can spin it into Exporting Democracy,etc. The mind warp is surreal. As Americans, for the most part, are xenophobic, isolated, & insular (& don't travel abroad),
perception management of the body politic, a cake walk.



In 1976 six National Security States of Latin America- Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay- entered into a system for the joint monitoring and assassinating of dissident refugees in member countries. The program was directly initiated under the sponsorship of Chile and its head of the secret police (DINA), Manuel Contreras. Chile provided the initial funding, organized a series of meetings in Santiago, and provided the computer capacity and centralized services. However, the United States deserves a great deal of credit for this important development, partly as the sponsor and adviser to DINA and other participating security services, but also because Operation Condor represented a culmination of a long sought U.S. objective-coordination of the struggle against "Communism" and "subversion." In 1968, U.S. General Robert W. Porter stated that "In order to facilitate the coordinated employment of internal security forces within and among Latin American countries, we are...endeavoring to foster inter-service and regional cooperation by assisting in the organization of integrated command and control centers; the establishment of common operating procedures; and the conduct of joint and combined training exercises." Condor was one of the fruits of this effort.

from:
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Herma%20...%20erman.html
Operation Condor (Latin America)
excerpted from the book
The Real Terror Network
by Edward S. Herman
South End Press





Jack:

Condor: another international hidden organization (largely formalized) of world order. You don't hear it mentioned with things like the NATO or Mercosur, but for its time in that form it was just as real. Much more formal than some other known Spook International orgs, such as the Pinay Circle and the Safari Club, not to mention Echelon and the Stay-Behinds. Many of these use the tactic of cooperation by trading each other's dirty work, so that domestic deniability is maintained: We might call it "Strangers on a Train," I'll kill your target while you have your alibi, and vice-versa.


Indeed. Ghastly. Culture of Death.

A seamless web:

The Phoenix Program (Vietnamese: Chiến dịch Phụng Hoàng, a word related to fenghuang, the Chinese phoenix) was a controversial counterinsurgency program designed, coordinated, and executed by the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), United States special operations forces, and the Republic of Vietnam's (South Vietnam) security apparatus during the Vietnam War that operated between 1967 and 1972. [1]
The Program was designed to identify the civilian infrastructure supporting the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam, more commonly referred to as the or Viet Cong and neutralize it though capture, coercion or killing its members. Phoenix Program operation were carried out by the South Vietnam’s National Police, National Police Field Force, Special Police Branch, U.S. and Vietnamese conventional armed forces; and by what became known as the Provincial Reconnaissance Units, or PRU’s. [1][2] By 1972, Phoenix operatives had neutralized 81,740 suspected NLF supporters, of whom 26,369 were killed.[1
Indeed. Ghastly. Culture of Death.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_Program


go ahead & thread merge; keep everything in place


edited for addition & links
...
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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby lucky » Wed Jun 08, 2011 6:13 pm

Just to keep a slant on this thread - the heroin drought that is just about creeping back to normaiity but is stil far away to normal dealing levels. What i and many others have found odd is that

A. there were no supplies stashed (it literally went from plenty of gear to nothiong in a matter of a week or so
B why did no other supplier nation step in (we get all our gear from afghanistan)
There's holes in the sky where rain gets in
the holes are small
that's why rain is thin.
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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Jun 08, 2011 8:24 pm

lucky wrote:Just to keep a slant on this thread - the heroin drought that is just about creeping back to normaiity but is stil far away to normal dealing levels. What i and many others have found odd is that

A. there were no supplies stashed (it literally went from plenty of gear to nothiong in a matter of a week or so
B why did no other supplier nation step in (we get all our gear from afghanistan)


My impression from reliable-seeming hearsay is that this happens once in a while, and it's the distributors who engineer it, so it will have little to do with production out of Afghanistan or successful hauls by the authorities or whatever other excuse is given. The way it works is, they get the users desperate and open the spigots once they're primed to pay anything.

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby hanshan » Thu Jun 09, 2011 7:52 am

JackRiddler wrote:
lucky wrote:Just to keep a slant on this thread - the heroin drought that is just about creeping back to normaiity but is stil far away to normal dealing levels. What i and many others have found odd is that

A. there were no supplies stashed (it literally went from plenty of gear to nothiong in a matter of a week or so
B why did no other supplier nation step in (we get all our gear from afghanistan)


My impression from reliable-seeming hearsay is that this happens once in a while, and it's the distributors who engineer it, so it will have little to do with production out of Afghanistan or successful hauls by the authorities or whatever other excuse is given. The way it works is, they get the users desperate and open the spigots once they're primed to pay anything.

.



wait- a- minute ....Jack's right again?




eh...metza-metza:

Image

far as the drought, when it rains it pours/anyday now

edited for purity(heh)
....
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condorman

Postby IanEye » Mon Jun 13, 2011 4:11 pm

Image


Condorman says you would be remiss if you did not check out this thread as well:

Italian judge seeks trial of 140 over Operation Condor

then again, you can't go home again….
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Re: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condorman

Postby hanshan » Mon Jun 13, 2011 6:52 pm

IanEye wrote:
Image


Condorman says you would be remiss if you did not check out this thread as well:

Italian judge seeks trial of 140 over Operation Condor

then again, you can't go home again….



Yeah, tx, IanEye for the( re:);caught the thread

Random youtube blocks on the line so couldn't get there
from here
Image


...
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eye pick up my axe & fight like a farmer...

Postby IanEye » Mon Jun 13, 2011 8:40 pm

hanshan wrote:
Random youtube blocks on the line so couldn't get there
from here

...


your consolation prize
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Re: eye pick up my axe & fight like a farmer...

Postby hanshan » Tue Jun 14, 2011 8:25 am

IanEye wrote:
hanshan wrote:
Random youtube blocks on the line so couldn't get there
from here

...


your consolation prize



too bad - consolded not...)-( am on heavy filter block so
couldn even see d'prize

Image


....
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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby undead » Tue Jun 14, 2011 9:44 pm

┌∩┐(◕_◕)┌∩┐
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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby American Dream » Mon Jun 27, 2011 9:10 pm

http://dissidentvoice.org/2011/06/priva ... -drug-war/

Private Contractors Making a Killing off the Drug War

by Cyril Mychalejko / June 27th, 2011



As tens of thousands of corpses continue to pile up as a result of the US-led “War on Drugs” in Latin America, private contractors are benefiting from lucrative federal counter-narcotics contracts amounting to billions of dollars, without worry of oversight or accountability.

U.S. contractors in Latin America are paid by the Defense and State Departments to supply countries with services that include intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, training, and equipment.

“It’s becoming increasingly clear that our efforts to rein in the narcotics trade in Latin America, especially as it relates to the government’s use of contractors, have largely failed,” said U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill, chair of the Subcommittee on Contracting Oversight which released a report on counter-narcotics contracts in Latin America this month. “Without adequate oversight and management we are wasting tax dollars and throwing money at a problem without even knowing what we’re getting in return.”

Washington doled out $3.1 billion dollars between 2005 and 2009, with spending having increased 32 percent over the five year period. DynCorp International was the big winner, racking in $1.1 billion, or 36 percent of total counter-narcotics contract spending in the region by the Defense and State Departments. Other contractors benefiting from the spending include Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, ITT, and ARINC.

“The federal government does not have any uniform systems in place to track or evaluate whether counter-narcotics contracts are achieving their goals,” the report states.

The June 7th Senate Report was released less than a week after an international drug commission declared the “War on Drugs” a failure. The commission included former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, former U.S. Federal Reserve Chief Paul Volcker, and former Colombian President Cesar Gaviria.

The lack of transparency, oversight and accountability by the Defense and State Departments on counter-narcotics contracts was brought to light last year in a May 2010 hearing McCaskill held in which the Defense Department provided incomplete accounting on how “Drug War” money was spent on private contractors. Remarkably, it was revealed that the Defense Department actually outsourced their audit to a private contractor for the hearing. In response, the frustrated Senator said at the time that she “will not hesitate to use subpoenas” in order to obtain accurate information.

This laissez-faire approach Washington takes with private contractors often leads to crimes and human rights abuses in foreign countries. For example, DynCorp, the company Washington has entrusted with a majority of taxpayer-funded counter-narcotics dollars, has been mired in scandals over the years, that include: employees allegedly having sex with teenage girls in Bosnia and selling them as sex-slaves; pimping out young “dancing boys” in Afghanistan; and spraying toxic chemicals in Colombia that drifted into Ecuador and is believed to have caused “massive health problems, numerous deaths and widespread environmental damage.”

In response to criticisms, a Pentagon Spokesman told the the L.A Times that counter-narcotics efforts “have been among the most successful and cost-effective programs” in decades and that “the U.S. has received ample strategic national security benefits in return for its investments in this area.” Some of these “benefits” might include U.S. military bases in Colombia, a law enforcement academy in El Salvador run by American “trainers” that critics fear could become another “School of the Americas“, and securing commercial access to oil. But one of these benefits definitely does not include significantly curtailing the amount of drugs reaching the United States, as the Rand Corporation’s Peter Chalk recently pointed out in his report on Latin America’s drug trade, an analysis sponsored by the U.S. Air Force.

Clearly the US-led war on drugs is failing as a policy to stop the production and trafficking of drugs. And it’s not as though there are not numerous viable solutions being provided by people across the hemisphere. Javier Sicilia, Mexican poet and leading activist against drug war-related violence in his country, told journalist Laura Carlsen of the Americas Program, “The United States must go back to the drawing board, listen to what citizens are demanding, and the United States should remember, as a democratic country, that sovereignty lies in the citizens, not in government officials.”

While there is an anti-drug war movement budding in Mexico, we need to grow our own here in the United States and to start making our demands for humane and nonviolent policy alternatives.


Cyril Mychalejko is an editor at UpsideDownWorld.org. He can be reached at Cyril@upsidedownworld.org.
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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby hanshan » Tue Jun 28, 2011 7:45 am

...


Private Contractors Making a Killing off the Drug War

pun-dog - you been a bad bad dog




Image


...
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Re: War on Drugs, Money Laundry and Plan (Destroy) Mexico

Postby American Dream » Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:08 am

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebo ... ra-scandal

ATF’s Fast and Furious Seems Colored With Shades of Iran/Contra Scandal

Posted by Bill Conroy - July 10, 2011

Congressional Inquiry Raising Specter of Spooks in the Soup



The acting head of ATF (the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives) has seemingly blown the cover of both DEA and FBI informant operations in order to spare his own neck and to deflect blame away from a badly flawed operation undertaken by his own agency.

In doing so, ATF Acting Director Kenneth Melson has also left open the door to the house of mirrors that always comes into play when U.S. interests intersect with foreign affairs.

The operation that has put Melson in the hot seat before Congress is known as Fast and Furious, which was launched in October 2009 as an offshoot of Project Gunrunner — ATF’s larger effort to stem the flow of illegal weapons into Mexico.

However, Fast and Furious actually undermined the goal of Project Gunrunner by allowing some 2,000 or more firearms illegally purchased in the U.S. to “walk” (or be smuggled under ATF’s watch) across the border in a supposed effort by the federal law enforcement agency to target the kingpins behind Mexico’s narco-gun-running enterprises, ATF whistleblowers contend.

Two of the guns linked to the Fast and Furious operation allegedly were found at the murder scene of Border Patrol agent Brian Terry, who was shot to death by Mexican border marauders in Arizona late last year. The whistelblower revelations about Fast and Furious have since sparked Congressional inquiries.

In a letter sent on July 5 to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, two Republican members of Congress from the committees probing Fast and Furious made startling allegations in the wake of what they say was an interview of ATF’s Melson conducted by “both Republican and and Democratic staff.”

The letter was drafted by U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight & Government Reform; and U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley, ranking member of the Judiciary Committee.

The revelation from that letter of greatest significance:

Specifically, we have very real indications from several sources that some of the gun trafficking “higher-ups” that the ATF sought to identify [via Fast and Furious] were already known to other agencies and may have been paid as informants. The Acting Director [Melson] said that ATF was kept in the dark about certain activities of other agencies, including DEA and FBI. [Emphasis added.]

Mr. Melson said that he learned from ATF agents in the field that information obtained by these agencies [DEA, FBI and “other agencies”] could have had a material impact on the Fast and Furious investigation as far back as late 2009 or early 2010. After learning about the possible role of DEA and FBI [and “other agencies”], he testified that he reported this information in April 2011 to the Acting Inspector General and directly to then-Acting Deputy Attorney General James Cole on June 16th, 2011.

The evidence we have gathered raises the disturbing possibility that the Justice Department not only allowed criminals to smuggle weapons but that taxpayers dollars [in the form of informant payments] from other agencies may have financed those engaging in such activities.

… It is one thing to argue that the ends justify the means in an attempt to defend a policy that puts building a big case ahead of stopping known criminals from getting guns. Yet it is a much more serious matter to conceal from Congress the possible involvement of other agencies in identifying and maybe even working with the same criminals that Operation Fast and Furious was trying to identify. …. [The entire letter can be found at this link.]


What the letter from Issa and Grassley is alleging, simply put, is that multiple U.S. agencies were employing as informants and assets members of Mexican drug organizations who were responsible for importing into their nation thousands of weapons from the U.S., leading to more than 40,000 homicides in Mexico’s drug war since late 2006.

The letter, by its wording, makes clear that the complicit U.S. agencies include FBI and DEA, but it also seems to make clear that “other agencies” might also be involved in the game. And also part of this game was ATF, which, via Fast and Furious, was allowing thousands of guns to be smuggled across the U.S. border into Mexico as part of a supposed plan to identify “higher-ups” in Mexican drug organizations who were responsible for the illegal weapons trade. And, as it turns out, those responsible, in some cases, were the very individuals being employed as informants and assets by other U.S. agencies.

Connecting flight

And in a strange twist of fate, one of the “higher-ups” in the Mexican narco-trafficking world, who recently claimed to be a U.S. government informant, is now pending trial in federal court in Chicago.

Jesus Vicente Zambada Niebla, is the son of Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada Garcia — one of the purported top leaders of the Sinaloa drug-trafficking organization — a leading Mexican-based importer of weapons and exporter of drugs. Zambada Niebla was arrested in Mexico in March 2009 and last February extradited to the United States to stand trial on narco-trafficking-related charges.

Image

The indictment pending against Zambada Niebla claims he served as the “logistical coordinator” for the “cartel,” helping to oversee an operation that imported into the U.S. “multi-ton quantities of cocaine … using various means, including but not limited to, Boeing 747 cargo aircraft, private aircraft … buses, rail cars, tractor trailers, and automobiles.”

Zambada Niebla also claims be an asset of the U.S. government. His allegation is laid out in a two-page court pleading filed in late March with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois in Chicago. The pleading asserts that Zambada Niebla was working with “public authority” “on behalf of the U.S. Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”); and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”); and the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”).

Interestingly, in addition to the narco-trafficking charges pending against him in Chicago, Zambada Niebla also stands accused of seeking to smuggle weapons into Mexico for the Sinaloa organization.

“Jesus Vicente Zambada Niebla sought to obtain weapons from the United States … and discussed the use of violence…,” U.S. government court pleadings in Zambada Niebla’s case state.

Zambada Niebla also is linked to alleged Sinaloa organization money-launderer Pedro Alfonso Alatorre Damy via a Gulfstream II jet (tail number N987SA) that crashed in Mexico in late 2007 with some four tons of cocaine onboard.

That aircraft was allegedly purchased with Sinaloa organization drug money laundered through Alatorre Damy’s casa de cambio business and a U.S. bank. And that same aircraft was reportedly suspected of being used previously as part of the CIA’s “terrorist” rendition program, according to media reports and an investigation spearheaded by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.

In addition, the Gulfstream II was purchased less than two weeks before it crashed in Mexico by a duo that included a U.S. government operative who allegedly had done past contract work for a variety of US law enforcement and intelligence agencies, according to a known CIA asset (Baruch Vega) who is identified as such in public court records. The four tons of cocaine onboard of the Gulfstream II at the time of its crash landing, according Vega, were purchased in Colombia via a syndicate that included a Colombian narco-trafficker named Nelson Urrego, who, according to Panamanian press reports and Vega, is a U.S. government (CIA) asset.

[For more more details on the Gulfstream II story and connections, read Narco News’s past coverage at this link.]

And now, one of the top players in the Sinaloa drug organization, who, according to the U.S. government, managed logistics for the criminal organization — a job that entailed overseeing the purchase of aircraft for drug smuggling activities, as well as weapons for enforcement activities — now claims to have been actively cooperating with several U.S. law enforcement agencies since at least 2004.

So once again, the DEA and FBI appear in the context of employing high-level narco-traffickers as informants and/or assets. And in the background of such intrigue, always, overseas, as in the Gulfstream II case, is the CIA, which trumps every other U.S. agency when it comes to operations in a foreign land.

A former CIA counterintelligence officer explained how it works as follows, in a recent interview with Narco News:

It’s … true that sometimes agents who do narcotics work [like DEA agents] may also do things that are at the same time of interest to the CIA in terms of intelligence collection.

If CIA and DEA are working the same person, collecting information, the CIA will get the nod [ultimate control] that’s normal. In the field [overseas] the CIA trumps everyone.

… The system is designed so that agencies do not walk over each other’s assets [or informants], so you don’t have two agencies going after the same people for different reasons [DEA to bust them for narco-trafficking and CIA to use them as intelligence assets, for example]. [In those cases, though] it is CIA that gets the preference; CIA is the mother god.


Wacko, Barroom Commandos

When it comes to prime intelligence targets, they don’t come much better than the leaders of Mexican drug organizations, who have their tentacles planted deep inside Latin American governments due to the corrupt reach of the drug trade. So it is not unreasonable to suspect that part of the reason that ATF’s Fast and Furious makes no sense in terms of a law enforcement operation is because it wasn’t one at all.

In fact, it may well have been co-opted and trumped by a covert U.S. intelligence agency operation, such as one run by CIA, that is shielded even from most members of Congress — possibly even the White House, if it was launched under a prior administration and parts of it have since run off the tracks on their own.

As the former CIA counterintelligence officer said: “Is there deviation [from the norm, in terms of CIA operations]? Yes. Stuff happens, but that’s because there was deviation; but it’s not authorized.”

In any event, it’s not likely that even the Attorney General of the U.S. could discuss publicly the specifics of such an intelligence operation, authorized or not, without facing the real threat of being accused of violating national security laws — such is the power of the U.S. intelligence community over even law enforcement and the courts in this nation.

As for Zambada Niebla, it is worth noting that shortly after he filed his motion in federal court outing himself as a U.S. informant, his attorneys filed separate pleadings alleging that he is being held improperly in solitary confinement, with all communications, except with his attorneys, essentially cut off by the very government he claims to have assisted.

From those pleadings, filed on June 27:

Vicente [Zambada Niebla] contends that the sum of the conditions under which he is being held in pre-trial detention violates the Due Process clause of the Fifth Amendment and the Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.

He is prohibited from speaking to any other inmates at any time and for any purpose. Vicente is prohibited from speaking to anyone except his counselor and those Bureau of Prisons personnel above the rank of lieutenant. Neither his counselor nor BOP personnel above the rank of lieutenant are regularly on his floor at the [Chicago Metropolitan Detention Center’s Special Housing Unit].

In the entire period of his pre-trial detention [since March 2011], he has not seen sunlight or breathed fresh air. In contrast, he had outdoor exercise every day in a super maximum security facility in Mexico.


Now, it’s not likely anyone is going to feel pity for Zambada Niebla, who stands accused of being a key player in one of the most ruthless narco-trafficking organizations in Mexico — though it is important to note, for the purposes of the U.S. justice system, he stands accused, but not yet convicted.

However, what should be a bit unsettling, even to those who have no empathy for someone like Zambada Niebla, is the possibility that he is telling the truth about being a U.S. government informant/asset, and that his treatment in jail is, in fact, designed to suppress that truth.

And with the stakes this high, in terms of the drug war in Mexico and the billions of dollars funding it, as well as the Congressional scrutiny now focused on Fast and Furious in Congress, can it be completely ruled out that Zambada Niebla might well be deemed a messenger worth silencing?

Former deep undercover DEA agent Mike Levine, who has extensive experience working in Latin America, offers his take on ATF’s Fast and Furious, a view that is grounded in first-hand knowledge of the drug war and its sordid history:

… Running guns into Mexico into the hands of criminals? There can be no objective to this but death, and lots of it.

The events in Operation Fast and Furious are eerily identical to those surrounding the arrest of General Ramon Guillen Davila, a CIA asset who was [indicted for] smuggling a ton of cocaine into the US [in] 1996, in what was described as an intelligence gathering operation, the problem being that no intelligence was ever gathered and that the ton was only one of many other similar shipments of cocaine that actually hit the streets of the U.S. by way of CIA agents.

If I were a criminal profiler, it wouldn't take much to identify a CIA pattern here [with Fast and Furious]: A wacko, barroom commando, illegal operation that makes no sense whatsoever, run outside the control of law enforcement.


Stay tuned….
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