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Mexican Army
corrupted and now largest Drug Cartel in Mexico
By Michael Webster:
Syndicated Investigative reporter. Feb 22, 2011 at 3:00 PM,
PT

The Mexican Army is known to be corrupt
and now is believed by many to be the
biggest Mexican Drug Cartel of all.
Most U.S. law-enforcement officials
working alongside of the Mexican
Army and other Mexican law enforcement
believe they are corrupt and very much
involved in drug and human trafficking.
Those same sources acknowledge the
involvement at the highest levels of the
Mexican military and lower level
officers and the troops on the ground
are being paid off by the other cartels
and are directly now trafficking
in the lucrative narcotics and migrant
smuggling business on a national bases.
In addition some human-rights
organizations charge that Mexican
soldiers, lacking in police training,
have been increasingly involved in
abuses including murder, rape, and
forced disappearances. New York-based
Human Rights Watch says accusations of
abuse lodged with Mexico's National
Human Rights Commission, an autonomous
government agency, skyrocketed to over
2500 complaints in 2010 from just 182
complaints in 2006.
The Calderon administration now admits
that corruption in Mexico's military has
become an increasing problem as the army
took the lead in fighting the country's
powerful and rich Mexican Drug Cartels (MDC's),
but stops short of acknowledging that
the Mexican Army has become a Mexican
Drug Cartel . President Felipe Calderón
put the military on the front lines of
the nation's drug war when he came to
power in 2006. Since then, Mr. Calderón
tried to quell a wave of violence using
the army by taking over policing duties
from corrupt police departments in parts
of the country.
“Many Mexican police agencies along the
border are in the pay of the
narcotraficantes and the corruption
extends to high-ranking key Mexican
military officers.”
And “Drug cartels spend $500 million a
year to pay off corrupt Mexican generals
and police officials.”
Former Congressman Tancredo went on to
say: “There’s no doubt Mexican military
units along the border are being
controlled by drug cartels, and not by
Mexico City. The military units operate
freely, with little or no direction, and
several of them have made numerous
incursions into the United States.”
Just recently the Laguna Journal
and the U.S. Border Fire Report
learned from a U.S. diplomatic cable,
that a Mexican officer assigned to guard
President Felipe Calderón was accused of
leaking information to drug cartels in
exchange for bribes, training hit men
through a private security firm, and
supplying military weapons to groups
like the Los Zetas.
The document also said another official
who worked for Calderón leaked a copy of
the president's medical file to one of
the cartels.
Concerning the accused military officer,
"the cartels were using the information
to avoid heightened security around the
president, not to target him
personally," said the document disclosed
by online whistleblower Wiki Leaks.
The arrest represents the most serious
security breach to date in the Calderon
Administration and the Mexican Army.
However, this news gathering
organization has been told by U.S. Law
enforcement that a full fledged
investigation by the United States which
involves the strong possibility that
information leaked to the Zetas cartel
by high ranking military personal within
the inner circles of the Calderon
administration may have lead and made it
possible for the ambush and brutal
murder and wounding of ICE's two
agents last week.
The document classified secret
identified the suspected officer as
Mexican army Maj. Arturo González
Rodríguez.
González also stands accused of leaking
military intelligence, training MDC's
hit men through a private security
company and supplying military weapons
to other MDC's, including los Zetas."
The Zetas are suspected of being
involved in the Feb. 15 shooting assault
on two Immigration and Customs
Enforcement agents in central Mexico,
according to sources close to the
investigation.
ICE Special Agent Victor Avila of El
Paso was wounded, while ICE Special
Agent Jaime Zapata of Brownsville died
at the scene. They were assigned to
liaison duties in Mexico.
Former ICE official Miguel Contreras
said he was not surprised by the
infiltration of cartel assets in
Mexico's military and law enforcement.
"I
was at a gathering in Mexico more than
20 years ago when the first commander of
the Mexican Federal Judicial Police
pulled out a copy of a DEA report that
was about him and read it to us,"
Contreras said. "He told us he knew the
DEA agent who wrote the report, and he
also told us that 'whatever you do or
write, we are going to know about it.'
The DEA report he had was a sensitive
document that someone had leaked to
him."
The U.S. diplomatic cable dated Jan. 20,
2009, said that Mexican officials tried
to downplay "the seriousness of the
breach" related to the army officer's
bribery case.
"The second unsettling aspect of the
case is that González apparently had
been on the cartel payroll since 2005,
during which time he held different
positions in the government," the U.S.
cable said. "As he changed assignments,
he was kept on as a cartel asset, and
the nature of his involvement with the
cartels changed."
The cable that originated in the U.S.
Embassy in Mexico.
Also, "One source advised that
Calderón's medical file was passed to a
(drug cartel) by a corrupt member of
Calderón's inner circle," according to
the U.S. diplomatic cable.
So call me a cynic.
A Mexican Army general who has
been methodically trashing the
power structure of northwestern
Mexico for the last two years is
now raising hell in Baja
California. But recent history
shows that he’s denounced public
officials in Mexican states
before – and always to no avail.
The situation is looking an
awful lot like the U.S. Army
generals who denounced Pres.
Bush's adventures in Iraq – lots
of big, experienced names
shaking their heads in
disapproval, and nobody in power
seems to care.
In fact, Gen. Sergio Aponte
Polito has now famously trashed
the power structure of three of
the four most lucrative narco-trafficking
states leading into the United
States, Sinaloa, Sonora and Baja
California; and nothing has ever
come of it.
Now I’m wondering what his real
purpose is.
Since 2005, Aponte has very,
very publicly denounced the
state, local and federal
government representatives in
Sinaloa, Sonora, and now, Baja
California.
While American and Mexican media
are giving him massive props for
his astonishing accusations of
corruption in Baja California’s
government, I’m curious to know
whether we’re watching a general
on a crusade or a political
powerplay coming out of Mexico
City.
If you notice, nobody in Mexico
City has stepped up to back the
guy – though nobody has tried to
slow him down, either. So is
Gen. Aponte Polito following a
script from his bosses or is he
going it alone?
And why, if his allegations are
true, are they being ignored?
Last week, the revered general
published a letter in
La Cronica, the Mexicali paper,
trashing more than 35 state and
local officials as corrupted
employees of a drug cartel.
Among his accusations:
That agents of Tijuana’s
anti-kidnapping squad
participated in kidnappings
itself.
That a state police officer
approached his infantry
commander in Tecate with an
offer to secure a pact with
local crime leaders in order to
gain public security control of
the city.
In yet another angry paragraph,
he went after the Mexican
Federal Attorney General’s
Office, saying that he’s
received information that local
Feds were receiving $4,000 to
$5,000 a month to let the
cocaine cartel, the Arellano
Felix family, cruise drugs on
through to the U.S.
“What kind of confidence can be
had of certain public
functionaries?” he asks in his
letter.
“How many officials are
connected to these criminal
organizations?”
The general’s accusations are
only the latest in a string of
very, very public accusations.
Last January, he went after the
state of
Sonora shortly after Alfredo
Beltrán Leyva was arrested in
Culiacán. I find it …
interesting … that he waited
until after the top kingpin goes
down before he slammmed the
state of Sonora.
“These are criminal gangs that
have been working for years and
they were only able to grow and
fortify themselves because they
count on the complicity of the
authorities,” he said.
And the year before that,
Sinaloa, telling the PAN
governor that corruption in his
state prosecutor’s office is not
being attacked.
Now, I have no doubt, in fact,
in many cases, I have very
conclusive proof, of state
officials tied to the country’s
top narco-traffickers.
This may be a new Mexico, but
the patronage system is as heavy
as it ever was. Maybe we should
call it the “patrón system.”
You’ve got state police
commanders working for the
Sinaloans in Sonora. PRI mayors
taking bribes, federal officials
in cahoots with the Gulf Cartel
to the east, the Arellanos to
the west. Federal employees
selling landing strips in
wildlife refuges, you name it.
Political corruption has seeped
so deeply into the country that
it’s nearly inextricable, a
cancer virus so profound, you’d
kill off the healthy cells if
you tried to remove it.
So, yeah; the general’s letter
offers no real surprises.
But what’s the motive? In 2005,
Gen. Aponte Polito was
attacking the Sinaloa government
when Pres. Vicente Fox’s Secure
Mexico plan was first being
implemented. If you notice, from
the linked opinion piece by
columnist Carlos Ramirez, Aponte
was yanked out of Sinaloa
shortly after he trashed the
state government and placed in
Quintana Roo.
The general kept up the attacks
against the governor of Sinaloa
but nothing was ever done. In
fact, by early 2007, thousands
of Mexican troops who’d been
sent into Sinaloa were quietly
withdrawn. Many accusations and
most, I have no doubt,
completely true.
But it’s like an inept
babysitter threatening to tell
mom and dad. Nobody’s listening.
More secrets.
The last time we all watched a
general go so public, it nearly
ended disastrously for Mexico.
Gen. Jesús Gutiérrez Rebollo was
crushing the Arellano Felix
cartel to the joy of the
Americans. But as it turned out,
he was merely doing the bidding
of top narco, Amado Carrillo
Fuentes.
Gen. Aponte Polito has tossed
the dice, but he’s tossed them
before and absolutely nothing
came of it. So call me a cynic,
but I’ll withhold my cheering
until the Feds fly in to see
what his ruckus is all about.
Continue reading at NowPublic.com:
A Mexican Army general is screaming
about corruption, but is anyone
paying attention? | NowPublic News
Coverage
http://www.nowpublic.com/world/mexican-army-general-screaming-about-corruption-anyone-paying-attention#ixzz1EocGtiFz
So call me a cynic.
A Mexican Army general who has
been methodically trashing the
power structure of northwestern
Mexico for the last two years is
now raising hell in Baja
California. But recent history
shows that he’s denounced public
officials in Mexican states
before – and always to no avail.
The situation is looking an
awful lot like the U.S. Army
generals who denounced Pres.
Bush's adventures in Iraq – lots
of big, experienced names
shaking their heads in
disapproval, and nobody in power
seems to care.
In fact, Gen. Sergio Aponte
Polito has now famously trashed
the power structure of three of
the four most lucrative narco-trafficking
states leading into the United
States, Sinaloa, Sonora and Baja
California; and nothing has ever
come of it.
Now I’m wondering what his real
purpose is.
Since 2005, Aponte has very,
very publicly denounced the
state, local and federal
government representatives in
Sinaloa, Sonora, and now, Baja
California.
While American and Mexican media
are giving him massive props for
his astonishing accusations of
corruption in Baja California’s
government, I’m curious to know
whether we’re watching a general
on a crusade or a political
powerplay coming out of Mexico
City.
If you notice, nobody in Mexico
City has stepped up to back the
guy – though nobody has tried to
slow him down, either. So is
Gen. Aponte Polito following a
script from his bosses or is he
going it alone?
And why, if his allegations are
true, are they being ignored?
Last week, the revered general
published a letter in
La Cronica, the Mexicali paper,
trashing more than 35 state and
local officials as corrupted
employees of a drug cartel.
Among his accusations:
That agents of Tijuana’s
anti-kidnapping squad
participated in kidnappings
itself.
That a state police officer
approached his infantry
commander in Tecate with an
offer to secure a pact with
local crime leaders in order to
gain public security control of
the city.
In yet another angry paragraph,
he went after the Mexican
Federal Attorney General’s
Office, saying that he’s
received information that local
Feds were receiving $4,000 to
$5,000 a month to let the
cocaine cartel, the Arellano
Felix family, cruise drugs on
through to the U.S.
“What kind of confidence can be
had of certain public
functionaries?” he asks in his
letter.
“How many officials are
connected to these criminal
organizations?”
The general’s accusations are
only the latest in a string of
very, very public accusations.
Last January, he went after the
state of
Sonora shortly after Alfredo
Beltrán Leyva was arrested in
Culiacán. I find it …
interesting … that he waited
until after the top kingpin goes
down before he slammmed the
state of Sonora.
“These are criminal gangs that
have been working for years and
they were only able to grow and
fortify themselves because they
count on the complicity of the
authorities,” he said.
And the year before that,
Sinaloa, telling the PAN
governor that corruption in his
state prosecutor’s office is not
being attacked.
Now, I have no doubt, in fact,
in many cases, I have very
conclusive proof, of state
officials tied to the country’s
top narco-traffickers.
This may be a new Mexico, but
the patronage system is as heavy
as it ever was. Maybe we should
call it the “patrón system.”
You’ve got state police
commanders working for the
Sinaloans in Sonora. PRI mayors
taking bribes, federal officials
in cahoots with the Gulf Cartel
to the east, the Arellanos to
the west. Federal employees
selling landing strips in
wildlife refuges, you name it.
Political corruption has seeped
so deeply into the country that
it’s nearly inextricable, a
cancer virus so profound, you’d
kill off the healthy cells if
you tried to remove it.
So, yeah; the general’s letter
offers no real surprises.
But what’s the motive? In 2005,
Gen. Aponte Polito was
attacking the Sinaloa government
when Pres. Vicente Fox’s Secure
Mexico plan was first being
implemented. If you notice, from
the linked opinion piece by
columnist Carlos Ramirez, Aponte
was yanked out of Sinaloa
shortly after he trashed the
state government and placed in
Quintana Roo.
The general kept up the attacks
against the governor of Sinaloa
but nothing was ever done. In
fact, by early 2007, thousands
of Mexican troops who’d been
sent into Sinaloa were quietly
withdrawn. Many accusations and
most, I have no doubt,
completely true.
But it’s like an inept
babysitter threatening to tell
mom and dad. Nobody’s listening.
More secrets.
The last time we all watched a
general go so public, it nearly
ended disastrously for Mexico.
Gen. Jesús Gutiérrez Rebollo was
crushing the Arellano Felix
cartel to the joy of the
Americans. But as it turned out,
he was merely doing the bidding
of top narco, Amado Carrillo
Fuentes.
Gen. Aponte Polito has tossed
the dice, but he’s tossed them
before and absolutely nothing
came of it. So call me a cynic,
but I’ll withhold my cheering
until the Feds fly in to see
what his ruckus is all about.
Continue reading at NowPublic.com:
A Mexican Army general is screaming
about corruption, but is anyone
paying attention? | NowPublic News
Coverage
http://www.nowpublic.com/world/mexican-army-general-screaming-about-corruption-anyone-paying-attention#ixzz1EocGtiFz
Calderon won a
narrow victory
as President in
Mexico. He had a
network of
profoundly
corrupt local
and national
municipalities.
He decided to
collect and use
a seemingly
“less corrupt”
army to impose
civil order. The
U.S. is
contributing
$1.4 billion to
help Calderon
combat the
ferocious MDC's
and their
worthless gangs
throughout
Mexico. The army
is ill-trained
and with large
segments corrupt
and corruptible,
according to
Mexican
reporters who
had previously
fled to the U.S.
They also claim
the army has
pulled off a
coup d’etat,
morphing into
its own
terrorist,
drug-money
collecting,
gun-wielding
cartel –
morphing into an
enemy in
uniformed
disguise to
terrorize
physically and
spiritually the
Mexican
citizenry.
This isn't the
first time army
officers have
been linked to
MDC's.
Despite such
incidents, many
Mexicans believe
Mr. Calderón had
little choice
but to use the
armed forces.
Many of the
country's 1,600
municipal and
state police
forces are
corrupt and act
as armed
branches of
Mexico's warring
drug cartels,
government
officials say.
Retraining
Mexico's police
to better deal
with the threat
will take at
least a decade,
officials say,
during which
soldiers will
have to bear the
main burden in
the war against
the drug
cartels.
In the past,
when the
military has
become involved
in
counternarcotics
policy, it
hasn't proved
immune to
corruption or
human-rights
abuses. Twelve
years ago, Gen.
Jesus Gutiérrez
Rebollo,
Mexico's newly
named drug czar,
was found to be
working for a
top drug
trafficker; he
is now in jail.
A decade
earlier, top
Mexican military
officials were
implicated in a
vast
marijuana-trafficking
operation whose
discovery led to
the torture and
murder of U.S.
Drug Enforcement
Administration
agent Enrique
Camarena.
The army, with
its low salaries
and high
desertion rate,
also has proved
as vulnerable to
corruption as
police, who
often have acted
as hired guns
for smugglers.
Five Mexican
soldiers,
including a
major, were
indicted on
charges of
leaking
information on
their unit's
movements to
members of the
Sinaloa drug
cartel.
"The amount of
money is huge,"
said Luis
Garfias, a
retired
three-star
general who said
he fended off
entreaties while
stationed on the
border in
Mexicali . "You
like women? You
like alcohol?
It's free for
you. Completely
free, and
dangerous."
In the 1990s,
then-President
Ernesto Zedillo
ordered the air
force to chase
drug flights and
named an army
general as the
nation's top
anti-drug
officer.
That general,
Jose de Jesus
Gutierrez
Rebollo, was
later convicted
on charges that
he helped Amado
Carrillo
Fuentes, reputed
head of the
Juarez cartel.
"Mid-level
Mexican Army
Major Arturo
González
Rodríguez was
arrested the
week of December
21, 2008, for
allegedly
assisting
Mexican drug
trafficking
organizations
for ($100,000
U.S. dollars) a
month.
"Based on
statements from
a former cartel
member turned
witness
code-named
'Jennifer,' PGR
(federal
attorney
general's
office) has
accused González
of passing
information
related to the
activities and
travel plans of
Mexican
President Felipe
Calderón to the
Arturo Beltran
Levya
organization (ABLO).
Related:
G eneral,
Three police
officers
arrested for
drug trafficking
A captain, a
colonel and a
major were
arrested for
having links
with a drug ring
headed by former
head of the
FELCN, General
Rene Sanabria
Oropeza.. Two
worked in
Intelligence.
The General,
arrested in
Panama Saturday,
was flown
immediately to
the U.S. He was
responsible for
arranging drug
shipments to the
U.S.
 
http://tinyurl.com/4ho3tta
http://tinyurl.com/46r7fpx
Mexican army
to hold press
conference about
ICE agent case
We Bring Fear" |
Mother Jones
Sources:
Members inner
circle Calderon
Administration
Wall Street
Journal.
The Mexican
military
U.S. & Mexican Embassy's
DEA
M3 Report
E l
Paso Times
Open Mexican news
sources
Other sources quoted and
referred
to
in article
Michael Webster
Syndicated Investigative
Reports are read
worldwide, in 100 or
more U.S. outlets and in
at least 136 countries
and territories. He
publishes articles in
association with global
news agencies and media
information services
with more than 350 news
affiliates in 136
countries. Many of Mr.
Webster´s articles are
printed in six working
languages: English,
French, Arabic, Chinese,
Russian and Spanish.
With ten more languages
planed in the near
future.
He served as a trustee on trade Union funds. A noted Author, Lecturer,
Educator, Emergency
Manager,
Counter-Terrorist, War
on Drugs and War on
Terrorist Specialist,
Newspaper Publisher.
Radio News caster. Labor
Law generalist, Teamster
Union Business Agent,
General Organizer, Union
Rank and File Member
Grievances
Representative, NLRB
Union Representative,
Union Contract
Negotiator, Workers
Compensation Appeals
Board Hearing
Representative. Mr.
Webster represented
management on that side
of the table as the
former Director of
Federated of Nevada. Mr.
Webster publishes
on-line newspapers at
www.lagunajournal.com
and
www.usborderfirereport.com
and does investigative
reports for print,
electronic and on-line
News Agencies.
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Survival Family
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