Borderland Beat posted by DD republished from The National Security Archive and The Intercept
Blood and bullet holes mark the walls of the warehouse where the Tlatlaya executions took place. (Miguel Dimayuga, Proceso) |
DD. Mark Twain once said, " If you don't read newspapers you are uninformed. If you do read newspapers you are ill-informed".
Fortunately, for all its faults, today we have the internet and don't have to rely on MSM newspapers and TV. Borderland Beat tries to present factual accurate news stories that you likely won't find on MSM. To do that we research a wide array of sources such as the Security Archive. I invite to you to visit their site and read a little about who and what they are.
From NSArchives
US: Mexico Mass Graves Raise "Alarming Questions" about Government "Complicity" in September 2014 Cartel Killings
National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 515
Posted May 12, 2015 Edited by Michael Evans
Washington, DC, May 12, 2015 – A U.S. military “Human Rights Working Group” said that mass graves not related to the September 2014 disappearance of 43 students in Guerrero, Mexico—but nevertheless found during the investigation of that case—raised “alarming questions” about the “level of government complicity” in Mexican cartel killings. The student victims from a rural teachers college in Ayotzinapa were allegedly abducted by local police forces and turned over to members of a local drug gang to be executed. All but one of the students—whose remains were reportedly identified by an Austrian forensic group—are still missing seven months later.
Too many Graves |
The October 2014 report from
U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM) is one of several declassified
records obtained by the nongovernmental National Security Archive and
highlighted in a new report for The Intercept by
former Archive staffer Jesse Franzblau and Cora Currier. The
newly-declassified records, some posted here for the first time (links to actual documents follow this story) , shed
light on how the U.S. has perceived and responded to allegations of
serious human rights abuses committed by U.S.-funded security forces in
Mexico, which have become disturbingly common in recent years.
“None of the 28 bodies identified thus far are the remains of the
students,” reads a summary of the Working Group meeting circulated to
senior officers at NORTHCOM on October 14, 2014, “raising alarming
questions about the widespread nature of cartel violence in the region
and the level of government complicity.” NORTHCOM, based in Colorado,
is the regional military command in charge of Defense Department
programs in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
Another item on the Working Group’s agenda was the June 2014
slaying of 22 suspected drug gang members at Tlatlaya, in the state of
Mexico, by the Mexican Army’s 102nd Battalion. Four months later, and
shortly after the arrests of a Mexican Army officer and seven soldiers
from the 102nd for the killings and subsequent cover up, the Working
Group “assesse[d] that as more facts come to light there is greater
acceptance that the military was involved in wrongdoing,” raising
serious questions about the ability of the U.S. to provide aid to
military forces in the region.
“If [the military zone commander is] implicated in a gross human
rights violation,” the Working Group reported, “the entire military zone
and 10,000 personnel will be ineligible for U.S. security cooperation
assistance.”
Building where Mexican soldiers killed 22 alleged criminals in Tlatlaya. (Universal ZumaPress |
Another NORTHCOM document obtained
by the Archive and highlighted in the report is the first public
confirmation that the U.S. State Department last year did quietly
suspend assistance to the 102nd Battalion following Tlatlaya, pending
the outcome of official investigations. The NORTHCOM “Information Paper
on San Pedro Limon, Tlatlaya Incident” indicates that the 102nd “is now
ineligible to receive US assistance.”
Questioned about the reported suspension of aid by The Intercept,
the State Department would only confirm that five members of the
battalion had previously been trained by the U.S. but said that none of
those five are implicated in the Tlatlaya case. A 1997 law introduced
by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) bars U.S. support to foreign security
forces credibly linked to human rights violations.
Franzblau and Currier, the reporters from the Intercept story, call the suspension of aid in the Tlatlaya
case “a rare confirmed example of the U.S. government actually cutting
off funding for security forces” in Mexico. Even so, the State
Department has not said whether any Mexican units tied to the Guerrero
disappearances (the 43 students) have been declared ineligible for U.S. aid, as the Leahy
law would seem to require in this case.
The Intercept asked the State Department for a list of all
Mexican units that have been cut off from U.S. funding because of human
rights violations since the Mérida initiative began, but the
spokesperson said it was not yet publicly available.
“It’s incomprehensible that they don’t already have that list,” said Laura Carlsen, Mexico City-based director of the Americas Program, in an email to The Intercept.
Carlsen has worked for years with a coalition of human rights groups to
bring attention to the consequences of U.S. support for the drug war in
Mexico.
According to the authors, “The State Department’s piecemeal
response to these events highlights the conundrum that Mexico now
presents for the United States, as it seeks to help the Mexican
government battle drug cartels.” The U.S. has provided some $3 billion
in security assistance to Mexican forces since 2008, in addition to
billions more in direct military sales and other aid. Franzblau and
Currier cite a diplomatic cable published
by Wikileaks to “show how U.S.-Mexico security and intelligence
relations have reached unparalleled levels of intimacy” in recent
years. The 2010 cable from the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City stresses that
U.S. “ties with the Military” at that time had “never been closer in
terms of not only equipment transfers and training” but also
“intelligence exchanges.”
As reported in the Intercept;
In this context, U.S. cooperation with the Mexican government — which
entails billions in American financial backing for its war on drugs —
is receiving renewed scrutiny.
U.S. government documents obtained by the National Security Archive
through Freedom of Information Act requests demonstrate that the United
States is well aware that its support is going to Mexican authorities
connected to abuses. And yet, with few exceptions, the money keeps
flowing.
New evidence provides a rare glimpse of the way U.S. authorities have
learned that the Mexican security apparatus has been implicated in
specific abuses, and how they have responded. The Tlatlaya incident is a rare confirmed example of the U.S. government actually cutting off funding for security forces.
Since 2008, the U.S. government has spent nearly $3 billion on security aid to Mexico, largely through the Mérida Initiative,
a counter-drug strategy modeled on Plan Colombia, through which the
United States funneled billions of dollars to that country’s
often-brutal drug war. This support comes in addition to direct sales of
arms and other equipment, which totaled over $1.15 billion last year alone. Mexico recently surpassed Colombia to become the largest customer for U.S. weapons in Latin America.
The U.S. State Department’s own human rights reporting on Mexico
highlights police and military involvement in serious abuses, including
unlawful killings, physical abuse, torture and disappearances.
One U.S. Embassy cable
from 2011 reported on the discovery of 219 bodies unearthed in a series
of mass graves that year around the northern city of Durango. Another cable,
from 2010, discusses a mass grave in Acapulco, Guerrero containing the
bodies of 18 men, and another near a ranch in the northern state of
Chihuahua, filled with 19 men and one woman.
“Clearly elements within the [Mexican] Army believed that they had
nothing to fear by slaughtering innocent people execution-style, which
indicates a pervasiveness of impunity,” said Tim Rieser, foreign policy
aide to Senator Leahy, who has been a longtime advocate for greater
pressure on Mexico on human rights, in reference to the Tlatlaya case.
“So clearly there’s a long way to go.”
But the unprecedented level of U.S. influence on Mexico’s armed
forces came alongside an extraordinary increase in drug war abuses and
in human rights violations connected to state and local security forces.
The violence that has engulfed Mexico since then has produced a flurry
of reports from U.S. diplomatic and intelligence officers expressing
concern that America's drug war partners in the Mexican security forces
were working hand-in-glove with cartel terrorists.
- In April 2010, the U.S. Embassy’s Narcotics Affairs Section said that criminal groups operated with “near total impunity in the face of compromised local security forces.”
- An FBI report from later that year included a list of police officers in Saltillo, Coahuila, who had “provided support and information” to the notorious Los Zetas drug gang.
- In another case previously reported by the Archive, the U.S. had knowledge of Mexican government efforts to downplay the magnitude of the infamous 2011 San Fernando massacre, in which cartel thugs allied with local police forces kidnapped and murdered hundreds of migrants from intercity buses headed north toward the U.S.-Mexico border. Mexican officials, “speaking off the record,” also told the U.S. that the bodies of the massacre victims were “being split up to make the total number less obvious and thus less alarming.”
One of the key objectives of U.S. aid to Mexico during this time has
been to beef up the country’s security communications infrastructure
by lending funds, expertise and equipment to the Plataforma Mexico project, which the U.S. State Department described
in 2007 as a “billion-dollar scheme for establishing interconnections
between all police and prosecutors.” The U.S. poured millions of
dollars into Plataforma Mexico, which was essentially a
criminal database that connected state- and regional-level intelligence
coordination centers known as “C-4s” (“command, control,
communications and coordiation”) to each other and to law enforcement
officials through a centralized, U.S.-funded command and control
facility known as “The Bunker.”
Franzblau and Currier point out that the “more sophisticated C-4s
in Mexico’s northern region communicate directly with U.S. agencies,
such as Department of Homeland Security offices across the border,” but
there is good reason to question the overall effectiveness of the C-4s
in combatting drug violence. A 2009 assessment said that neither Plataforma México
nor the C-4 in San Pedro, in a suburban section of Monterrey, had been
successful in hindering cartel operations. A declassified January 2010 cable from
the U.S. Embassy in Mexico, for example, said that the C-4 facility in
Tijuana was little more than a “glorified call center” for everyday
emergencies that lacked “a strong analytical component.” Two months
prior, a separate cable from the Embassy
described a range of competency at the various C-4s, from, “at the low
end, glorified emergency call centers,” to “[a]t the high end... more
professional analytic cells that produce useful analysis and planning
documents and also have a quick response time.”
The more complete C-4s include representatives from national and regional entities, and are the nerve centers for day-to-day information flow, intelligence, and directing operations in the state. They are often also the link to national databases, such as Plataforma Mexico. Huge disparities between state C-4s exist, but many states are working to move their units from merely housing emergency dispatchers to being functional hubs of operations and intelligence. The UNITOs [Tactical operational units, or Unidades Táctiva Oprerativo] often rely on information fed from good C-4s, in addition to federal databases and platforms.
Most importantly, as Franzblau and Currier note in their piece,
the U.S.-funded C-4s also appear to have played a role in the
disappearance of the 43 students in Guerrero:
C-4s certainly didn’t help in the case of the forty-three missing Ayotzinapa students. As The Intercept detailed, internal records produced by Guerrero state investigators show that the regional C-4s near the site of the students’ kidnapping transmitted information on the movement of the students the night that they were attacked. But neither federal law enforcement nor the military intervened to stop the violence.
Reports in the Mexican magazine Proceso and
elsewhere linking regional C-4s and other government entities to the
events surrounding the Ayotzinapa case have led many to question what
the government knew about the massacre and have galvanized calls in
Mexico for greater openness about government efforts to bring cartel
thugs and their collaborators in the security forces to justice. It
remains unclear whether the U.S. will apply Leahy Law sanctions to the
C-4 units that were apprently involved in the disappearance of the 43
students.
Mexican authorities have promised transparency but have largely
resisted the efforts of journalists and academics to gain access to
records on the cases. This despite the fact that Mexican law requires
the release of information pertaining to grave violations of human
rights in all cases. (In one notable exception, Mexico’s attorney general last year declassified a document from
its case file on the 2011 San Fernando massacre showing that local
police helped to round up hundreds of migrants later killed at the
hands of the Zetas cartel.)
Mexican government stonewalling about the case has some looking
to the U.S.—Mexico’s chief sponsor and partner in the anti-drug
effort—for answers. A key part of the U.S. paper trail are records
indicating how the U.S. government determines whether to suspend
security assistance to members and units of the Mexican security forces
involved in human rights abuses. One newly-declassified document shows
that senior U.S. military officials from NORTHCOM reached out to
counterparts from Mexico’s Defense Ministry (SEDENA) about the Tlatlaya
killings after receiving multiple questions about the case.
“Since we’ve continued to get inquiries as to what we’ve
specifically talked to SEDENA about ref. the Tlatlaya incident, I made a
call to SEDENA Enlace,” reads an October 2014 message from the
Pentagon official in charge of U.S. military assistance programs in
Mexico (the Office of Defense Cooperation – ODC). Among other things,
the ODC chief said it was “good news” to hear from SEDENA that alleged
human rights cases like Tlatlaya are “taken out of the military justice
system” and transferred to civilian authorities.
A 2014 law requires Mexico’s attorney general to
prosecute all cases in which Mexican security forces are accused of
abusing civilians. But as Franzblau and Currier point out, it is not at
all clear that the civil justice system has been any more effective at
punishing human rights violators than military tribunals:
A Mexican government database lists over 23,600 people who have been reported disappeared throughout the country; 2014 witnessed 5,133 disappearances, the highest number on record. Impunity remains the norm, with 98.3 [sic - should be 93.8] percent of crimes going unpunished in 2013, according to Mexican government statistics. The U.S. State Department’s own human rights reporting on Mexico highlights police and military involvement in serious abuses, including unlawful killings, physical abuse, torture and disappearances...
The Mexican government’s failure to investigate mass graves provides a revealing example of the problem of impunity. Hundreds of mass graves have been discovered in Mexico in recent years. Despite that, Mexico’s federal prosecutors have reported opening just 15 investigations between 2011 and April 2015, according to documents obtained by the human rights organization Article 19.
The U.S. government has also known about cases where the Mexican
government has opened investigations into mass graves only to suppress
them later. As the National Security Archive has documented,
in 2011, when mass graves were discovered in Northeastern Mexico
containing the remains of victims of the Zetas cartel, U.S. officials
knew that Mexican authorities were downplaying the massacres and
removing remains to make the body count appear less alarming,
jeopardizing investigations in the process. (Mexican authorities later
released files implicating local police in the crime.)
There are no easy answers to the “alarming questions” raised by
the shocking number of mass graves now being unearthed in Mexico. What
seems clear is that a U.S. strategy that has poured billions of dollars
into Mexico’s drug war over the last decade—mostly aimed at taking
down high-profile cartel kingpins—has done little to stem epidemic
levels of violence or limit the criminal groups’ ability to compromise
government officials at all levels.
“The bigger picture is that this aid does go to human rights
violators. U.S. taxpayer dollars are supporting a drug war that
emboldens abusive government forces that are executing and disappearing
Mexican citizens. No amount of withholding or [human rights]
conditioning will change that,” said.Laura Carlson, Mexico City director of the Americas Program.
DD. While the State Dept made a step (a baby step) in the right direction by suspending of assistance to the 102nd Battalion, the money is still flowing.
THE DOCUMENTS (DD; these are summaries, the full documents may be seen at the National Security Archive at the link at the beginning of this post)
Document 1
ca. October 2007
The Deputy Secretary's Meeting with Mexican Secretary of Public Security Genaro Garcia Luna at AFI Headquarters, La Moneda
U.S. State Department, briefing paper, Sensitive But Unclassified, 3 pp.
In a briefing paper prepared for U.S. Deputy Secretary of
State John Negroponte's meeting with the head of Mexico's Public
Security Secretariat (SSP), the State Department's bureau for the
Western Hemisphere says SSP chief Genaro Garcia Luna is "creating a
massive system of interconnectivity between all levels of law
enforcement, Plataforma Mexico, a billion dollar project."
Negroponte is instructed to ask, if time allows, about "how Mexican
jurisprudence treats privacy issues in context of criminal databases."Source: FOIA
Document 2
December 5, 2007 Deputy Secretary Negroponte has Cordial Meetings [with] Senior Mexican Security and Law Enforcement Officials
U.S. Embassy Mexico, cable, Confidential, 6 pp.
In a meeting with SSP director Garcia Luna, Deputy Secretary of State Negroponte "emphasized the need for good coordiation among police elements, and noted [the U.S.] commitment to helping Mexico meet its current security challenges." Garcia Luna told Negroponte about Plataforma Mexico, described in the meeting read-out as "the billion-dollar scheme for establishing interconnections between all police and prosecutors." The Plataforma "already reaches every Mexican state," according to the meeting record, "and by January [2008] would extend down to the municipalities, eventually reaching 2000."
Source: U.S. Department of State, FOIA Appeals Review Panel
Document 3
March 4, 2009
Nuevo Leon’s Efforts to Reform State and Local Police Have Not Been Effective
U.S. Consulate Monterrey, cable, Secret
The U.S. Consulate in Monterrey, the capital of the Mexican state of Nuevo León, provides an assessment of law enforcement activities in the wealthy Monterrey suburb of San Pedro. The cable notes that Plataforma México has been installed in the San Pedro regional command, control, communication and coordination center (C-4) and that the U.S.-based global aerospace and technology company Northrop-Grumman served as a prime contractor for a similar facility in the state of Nuevo León, called the C-5.
According to the assessment, U.S. consulate officials do not believe that either Plataforma México or the C-4 in San Pedro had been successful in hindering cartel operations.
Source: Wikileaks
Document 4 November 10, 2009 Mexico: More Interagency Cooperation Needed on Intelligence Issues U.S. Embassy Mexico, cable, Secret
This cable provides a detailed assessment of the capacity of Mexico’s intelligence agencies, and explains the functions of the state level command and control centers, and the Plataforma database. The cable reads:
10. (C) The state-level C-4 centers (command, control, communications, and coordination) are, at the low end, glorified emergency call centers. At the high end, they include more professional analytic cells that produce useful analysis and planning documents and also have a quick response time. The more complete C-4s include representatives from national and regional entities, and are the nerve centers for day-to-day information flow, intelligence, and directing operations in the state. They are often also the link to national databases, such as Plataforma Mexico. Huge disparities between state C-4s exist, but many states are working to move their units from merely housing emergency dispatchers to being functional hubs of operations and intelligence. The UNITOs [Tactical operational units, or Unidades Táctiva Oprerativo] often rely on information fed from good C-4s, in addition to federal databases and platforms.Source: Wikileaks
11. (C) Plataforma Mexico is another important piece of the intel puzzle and continues to expand its presence throughout the country. The mega-criminal database has a wide array of information-sharing and analytical tools that help to track and share information on individuals and organized crime cells, vehicles, air movements, and is linked with an increasing number of surveillance and security cameras. The database is housed at SSP and is being deployed to an increasing number of states, with different tiers of access that are controlled through the vetting system.
Document 5
January 12, 2010
Tijuana Bilateral Assessment
U.S. Embassy Mexico, cable, Confidential, 8 pp.
Like the previous document, this declassified cable from the U.S. Embassy in Mexico characterizes the C-4 center in Tijuana, Baja California, as a “glorified call center.”
Source: FOIA
Document 6
January 29, 2010 Scenesetter for the Opening of the Defense Bilateral Working Group, Washington, D.C., February 1
U.S. Embassy Mexico, cable, Secret
In 2010, with the U.S.-funded Mérida Initiative aid package in full swing, the U.S. Embassy noted in a cable released by Wikileaks that, “our ties with the military have never been closer in terms of not only equipment transfers and training,” but also “intelligence exchanges.”
Source: Wikileaks
Document 7
April 16, 2010
Narcotics Affairs Section Mexico Monthly Report for March 2010
U.S. Embassy in Mexico, cable, unclassified, 11 pp.
The U.S. Embassy's Narcotics Affairs Section provides a monthly summary of internal developments in Mexico, reporting that "March ended as one of the bloodiest months on record, with an estimated 900 killings nationwide." The cable says that Mexican government officials did not anticipate the sharp increase in violence in the northeast that occurred as the Zetas took control the lucrative plazas in the region. U.S. officials report the violence has "cut a swath across north-east Mexico, including key towns in Tamaulipas, Coahuila, and Nuevo Leon, and even in neighboring Durango." The Embassy message notes the failure of the Mexican authorities to manage the growing threat, highlighting how "DTO's [Drug Trafficking Organizations] have operated fairly openly and with freedom of movement and operations…In many cases they operated with near total impunity in the face of compromised local security forces."
As part of U.S. support provided through the Mérida Initiative, the document also reports on U.S. efforts to implement an initiative to train regional police under the Culture of Lawfulness education initiative, involving officials from the now-defunct Secretariat of Public Security (SSP) in Baja California, Chihuahua, Nuevo Leon, Coahuila, and Tamaulipas.
Source: FOIA
Document 8
August 19, 2010
2010 Omnibus INCLE ALOA Ready for Signature
U.S. State Department, cable, unclassified, 4pp.
In August 2010, the State Department reported that over $6 million was authorized for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) to support the implementation of the Plataforma software in regional C-4s.
Source: FOIA
Document 9
August 23, 2010
DOD Counter Narcoterrorism Technology Program Office (CNTPO) Program and Operations Support, TORP 0200, Revision Number 00
DOD, task order, performance work statements, 17 pp.
This document discusses how the DOD Counter Narcoterrorism Technology Program Office (CNTPO) contracted out projects to provide support for Mexico’s regional command centers (C-4s). The CNTPO request for proposals discusses requirements for program and operations support for ten C-4 sites.
The support included providing relay capability at existing Mexican communications facilities for connectivity to the C-4 sites. This involved conducting site surveys in order to verify equipment required to satisfy the requirements for ten C-4 sites and two microwave relay facilities in Mexico that would correspond to microwave facilities run by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP). The contractor hired to provide the equipment was to interact with other Mexican and U.S. agencies (e.g. C-4s, DHS, CPB) where needed to perform and complete the required activities. The contractor was also tasked to provide training to personnel from Mexican state and federal offices.
Source: FOIA
Document 10
November 19, 2010
Administrative Revision - Provision of Support to Los Zetas by Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico, Municipal Police Officers and Polic [sic]
U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, Intelligence Information Report, Secret/Noforn, 3 pp.
FBI authorities in Mexico report information connecting police officials in Saltillo, Coahuila, to the Zetas and to “drug trafficking and homicides.” A list of officers who “provided support and information to Los Zetas” is redacted from the document.
Source: FOIA
DOCUMENT 11
April 15, 2011
Tamaulipas' Mass Graves: Body Count Reaches 145
U.S. Consulate Matamoros, cable, unclassified, 4 pp.
Summing up information taken from official sources, the U.S. Consulate reports that a total of 36 grave site containing 145 bodies were discovered in the San Fernando area during a SEDENA operation that took place April 1-14, 2011. Seventeen Zetas and 16 members of the San Fernando police have been arrested in connection with the deaths. The police officials are being charged with "protecting the Los Zetas TCO members responsible for the kidnapping and murder of bus passengers in the San Fernando area."
Off the record, Mexican officials tell Consulate officials that "the bodies are being split up to make the total number less obvious and thus less alarming." Consulate officers also comment that, "Tamaulipas officials appear to be trying to downplay both the San Fernando discoveries and the state responsibility for them, even though a recent trip to Ciudad Victoria revealed state officials fully cognizant of the hazards of highway travel in this area."
Source: FOIA
Document 12
Ca. October 8, 2014
ODC Chief Comments
U.S. Northern Command, ODC Mexico Weekly Report, Unclassified/For Official Use Only, 5 pp.
The chief of the U.S. Office of Defense Cooperation (ODC) in Mexico reports on his communications with Mexican defense officials after repeated queries about the Tlatlaya case.
Source: FOIA
Document 13
October 15, 2014
INFO – Summary Human Rights Working Group, 15 OCT
U.S. Northern Command, report, Unclassified, 2 pp.
This summary of the U.S. Northern Command’s “Human Rights Working Group” from October 15, 2014 focuses on two major human rights cases of concern that month. The first case was related to the alleged military involvement in the Tlatlaya killings, in which four individuals had been taken into civilian custody (three soldiers for murder charges and one lieutenant for cover up charges) and an additional four soldiers were in military custody for violations of the military justice code. According to the report, “New facts indicate that these personnel were a patrol involved in the extrajudicial killing of 8 cartel members following two firefights with multiple civilian casualties.”
The summary goes on to note that Mexico’s military is investigating the major general in charge of the military zone overseeing the battalion accused of the killing (the 102nd Battalion). The notes from the meeting indicate that if credible allegations connect the commander to a gross human rights violation, “the entire military zone and 10,000 personnel will be ineligible for U.S. security cooperation assistance.” Further, the U.S. Office of Defense Cooperation (ODC) assesses that as more facts come to light, “there is greater acceptance the military was involved in wrong-doing.”
The other issue of concern for the U.S. military last October was the police involvement in the disappearance of the 43 students from Ayotzinapa kidnapped in Guerrero. While there had been approximately 50 arrests of police and government officials, the report notes that the students’ whereabouts are unknown. Further, nine new mass graves have been found outside of Iguala, but “None of the 28 bodies identified thus far are the remains of the students, raising alarming questions about the widespread nature of cartel violence in the region and the level of government complicity.”
Source: FOIA
Document 14
January 14, 2015
Information Paper on San Pedro Limón, Tlatlaya Incident
U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM), unclassified, report, 1pp.
The document provides the latest update on the Tlatlaya killings, reporting that the government of Mexico “has detained and charged seven SEDENA personnel in conjunction with the killing of twenty-two individuals on 30 June 2014 in San Pedro Limon, Tlatlaya, Mexico State.” According to the report, “The unit implicated is now ineligible to receive US assistance.” The report states that none of the alleged perpetrators previously received U.S.-funded training, but notes that the incident has received “extensive negative coverage in international press and, along with subsequent cases involving police, has prompted non-government organizations to lobby the US legislature to suspend security assistance to Mexico.”
The document gives the following account of the incident: “SEDENA members of the 120nd [sic] infantry Battalion stationed in Santa María Ixtapan responded to an anonymous call in the early morning of 30 June, regarding the presence of armed suspects at a warehouse in Tlatlaya. A firefight ensued between the military and the civilians on site (suspected to be members of the Guerreros Unidos Cartel). According to the Mexican Attorney General (PGR), one soldier was wounded during the confrontation, and all 22 of the civilians were either killed or wounded. Four soldiers are accused of entering the warehouse alter the conclusion of the firefight, and killing all remaining civilians. Evidence indicates up to fifteen of the twenty two civilians were killed alter the firefight, and prosecutions are focused on these killings.”
The NORTHCOM information paper adds that “SEDENA’s 102nd Infantry Battalion, and that the State Department has suspended U.S. funded assistance to this unit pending the results of the investigations.”
Source: FOIA
So where is el pitufu??
ReplyDeleteHe is In your butt . In all seriousness he is probably hiding
Deletepitufu, or Papa Smurf is not hiding. According to a story posted on the Forum (link below) by Pepe, pitufu is likely to be the next security chief of Michoacan if PRI wins the governors election there. He and his band of rurales are actively supporting the PRI candidate for Governor.
DeleteProbably a coincidence that a non PRI candidate for Mayor of Yurecuaro, who was leading in the polls by over 80% and was a former Autodefense leader was murdered this week as reported here on BB by Lucio.
Photo of Papa Smurf campaigning for PRI is included in the link to Pepe's story on Forum.
http://borderland-beat-forum.924382.n3.nabble.com/Enrique-Hernandez-Former-Mich-AD-Leader-Running-for-Mayor-of-Yurecuaro-td4083219.html
Ok thank you for correcting me but i said that trying to make you laugh and being ignorant
DeleteWhen I was young my mom used to tell me Mexico was full of demons and chupacabras Y La Llorona. Now i get it.
ReplyDeleteAll this stupid war brings to my memory Vietnam, We, who are old enough to have a clear memory of My Lai massacre(s), think of this US taxpayer financed war as a prolongation of the desire of our country to sell weapons ... and the people to get drugs. Not too different from Afghansitan or Irak, were our boys killed hundreds of thousands of civilians and were rewarded wiht the medal of honor, leaving a legacy of hate (ISIS) and destroyed countries. We, the people, deserve to be informed with the truth, establish Justice ... how far our ideals are from this reality.
ReplyDeleteTwisted version of history ! Probably written by a draft dodger .ISIS exists to hate everyone btw.Killing Muslims from different sects,be it Kurdish ,Shiite,and also Christians.
ReplyDeleteIf the Mexican people don't rise up ,there is no future .Dr Mierles still in prison,oh well just watch Novelas until they come for you...
its sad to say but i dont know if the mexican people are cowards or just ignorant
DeleteIt is not ignorance or cowardice...
Delete--when tue US themselves seem to be so "confused" about the poor results of their billion dollar investments in the mexican SSP, police and military, "none of them personally trained in the US schools of the assassins", but the billions of dollars looted from the US public treasury have been used by private interests with aims different from those of the american taxpayer, henry kissinger and co. know perfectly well what is going on, they have been carrying on with dirty wars, false wars, wars against communism, and wars against drug trafficking chieftains that do not fit the mold because they got greedy and do not produce anymore as they should...
--La platforma mexico begging for one billion US dollars a year, se la pela a la platforma slim, that makes that as chump change to burn...
--seven members of the mexican army, arrested for Tlatlaya murders, do not even count, the whole 102 Battallion will just be dispersed into other units...
--Independent tribunals and investigations of crimes of state need to be established, but the US will not stop supporting their murdering but ass kissing servants, the mexican governing narco-mierdocracia and the mexican armed forces "commander in chief"...
--All the war on drugs represents is a bitch fight among powerful interests that really own the drug trafficking business and want to keep it that way...
It's about time you read an article on what the US government feels about all this crap in Mexico. This explains the lack of US involvement in this drug war. Guess their perception is they would have to fight cartels and the Mexican government.
ReplyDeletelink?
Delete@12:20. I am not sure what link you want. On the first line of the post, there is a hyper-link to National Security Archives and to Intercept. If you don't know how a hyper-link works, just click on the highlighted words and you will go to that web-site. There are numerous hyper-links through out the story. If a hyper-link is not working please let me know.
Delete12:20 was talking to 7:54 pm, not to you, dd...s' ok we all fack up all the time...
Deletewhy you always talk about forum this and forum that? been there and done that. a bunch of losers and speculators there giving bad information from narco blogs.
ReplyDeleteBecause it is entertaining, and there is room for YOU!!! To correct to your heart's content, I bet the BB administrators will post 100% of the corrections you send, try...
ReplyDelete