Here's this from Quinones' essay:
When I lived in Mexico, its cartels were content with assault rifles and large-caliber pistols, mostly bought at American gun shops. Now, Mexican authorities are finding arsenals that would have been incomprehensible in the Mexico I knew. The former U.S. drug czar, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, was in Mexico not long ago, and this is what he found:Be sure to check out the article at the Times as well, "Drug Cartels' New Weaponry Means War," and especially the stunning graphic illustrations, "Asymmentical Arms" and "Traffickers' Advantage in Arms."The outgunned Mexican law enforcement authorities face armed criminal attacks from platoon-sized units employing night vision goggles, electronic intercept collection, encrypted communications, fairly sophisticated information operations, sea-going submersibles, helicopters and modern transport aviation, automatic weapons, RPG’s, Anti-Tank 66 mm rockets, mines and booby traps, heavy machine guns, 50 [caliber] sniper rifles, massive use of military hand grenades, and the most modern models of 40mm grenade machine guns.
These are the weapons the drug gangs are now turning against the Mexican government as Calderón escalates the war against the cartels.
Mexico’s surge in gang violence has been accompanied by a similar spike in kidnapping. This old problem, once confined to certain unstable regions, is now a nationwide crisis. While I was in Monterrey, the supervisor of the city’s office of the AFI—Mexico’s FBI—was charged with running a kidnapping ring. The son of a Mexico City sporting-goods magnate was recently kidnapped and killed. Newspapers reported that women in San Pedro, once one of Mexico’s safest cities, now take classes in surviving abductions.
All of this is taking a toll on Mexicans who had been insulated from the country’s drug violence. Elites are retreating to bunkered lives behind video cameras and security gates. Others are fleeing for places like San Antonio and McAllen, Texas. Among them is the president of Mexico’s prominent Grupo Reforma chain of newspapers. My week in Mexico last August ended with countrywide marches of people dressed in white, holding candles and demanding an end to the violence.
This is just one more of the "unintended consequences" of the hideous "War on Drugs," which I view as an utter failure.
ReplyDeleteWe learned absolutely nothing from Prohibition.
God only knows how much of our tax dollars have been wasted, how many innocent people have been killed, and how many Americans have had their rights as citizens trampled upon by our own government in its misguided effort to "save us from ourselves."
All this war has accomplished is to fill up our prisons with non-violent drug "offenders" who pose no threat whatsoever to the life, liberty or property of another living American.
The law of supply-and-demand is absolute. If there is a demand, there will be a supply, and all one does when making that supply illegal is to drive up the price and attract more sellers.
Since these people operate outside of the law, they deal with competitors encroaching on their territories the same way the Mafia does. They shoot them.
It isn't just California and Texas that are dealing with the effects of this failed war, either, but we way over here in Atlanta are seeing the effects of it as well:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2009-03-08-mex-cartels_N.htm
What is more, I expect this to be used as an excuse by the freedom-hating gun-grabbers to further infringe on our 2nd Amendment rights.
It is long past time the "War on Drugs" was ended.
-Dave
Having a wide open border doesn't help at all. Isn't that what the drug war is all about? For control of those easy routes into the United States?
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