NO MORE BULLETS

June 8th, 2008

A friend asked me “why is there no .223?”. He was under the mistaken idea that most if not all of the U.S. production of commercial ammunition was being sent to the middle-eastern theater. The production of military contract ammunition is a priority for munitions factories  but there is plenty of domestic capacity to fulfil all domestic orders. So why is there no ammo on store shelves?

Two brothers, both Chinese Nationals, opened up a scrap metal business in a Long Island Industrial Park. They bought a 2200 square foot building situated on a half-acre fenced yard. Shortly after they moved in, the highly compressed bails of scrap metal started to show up. Two fork trucks work feverishly 7-days a week shifting the bails into segregated stacks of aluminum, steel, brass, copper and old car batteries. Tons and tons of metallic flotsam and jetsam compressed into compact cubes measuring 3-feet by 3-feet by 4-feet get stacked in every square inch of space in the yard.

Plastic-wrapped pallets of hundreds of used mag wheels purchased from automotive wreaking yards sit next to plastic-wrapped pallets of computer monitors long obsolete. Scrap wire left over from construction sites, compressed into cubes, with their kaleidoscope of insulation colors, sit on top of cubes of crushed auto radiators which have been carefully wrapped in shrink wrap.

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The tractor trailers line up at the crack of dawn, with their Ship Container Trailer rear cargo doors wide open. Fork truck after fork truck of scrap metal cubes and pallets get painstakingly packed into each. Eight maybe ten Ship Containers a day, seven days a week, are loaded at the 6-month old company. By all estimates, a million dollars a week in high quality scrap metal is packaged and shipped from the business.  Where is it all going?

Think of all those Ship Containers coming over from China. Each one carrying microwaves and LCD big screen televisions from China. Tens of thousands a day arrive from the Communist country, who’s gross domestic product is surpassing us (the U.S.) and who’s tilting of the trade imbalance is giving them an unparalleled amount of influence over our economy.

As China plunders their natural resources, the need for more raw materials to fuel their phenomenal rate of economic growth has become the paramount goal of the government. The opening up of free-trade with the ChiComs has moved the third-world giant to where they are knocking on our back door. Now that their raw materials are drying up, Chinese entrepreneurs are coming here and buying up scrap materials to ship back to China. The fact that it costs less for a Chinese manufacturer to buy American aluminum mag wheels here, ship them back to China, cut them up and melt them down, then cast them into everything from cooking pans to high-hat ceiling light fixture housings, and ship it back to sell to us, all at a cost far less than what a U.S. manufacturer can do it for, shows just how screwed up our own economy really is.

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Bottom line: The Chinese and the Indians are willing to pay more for our raw materials than we are. Brass, lead, copper and steel are being sucked out of our country at a frightening rate. On the world market, a ton of scrap copper wire will cost the Chinese over $7,400, and they will still have to strip off the plastic insulation. They are willing to bid more than we are.

But what’s the real costs? As both U.S. houses of Representatives fight over the so-called “Cap -n- Trade” bill, which basically places the burden of the world’s carbon emission upon us (U.S.), China will not have to abide or comply to it. They will strip off that plastic insulation on that ton of scrap wire by throwing in in a furnace, with the resultant PCBs emitted into the air.

Yet we will suffer.

Why “Open-Borders” makes for bad neighbors

May 30th, 2008

The dismal failure of U.S. Customs and Border Patrol’s “Project 28” again highlights the level of mismanagement and the waste of public funds. The nine 100-foot mobile communications and surveillance towers which were designed and intended to provide real-time information of illegal border crossings along the Mexican and Canadian borders is a no-starter. The system which was suppose to give “live-feed” video back to a central command center and provide a reliable radio-repeater retransmission of Border Patrol Agent’s radios, does not work.

Jayson Ahern, deputy commissioner for the CBP, under which Project 28 has been managed, testified before congress that some of the “technical deficiencies” were “egregious.” CBP plans are to remove the mobile towers and store them in some “Indiana Jones-style government warehouse” to be re-utilized at some later date. Referred to as “Tool-Box” inventory, the towers will sit and rot until they show up on some on-line government liquidator’s website being offered for pennies on the dollar.

Key contractor for “Project 28”, Boeing Co. who is the SBInet systems integrator, will now provide an entirely new system of towers for deployment along the 6,000 miles of common border with Mexico and Canada. Calling the original multi-million dollar failed system a “prototype”, the supposed “new” system will incorporate ground radar into the multi-facetted border observation towers.

It doesn’t really matter what system CBP deploys next because NOTHING will replace real eyes on the scene. Agents actually working the border instead of sitting behind a computer monitor is what will stop the illegal alien and drug transport problem.

Here is a perfect example of hand-on border enforcement:

Texas DOT Vehicle Stopped by State Trooper

Texas DOT Vehicle stopped by an alert DPS Trooper on I-10 between San Antonio and Seguin , TX    

The Mexican’s went to great lengths to replicate a Texas State DOT truck.

Exact down to the littlest detail, the truck could be parked in a DOT yard and never be noticed.

A check reveiled that the base pick up was stolen from a Mexican construction company.

Under the truck’s bed-liner was a treasure of marijuanna.

The bed-mounted tool box was equally stuffed with “grass”.

The smuggling operation could have been going on for months.

The Mexican-cloned Texas State DOT truck was the perfect cover until a sharp-eyed Texas State Trooper spotted the pickup and decided to investigate further.

The arrested Mexican nationals have so far refused to provide any information as to how wide-spread the practice of cloned-government vehicles being utilized for drug and illegal alien border-crossings really is.

Compiled from news dispatches

Battling the Mexican threat

May 14th, 2008

We are going it alone

The burden of policing the country’s southern border for drug trafficking increasingly falls upon us (U.S.) shoulders. Mexican authorities are proving ineffective thanks to massive and outright bribery. Similar to gang infiltration of the rank and file of the NYPD, Chicago PD, Huston PD and Bill Bratton’s LAPD, southern U.S. law enforcement has increasingly been influenced by outside entities with fist-full’s of cold hard cash. Just like the level of corruption seen in Arkansas with its Ozark to Chicago Chrystal-Meth pipeline, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas law enforcement have been co-opted by the cash.

Professionals are doing the heavy lifting

Los Zetas, the military wing of the Gulfo Cartel, are engaging in a house-cleaning of sorts. The body-count is reaching astronomical proportions as the Cartel consolidates its hold on the very profitable Mexican-US pipeline. Mexican military HUMMVEEs are spotted nightly by US Border Patrol officers who use Night-Vision equipment, crossing the Rio Grande along Texas’ huge border. Stolen or “loaned” to the Zetas by corrupt Mexican federal authorities, these American-made heavy personnel carriers are transporting huge shipments of drugs across terrain once thought of as impassable. Our inept Department of Homeland Security, ham-strung by political in-fighting amongst congressmen, senators and presidential candidates has resulted in a hands-off attitude towards the problem.  

Firearms in high demand

BATF Special Agents are loosing the fight to prevent US acquired firearms from being transshipped back to the cartels. Thanks to our very porous borders and lax immigration policies, most if not all Latin gangs are sympathetically facilitating straw-man purchases of firearms from Federal Firearms Licensees’ in states along our southern boarders. Several large dealer/manufacturers have been raided recently because of ATF Tracing Center serial number checks of guns captured in raids. The vast majority trace back to dealers located in large urban areas with massive Latin populations. Infiltration of these dealers / manufacturers by gang members is now the focus of the ATF. New regulations for employees and thorough annual background checks are forthcoming.

 

Who are the players?

  Tracking Mexico’s Drug Cartels Edgar Millan Gomez was shot dead in his own home in Mexico City on May 8. Millan Gomez was the highest-ranking law enforcement officer in Mexico, responsible for overseeing most of Mexico’s counternarcotics efforts. He orchestrated the January arrest of one of the leaders of the Sinaloa cartel, Alfredo Beltran Leyva. (Several Sinaloa members have been arrested in Mexico City since the beginning of the year.) The week before, Roberto Velasco Bravo died when he was shot in the head at close range by two armed men near his home in Mexico City. He was the director of organized criminal investigations in a tactical analysis unit of the federal police. The Mexican government believes the Sinaloa drug cartel ordered the assassinations of Velasco Bravo and Millan Gomez. Combined with the assassination of other federal police officials in Mexico City, we now see a pattern of intensifying warfare in Mexico City.  

 The fighting also extended to the killing of the son of the Sinaloa cartel leader, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman Loera , who was killed outside a shopping center in Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa state. Also killed was the son of reputed top Sinaloa money launderer Blanca Margarita Cazares Salazar in an attack carried out by 40 gunmen. According to sources, Los Zetas, the enforcement arm of the rival Gulf cartel, carried out the attack.. Reports also indicate a split between Sinaloa and a resurgent Juarez cartel , which also could have been behind the Millan Gomez killing.   

Spiraling Violence  

Violence along the U.S.-Mexican border has been intensifying for several years, and there have been attacks in Mexico City. But last week was noteworthy not so much for the body count, but for the type of people being killed. Very senior government police officials in Mexico City were killed along with senior Sinaloa cartel operatives in Sinaloa state. In other words, the killings are extending from low-level operatives to higher-ranking ones, and the attacks are reaching into enemy territory, so to speak.

 Mexican government officials are being killed in Mexico City, Sinaloan operatives in Sinaloa. The conflict is becoming more intense and placing senior officials at risk. The killings pose a strategic problem for the Mexican government. The bulk of its effective troops are deployed along the U.S. border, attempting to suppress violence and smuggling among the grunts along the border, as well as the well-known smuggling routes elsewhere in the country. The attacks in Mexico raise the question of whether forces should be shifted from these assignments to Mexico City to protect officials and break up the infrastructure of the Sinaloa and other cartels there. The government also faces the secondary task of suppressing violence between cartels.

  The Sinaloa cartel struck in Mexico City not only to kill troublesome officials and intimidate others, but also to pose a problem for the Mexican government by increasing areas requiring forces, thereby requiring the government to consider splitting its forces — thus reducing the government presence along the border. It was a strategically smart move by Sinaloa, but no one has accused the cartels of being stupid.  

 Mexico now faces a classic problem. Multiple, well-armed organized groups have emerged. They are fighting among themselves while simultaneously fighting the government. The groups are fueled by vast amounts of money earned via drug smuggling to the United States. The amount of money involved — estimated at some $40 billion a year — is sufficient to increase tension between these criminal groups and give them the resources to conduct wars against each other. It also provides them with resources to bribe and intimidate government officials. The resources they deploy in some ways are superior to the resources the government employs. 

 Given the amount of money they have, the organized criminal groups can be very effective in bribing government officials at all levels, from squad leaders patrolling the border to high-ranking state and federal officials. Given the resources they have, they can reach out and kill government officials at all levels as well. Government officials are human; and faced with the carrot of bribes and the stick of death, even the most incorruptible is going to be cautious in executing operations against the cartels.   

Toward a Failed State?  

 There comes a moment when the imbalance in resources reverses the relationship between government and cartels. Government officials, seeing the futility of resistance, effectively become tools of the cartels. Since there are multiple cartels, the area of competition ceases to be solely the border towns, shifting to the corridors of power in Mexico City. Government officials begin giving their primary loyalty not to the government but to one of the cartels. The government thus becomes both an arena for competition among the cartels and an instrument used by one cartel against another. That is the prescription for what is called a “failed state” — a state that no longer can function as a state. Lebanon in the 1980s is one such example. 

 There are examples in American history as well. Chicago in the 1920s was overwhelmed by a similar process. Smuggling alcohol created huge pools of money on the U.S. side of the border, controlled by criminals both by definition (bootlegging was illegal) and by inclination (people who engage in one sort of illegality are prepared to be criminals, more broadly understood). The smuggling laws gave these criminals huge amounts of power, which they used to intimidate and effectively absorb the city government. Facing a choice between being killed or being enriched, city officials chose the latter. City government shifted from controlling the criminals to being an arm of criminal power. In the meantime, various criminal gangs competed with each other for power.

 Chicago had a failed city government. The resources available to the Chicago gangs were limited, however, and it was not possible for them to carry out the same function in Washington. Ultimately, Washington deployed resources in Chicago and destroyed one of the main gangs. But if Al Capone had been able to carry out the same operation in Washington as he did in Chicago, the United States could have become a failed state. It is important to point out that we are not speaking here of corruption, which exists in all governments everywhere. Instead, we are talking about a systematic breakdown of the state, in which government is not simply influenced by criminals, but becomes an instrument of criminals — either simply an arena for battling among groups or under the control of a particular group. The state no longer can carry out its primary function of imposing peace, and it becomes helpless, or itself a direct perpetrator of crime. Corruption has been seen in Washington — some triggered by organized crime, but never state failure.  The Mexican state has not yet failed. If the activities of the last week have become a pattern, however, we must begin thinking about the potential for state failure.

 The killing of Millan Gomez transmitted a critical message: No one is safe, no matter how high his rank or how well protected, if he works against cartel interests. The killing of El Chapo’s son transmitted the message that no one in the leading cartel is safe from competing gangs, no matter how high his rank or how well protected. The killing of senior state police officials causes other officials to recalculate their attitudes. The state is no longer seen as a competent protector, and being a state official is seen as a liability — potentially a fatal liability — unless protection is sought from a cartel, a protection that can be very lucrative indeed for the protector.

The killing of senior cartel members intensifies conflict among cartels, making it even more difficult for the government to control the situation and intensifying the movement toward failure. It is important to remember that Mexico has a tradition of failed governments, particularly in the 19th and early 20th century. In those periods, Mexico City became an arena for struggle among army officers and regional groups straddling the line between criminal and political. The Mexican army became an instrument in this struggle and its control a prize. The one thing missing was the vast amounts of money at stake. So there is a tradition of state failure in Mexico, and there are higher stakes today than before.  

The Drug Trade’s High Stakes  

To benchmark the amount at stake, assume that the total amount of drug trafficking is $40 billion, a frequently used figure, but hardly an exact one by any means.

 In 2007, Mexico exported about $210 billion worth of goods to the United States and imported about $136 billion from the United States. If the drug trade is $40 billion dollars, it represents about 25 percent of all exports to the United States. That in itself is huge, but what makes it more important is that while the $210 billion is divided among many businesses and individuals, the $40 billion is concentrated in the hands of a few, fairly tightly controlled cartels. Sinaloa and Gulf, currently the strongest, have vast resources at their disposal; a substantial part of the economy can be controlled through this money. This creates tremendous instability as other cartels vie for the top spot, with the state lacking the resources to control the situation and having its officials seduced and intimidated by the cartels. We have seen failed states elsewhere. Colombia in the 1980s failed over the same issue — drug money. Lebanon failed in the 1970s and 1980s. The Democratic Republic of the Congo was a failed state.  

 Mexico’s potential failure is important for three reasons. First, Mexico is a huge country, with a population of more than 100 million. Second, it has a large economy — the 14th-largest in the world. And third, it shares an extended border with the world’s only global power, one that has assumed for most of the 20th century that its domination of North America and control of its borders is a foregone conclusion. If Mexico fails, there are serious geopolitical repercussions. This is not simply a criminal matter. The amount of money accumulated in Mexico derives from smuggling operations in the United States. Drugs go one way, money another. But all the money doesn’t have to return to Mexico or to third-party countries. If Mexico fails, the leading cartels will compete in the United States, and that competition will extend to the source of the money as well. We have already seen cartel violence in the border areas of the United States, but this risk is not limited to that. The same process that we see under way in Mexico could extend to the United States; logic dictates that it would. The current issue is control of the source of drugs and of the supply chain that delivers drugs to retail customers in the United States.

 The struggle for control of the source and the supply chain also will involve a struggle for control of markets. The process of intimidation of government and police officials, as well as bribing them, can take place in market towns such as Los Angeles or Chicago, as well as production centers or transshipment points.   Cartel Incentives for U.S. Expansion  That means there are economic incentives for the cartels to extend their operations into the United States. With those incentives comes intercartel competition, and with that competition comes pressure on U.S. local, state and, ultimately, federal government and police functions. Were that to happen, the global implications obviously would be stunning. Imagine an extreme case in which the Mexican scenario is acted out in the United States. The effect on the global system economically and politically would be astounding, since U.S. failure would see the world reshaping itself in startling ways.  

 Failure for the United States is much harder than for Mexico, however. The United States has a gross domestic product of about $14 trillion, while Mexico’s economy is about $900 billion. The impact of the cartels’ money is vastly greater in Mexico than in the United States, where it would be dwarfed by other pools of money with a powerful interest in maintaining U.S. stability. The idea of a failed American state is therefore far-fetched. Less far-fetched is the extension of a Mexican failure into the borderlands of the United States. Street-level violence already has crossed the border. But a deeper, more-systemic corruption — particularly on the local level — could easily extend into the United States, along with paramilitary operations between cartels and between the Mexican government and cartels.  

 U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates recently visited Mexico, and there are potential plans for U.S. aid in support of Mexican government operations. But if the Mexican government became paralyzed and couldn’t carry out these operations, the U.S. government would face a stark and unpleasant choice. It could attempt to protect the United States from the violence defensively by sealing off Mexico or controlling the area north of the border more effectively. Or, as it did in the early 20th century, the United States could adopt a forward defense by sending U.S. troops south of the border to fight the battle in Mexico.  There have been suggestions that the border be sealed. But Mexico is the United States’ third-largest customer, and the United States is Mexico’s largest customer. This was the case well before NAFTA, and has nothing to do with treaties and everything to do with economics and geography. Cutting that trade would have catastrophic effects on both sides of the border, and would guarantee the failure of the Mexican state. It isn’t going to happen.  

The Impossibility of Sealing the Border  

 So long as vast quantities of goods flow across the border, the border cannot be sealed. Immigration might be limited by a wall, but the goods that cross the border do so at roads and bridges, and the sheer amount of goods crossing the border makes careful inspection impossible. The drugs will come across the border embedded in this trade as well as by other routes. So will gunmen from the cartel and anything else needed to take control of Los Angeles’ drug market.  A purely passive defense won’t work unless the economic cost of blockade is absorbed. The choices are a defensive posture to deal with the battle on American soil if it spills over, or an offensive posture to suppress the battle on the other side of the border. Bearing in mind that Mexico is not a small country and that counterinsurgency is not the United States’ strong suit, the latter is a dangerous game. But the first option isn’t likely to work either. One way to deal with the problem would be ending the artificial price of drugs by legalizing them. This would rapidly lower the price of drugs and vastly reduce the money to be made in smuggling them. Nothing hurt the American cartels more than the repeal of Prohibition, and nothing helped them more than Prohibition itself.

 Nevertheless, from an objective point of view, drug legalization isn’t going to happen. There is no visible political coalition of substantial size advocating this solution. Therefore, U.S. drug policy will continue to raise the price of drugs artificially, effective interdiction will be impossible, and the Mexican cartels will prosper and make war on each other and on the Mexican state. We are not yet at the worst-case scenario, and we may never get there. Mexican President Felipe Calderon, perhaps with assistance from the United States, may devise a strategy to immunize his government from intimidation and corruption and take the war home to the cartels. This is a serious possibility that should not be ruled out.

 Nevertheless, the events of last week raise the serious possibility of a failed state in Mexico. That should not be taken lightly, as it could change far more than Mexico.  

This article has been supplemented with info provided by George Friedman

Police Foundation Day at Rodman’s Neck

May 10th, 2008

May 8th. 2008

The NYPD’s Firearms Instructors assigned to teach “Heavy Weapons” start the day piling cases of twelve gauge and nine millimeter on the pallet. The fork truck upon which the pallet sits, idles softly in the morning breeze. Sea gulls lull in the air above the officers who work on the spit of land known as Rodman’s Neck.

In the culture of city police, a smaller subculture toils on this wasteland of dilapidated corrugated sheet metal and plywood. Buildings that the city would gleefully condemn if owned by a private entity, are held together with spit and ingenuity. The ’neck is, what once was, a military base who’s time had long since expired. Overrun by feral cats, the smell of feline urine and dry rot permeate the air. The decay seeps into the very souls of those who trek from the farthest reaches to pass down Range Road.

Today, the tents are up, tables are set and the flame is lit. It’s Foundation Day and the city’s most privileged will be arriving shortly. Preparations for their arrival has the range a buzz with activity. Everywhere, brooms are pushed, trash cans are emptied and parking lots are cleared of instructor’s cars to make way for the chariots of the Titans of Industry. Soon the Bentleys, Rolls, Mercedes and BMWs of the wealth members who make up this shadow enterprise will arrive to a grand reception.

The Water Club again has provided the Prime Rib, T-Bones, Shrimp Cocktails and Lobster Tails. Beverages of all types sit chilling in tubes of ice with special emphasize being paid to the extraordinary tastes of these select few who have powers far beyond those of mortal men. These Friends of Ray Kelly, will spend the day playing with toys that are prohibited from those of lesser social standings.

As the parking lot fills, treasured PD parking placards carefully placed on the dashboards of the ultra expensive motorized conveyances glint in the late morning sunshine. It’s the one day of the year when these elite can walk around disregarding their pistol license restriction to carry concealed, with their prized pistols proudly on display. The eternal competition for who have the biggest and bawdiest handgun rages as these privileged personages strut amongst the Range buildings.

This year, no less than three mechanical clay bird throwing machines have been set up along with several department-owned sporting shotguns and thousands of rounds of specialty shotgun shells, for the spoiled rich boys to play with. Heckler and Koch MP-5A2 and A3 nine millimeter submachine guns and thousands of rounds of precious ammunition has been neatly placed on benches for the Foundation members to spurt down range in magazine-empting bursts.

Police officers, Union Representatives and even the Rand Corporation all agreed that firearms training as had been performed by the Police Academy’s Firearms Training Section was minimal and lackluster at best. In a silent reorganization, Special Operations Division, the home of the famous ESU, has been put in charge of all firearms training, yet ammunition shortages continue to hamper the implementation of additional training which officers so desperately require. Yet on Foundation Day, ammo is flowing from every orifice up here at Rodman‘s Neck.

The man himself, Ray Kelly strolls the ranges, glad-handing the rich and famous as wave upon wave of stupid-rich, expel precious metals at supersonic speed towards entombment in the generations-old dirt embankments so packed with lead and heavy metals that if it were any place else, would be a superfund hazardous waste site. But these are the movers and shakers of New York’s society, and as such, are the life blood of aspiring politicos and city managers. Nothing gets done in New York City without these individuals say-so.

The echo of rolling thunder emanating from the firing lines reverberates throughout the ‘Neck, on this very special day which can only be enjoyed by the very exclusive members of the NYC Police Foundation.

The gem of the Americas

March 30th, 2008

While the world was asleep at the switch, a little-noticed country’s struggle assumed a new role in the long list of world political and ideological conflicts. Israel, since it’s formal founding at the hands of British Generals and Arab royal families, has been the keystone in an arch of fermented violence that has crippled the entire Middle East.  The protagonists and the object of their obsessive desire to cleanse the earth of, battle for a stretch of land that for the rest of the world, appears to have no viable value other than a deep seated notion that someone walked, talked and died there.  

The newest entry to the exalted list of miniscule countries being attacked from all sides is, just like Israel, a staunchly allied friend of ours. This little gem features some of the world’s most agriculturally viable earth, the most cosmopolitan cities of the hemisphere, the most beautiful beaches and a work ethic unmatched by its peers.

The country is a free market economy with major commercial and investment ties to the United States. Transition from a highly regulated economy has been underway for more than 15 years. In 1990, the administration initiated economic liberalization with tariff reductions, financial deregulation, and privatization of state-owned enterprises and adoption of a more liberal foreign exchange rate. These policies eased import restrictions and opened most sectors to foreign investment, although agricultural products remained protected.

$6.9 billion of our exports go there. $9.6 billion of their exports come here.

But who are the enemies of this burgeoning country who is struggling to implement their “Strategy to Strengthen Democracy and Social Development”?

Rafael CORREA, the president of Ecuador and Hugo CHÁVEZ Frias, the president of Venezuela, have let it be known officially, that the overthrow of the pro-US government of Alvaro Uribe Velez and his county of Columbia is their number one priority.

Pay close attention to this one. It’s about to make the Israeli / Palestinian conflict look like a pillow fight.


AJAXed with AWP