Author: mopress

  • Guard Carry Automatic Weapons to Border, Compare Duty to Iraq

    In a priceless dispatch from the Associated Press posted below, guard troops hitting the border in Arizona carry automatic weapons and compare their duty near Mexico with previous work near Iran as one big global war on terror. It will be good training for Mid-East duty says a guard officer. Is this exactly why the guard should not be in Arizona? Two other reports about deployments from Maryland and North Carolina mix references with Afghanistan and Iraq–gm SAN LUIS, Ariz. (AP) _ A National Guard unit that helped secure the border between Iraq and Iran about 18 months ago now has its eye on another border — this one a little closer to home.

    Soldiers from the Fayetteville, N.C.-based Combined Arms Battalion this week became the first guardsmen to get field assignments in the Yuma sector of the U.S.-Mexico border, where they’ll act as the eyes and ears for the U.S. Border Patrol, sector Chief Patrol Agent Ron Colburn said.

    The guardsmen will be posted about every quarter of a mile along a levee running adjacent to the border and will report any illegal crossings to border patrol agents, who will carry out any interceptions and arrests, Colburn said.

    The National Guard troops deployed Wednesday night in full-combat gear, wearing camouflage and helmets and carrying automatic rifles. Lt. Col. Randy Powell said the roughly 100-degree temperatures will provide excellent training during the guard’s two-week mission because it mimics conditions in the Middle East.

    Of the battalion’s roughly 550 soldiers, 240 have been deployed in Arizona, Powell said.

    ”We’ll get great training out of it and the great satisfaction of knowing that we’re helping secure the border,” Powell said. ”It helps us see the front line of what the global war on terror is for us here. They’ve seen it overseas and now they can really see it here.”

    The addition of guard troops at the border has led to more than 15 Border Patrol agents being moved from support roles back into the field, Colburn said.

    ”It’s sending the right message to organized crime that would take advantage of the border situation,” he said. ”America is safer, Yuma is safer and residents here can sleep safer tonight because the National Guard from North Carolina are assisting us here in mission support.”

    Paul Chavez, an asap reporter based in Los Angeles, traveled to southern Arizona and northern Mexico to report on the people who patrol the border, and those who hope to cross it.

    Guarding borders: From Iraq to Arizona; By PAUL CHAVEZ , Associated Press (ASAP); © July 29, 2006


    Annapolis-based Guard will help Border Patrol
    By PAMELA WOOD, Staff Writer

    Citzen-soldiers based in Annapolis will head to Arizona next week to help secure the border with Mexico, officials announced yesterday.

    Maj. Charles Kohler, a public affairs officer for the Maryland National Guard, couldn’t say exactly how many Annapolis-based soldiers would go to the border. But he did said the majority of the 120 Maryland soldiers being deployed are based at the Medford National Guard Armory in Parole.

    They’ll fly from Martin State Airport in Baltimore County in two segments on Monday and Aug. 5. Once in Arizona, they’ll support Border Patrol and Customs agents stationed at the Arizona-Mexico border, Maj. Kohler said.

    The call-up is part of Operation Jump Start, President Bush’s plan to ramp up manpower along the border.

    The soldiers won’t be directly responsible for confronting or arresting suspected illegal border-crossers.

    Instead, they’ll conduct observation along a 372-mile sector between Arizona and Mexico, identifying suspicious subjects and alerting Border Patrol agents, Maj. Kohler said. They also could man checkpoints.

    “They’ll be working closely with Border Patrol,” he said.

    The Annapolis soldiers will come from the 1st Squadron, 158th Calvary Regiment of the 58th Infantry Brigade Combat Team.

    “They’re trained primarily in surveillance and reconnaissance, so it naturally fits with what they do,” Maj. Kohler said.

    The tours will last 60 days.

    Though the full Annapolis unit hasn’t been deployed recently, many of the individual members have been called up.

    Some have gone to Iraq and Afghanistan to help with the war on terror. Others have participated in Operation Noble Eagle, providing protection at key domestic sites, such as airports and military installations.

    “Some of them were tasked to go down to Hurricane Katrina,” Maj. Kohler added.

    More than 800 guard soldiers from across the state are currently deployed on various assignments, including Iraq, Afghanistan, Cuba and Kosovo.

    “Once again, the Maryland National Guard answers the call of our nation,” Maryland’s top military official, Maj. Gen. Bruce F. Tuxill, said in a statement. “Our soldiers have valuable skills that can help with the security of the southern border.”

    Soldiers are expected to arrive at the armory this weekend for training before their deployment.

    Published July 28, 2006, The Capital, Annapolis, Md.


    Posted on Fri, Jul. 28, 2006
    N.C. troops on guard at Mexico border
    Soldiers stake out miles of desert to report illegal crossings

    BARBARA BARRETT
    (Raleigh) News & Observer

    SFC Patrick Mohan, of Sanford, points out a spot along the Mexico-Arizona border to Sgt. John Burt of Fuquay-Varina in San Luis, Arizona, on Thursday toward the end of the N.C. National Guard’s first shift assisting the Border Patrol.
    TED RICHARDSON | News & Observer

    SAN LUIS, Ariz. – The Border Patrol official gave the signal to move ’em out, and the N.C. National Guard’s first caravan of desert-tan Humvees and cargo trucks rolled south toward the nation’s border late Wednesday, drawing onlookers’ stares and casting long shadows.

    This is the show of force President Bush wanted when he announced Operation Jump Start in May. The buildup to 6,000 National Guard troops on the U.S.-Mexico border is intended to send a signal to potential illegal immigrants: Don’t do it.

    Some 200 troops from North Carolina’s 252nd Combine Arms Battalion are among the nation’s first to set up observation points to stem the flow of migration into the United States.

    “We’re spotting illegal immigrants and reporting them. The customers, for us, are Border Patrol,” said Lt. Col. Randy Powell, a Charlotte-Mecklenburg police sergeant who commands the Fayetteville-based battalion. “I think our legacy in Arizona is we develop something that’s not been done before by the Guard.”

    Though the battalion is armed and has experience enforcing borders in Iraq, the soldiers will be used solely as scouts in Arizona. It is their job to spend endless hours near the line with Mexico, radioing reports of suspicious movement to the Border Patrol. It’s up to the federal agency to catch illegal immigrants.

    “If we’re doing our job right, hopefully we won’t see anything,” said Capt. Chris Rogers, 39, of Cary. “We’re here to deter.”

    This is why the troops are running out in caravans, hanging lights from their nighttime observation points and setting up along some of the sites most visible from Mexico.

    The troops frighten migrants, Assistant Chief Arthur Angulo of the Border Patrol’s Yuma sector said during a tour of the border with visiting Brig. Gen. Steve Hargis of the N.C. Guard.

    “They are afraid of the uniform, of the military uniform,” said Angulo, who oversees Operation Jump Start for the sector.

    As the truck passed the border fence, a man peered around it, less than a foot from the United States.

    The Border Patrol expects to have about 2,000 National Guard troops in place in California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas by Tuesday .

    Already, the National
    Guard deplo
    yments have helped free up 250 Border Patrol agents for field duty, Border Patrol Chief David Aguilar said this week in Washington. The Guard will stay two years as the federal agency hires new agents.

    For North Carolina’s troops, the work replaces two weeks of training at Fort Bragg.

    The N.C. troops arrived in Arizona on Sunday and spent the next couple of days training and getting briefed while leaders tried to figure out where to place them. They stayed two nights in Tucson hotels for training before driving west to Yuma.

    To the troops, the land southwest of Yuma looks eerily familiar, like Balad, Iraq, with its flat lands, groves of date trees and harsh wind.

    Wednesday evening, troops in San Luis unfurled camouflage netting on a levee overlooking the border a few hundred yards away. The netting would be used as daytime shade during the blistering southern Arizona heat, which is topping 110 degrees daily.

    A Border Patrol agent briefed Rogers. Watch the fence there, he said, pointing left to the tall, corrugated metal. The migrants duck in and dash to the right along the fields or scurry past into a nearby cluster of homes and lose themselves there.

    “Anything here, that’s what you’re looking for,” the agent said, sweeping his arm over the fields.

    It was dark, and Pfc. Jonathan Tart of Erwin and Pfc. Isaac Lake of Fayetteville sat cross-legged on the hood of a Humvee. They wore Kevlar helmets, scanning the inky horizon through night binoculars.

    “Do you see that?” Tart asked. He pointed out a pair of lights speeding through the field.

    Lake nodded. “I see it. What is that?”

    “It’s a truck. It’s moving fast as h—.”

    It was the Border Patrol. No migrants, no emergency.

    Since Bush announced Operation Jump Start in May, apprehensions on the Mexican border have dropped nearly 45 percent from the previous two months, Aguilar said Tuesday in Washington.

    In the Yuma sector, apprehensions are down 1 percent from this time last year, said spokesman Richard Hays. Until Bush’s announcement, Hays said, apprehensions had been up.

    Inside the detention center this week, captured immigrants sat on wooden benches in barren holding rooms. Two teenage girls sat quietly while a man slept nearby on the floor. A boy alone in a juvenile holding cell watched through the glass as a Border Patrol agent showed paperwork to N.C. Guard leaders.

    Powell said the troops will work until Thursday and will return to North Carolina by Aug. 5.

    By sunup, the troops on the San Luis levee had seen little. A few jackrabbits. A person who stood on the edge but wandered back into Mexico. And an endless stream of cars on a distant border road, making it tough to distinguish through the night vision goggles.

    — News & Observer Photographer Ted Richardson contributed.

    — Barbara Barrett: 202-383-0012; bbarrett@mcclatchydc.com

  • El Paso Sector Arrests Up, Deployment not Quite on Schedule

    The El Paso border sector, which includes all of New Mexico and two Texas counties, reports an increase of border arrests year-to-date. The Border Patrol Chief testified in Congress last week that overall border arrests were down for the past few months, but news reports usually added that border crossings usually decline at the peak of summer heat.

    Meanwhie, in a story about Nevada troops soon to be baking in the Arizona sun, the AP continues to hint that the border deployment is not keeping up to schedule, a claim that has in the past drawn attention from the White House response team. Still, we would love to see the plan for Operation Jump Start so we can judge for ourselves.

    We do have an FOI request that has been forwarded to Washington. With all the celebration of guard troops as citizen-soldiers, we hope for a day when citizen-journalists will have value in the eyes of the nation, too.–gm Arrests along N.M.-Mexico border increase

    July 27, 2006, 10:56 AM

    WASHINGTON — Arrests of would-be illegal immigrants along a section of the Mexican border that includes New Mexico have increased 13 percent in the last 10 months, the U.S. Border Patrol said.

    The increase comes as arrests along the entire U.S.-Mexico border have dropped since President Bush ordered the military to help tighten the border.

    Border Patrol Chief David Aguilar said Tuesday that New Mexico arrests were up because the area had been shortchanged on resources to fight illegal immigration in the past.

    The Border Patrol “had not been able to do a very good job” in the Deming and Lordsburg areas, Aguilar said.

    “We just didn’t have any resources,” he said.

    Spurred by complaints from New Mexico politicians, the Border Patrol added 305 agents to the El Paso Sector of the border, which includes all of New Mexico and Texas’ two westernmost counties.

    Doug Mosier, a spokesman for the El Paso sector, said 1,642 agents are assigned to the sector with plans to raise that number to 1,900 by year’s end.

    New Mexico also has 692 of the 4,500 National Guardsmen that Bush ordered deployed to California, New Mexico, Texas and Arizona.

    From Oct. 1, the start of the federal fiscal year, through Sunday, 110,217 illegal immigrants were caught in the El Paso sector of the border. That compares with 97,194 arrests during the same period the previous fiscal year.

    Along the entire U.S.-Mexican border, Aguilar reported a 45 percent decline in the number of people arrested from May 16, a day after Bush announced he would deploy National Guard troops to the border, to July 23.

    Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., said for the last several years he has been urging the Bush administration to deploy more resources to New Mexico’s border.

    “I’m glad that the White House has finally recognized that things have, in fact, not been under control and has begun to take the problem seriously,” Bingaman said.

    Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M., said there has been a “dramatic” change since August, when “high-ranking officials in El Paso seemed unaware and unconcerned about the problem, and unwilling to make significant changes.”

    A spokesman for Gov. Bill Richardson says the increased arrests in New Mexico show why the governor declared a state of emergency along the border last year and freed up $1.75 million in state funds to help county law enforcement along the border.

    “The National Guard deployment is a helpful stopgap, but the governor still believes that what are needed are additional, permanent Border Patrol agents along the New Mexico border,” Goldstein said.

    Copyright 2006 Associated Press.


    130 Nev. Guardsmen will arrive Saturday

    the associated press

    Tucson, Arizona | Published: 07.28.2006

    CARSON CITY, Nev. — About 130 members of the Nevada Army and Air National Guard leave Saturday for duty along the Arizona-Mexico border as part of Operation Jump Start, designed to keep illegal immigrants from crossing into the United States.
    Members of the 152nd Civil Engineering Squadron, based in Reno, and soldiers from the 150th Maintenance Company based in Carson City and Las Vegas, will travel to several locations in Arizona as part of two- and three-week rotations.

    They’ll assist U.S. Customs and Border Protection personnel near Phoenix, Nogales, Tucson and Yuma.
    President Bush’s “Jump Start” plan called for 6,000 troops to be on the border in support roles by this weekend. But officials in border states have said the Guard would likely need more time to meet that mark.

    Bush has said the mission will free up thousands of officers now on other duties to actively patrol the border. Guardsmen are building fences, conducting routine surveillance and taking care of other administrative duties for the border patrol.

    Bush’s plan called for all 50 states to send troops, but not all states immediately signed commitments. Some state officials argued that they couldn’t free up Guard members because of responsibilities in their home states.

  • Focus on 'Free Trade' Policy, not Migrants

    Paul Craig Roberts argues in the subscriber edition of CounterPunch that declines in pay and availability of USA employment can be best explained by ‘free trade’ policies that encourage export of middle-class work. We offer some excerpts, beginning with another indication of suppressed public information–gm

    “If outsourcing jobs offshore is good for U.S. employment, why won’t the U.S. Department of Commerce release the 200-page, $335,000 study of the impact of the offshoring of U.S. high-tech jobs? Republican political appointees reduced the 200-page report to 12 pages of public relations hype and refuse to allow the Technology Administration experts who wrote the report to testify before Congress.
    Democrats on the House Science Committee are unable to pry the study out of the hands of Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez. On March 29, 2006, Republicans on the House Science Committee
    voted down a resolution designed to force the Commerce Department to release the study to Congress. Obviously, the facts don’t fit the Bush regime’s globalization hype.”


    American economists, some from incompetence
    and some from being bought and paid for, described globalization as a “win-win” development. It was supposed to work like this: The U.S. would lose market share in tradable manufactured goods and make up the job and economic loss with highly educated knowledge workers. The win for America would be lower-priced manufactured goods and a white-collar work force. The win for China would be manufacturing jobs that would bring economic development to that country.

    It did not work out this way, as Morgan
    Stanley’s Stephen Roach, formerly a cheerleader for globalization, recently admitted. It has become apparent that job creation and real wages in the developed economies are seriously lagging behind emtheir historical norms as offshore outsourcing
    displaces the “new economy” jobs in “software programming, engineering, design, and the medical profession, as well as a broad array of professionals in the legal, accounting, actuarial, consulting,
    and financial services industries”.

    The real state of the U.S. job market is revealed by a Chicago Sun-Times report on January 26, 2006, that 25,000 people applied for 325 jobs at a new Chicago Wal-Mart. According to the BLS payroll jobs data, over the past half-decade (January 2001 – January 2006, the data series available at time of writing) the U.S. economy created 1,050,000 net new private sector jobs and 1,009,000 net new government jobs for a total five-year figure of 2,059,000. That is seven million jobs short of keeping up with population growth, definitely a serious job shortfall.

    The BLS payroll jobs data contradict the hype from business organizations, such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, that offshore outsourcing is good for America. CounterPunch subscriber edition Vol. 13, No. 13

  • Ramsey Muniz on Carlos Fuentes, Liberation, and Spirituality

    Dear Friends:

    In the enclosed writings Ramsey Muniz shares very spiritual sentiments inspired by his favorite author, Carlos Fuentes. We were fortunate and perhaps
    destined to hear him speak at Del Mar College more than twelve years ago. Please distribute.–Irma L. Muniz


    Carlos Fuentes, Liberation, and Spirituality
    6/25/06

    “The key to understanding ourselves as a people today
    remains in discovering and living our Mexicano spirituality and cultura. Today we are in the actual visible process of building our spiritual temple in our hearts in all Aztlan. We are unconsciously working together and assisting each other for the new millennium by growing in love, character, awareness,
    sharing Mexicayotl, and preparing ourselves for the liberation of all Aztlan.”

    –Tezcatlipoca

    I can never forget when we met Carlos Fuentes in
    Corpus Christi, Texas when he spoke at Del Mar College. We took photos with the author as I shared with him the importance of his words and wisdom for our people.

    “Every single person in the valley of Morelos, Mexico, from the old veterans of the Mexican Revolution to present day schoolchildren, still believes that Zapata is alive. And perhaps they are right. Zapata will live as long as people believe that they have a right to their land and a right to govern themselves according to their deeply held beliefs and cultural values.”

    The Buried Mirror. Carlos Fuentes.

    During the late hours confined in these dungeons of the oppressor I was enlightened by the written spiritual words as expressed by Mr. Fuentes in his book entitled I Believe. I could feel the spirituality of our ancient Mexicano past enter into the brick walls of this realm of injustices and sorrow. Never before in all his writings had he expressed the reality and truth of our
    spirituality as a people, as a race, and as a nation.

    “The singularity of Jesus is that the permanence, fame or value of his work arises from obscurity and anonymity. Had he not been rescued by the apostles and propagandized by St. Paul, it is highly likely that the preacher from Galilee would have become lost
    among the hundreds of holy men who traveled the paths of the ancient world. But nothing – not the gospels, not St. Paul, not even the Christian church itself can divest Jesus of his condition as a humble man, stripped of all power, unadorned by luxury, a man whose humility and poverty transform him into the most powerful symbol of human salvation.”

    This I Believe. An A to Z of a Life. Carlos Fuentes. 2006. p. 39

    There is definitely an aura of spirituality among our people like never before in our history. I can sense and feel the same positive spiritual attitude among those who find themselves in solitary confinement. I can feel the outcry and yearning of Mexicanos in the so-called free world as they too reach out for our spiritual
    ancient power and resistance. Yes, it is and was part of us from the beginning of our creation. We can no longer deny that spiritual power which lies in our hearts and minds. We must rise again!

    “Even during the times of sickness, pain, and suffering, the dreams were so vivid about us from the beginning to the end. It is truly an endless love between two hearts that were destined to meet before their births. The dreams during these times of sorrow and
    loneliness were so clear and visions came into my heart about our direction and shining path that we must take as a people during this era of despair and destruction. We must once more seek the means of understanding each other as a race of humanity, harmony, peace,
    and spirituality.”

    –Tezcatlipoca – R. Muniz. 2005

    The visions, dreams, and spiritual messages that I receive in this harsh debilitating incarceration bring joy and happiness to my heart, because I know that the “time” has come for us to rise once again in this world of our. At times tears will come from my heart as I feel the spiritual power of justice and liberation becoming a
    part of us once again in all Aztlan.

    “Was he, like Saints Francis and Augustine, a sated and reformed sinner? Precisely because he works within the constraints of time, Jesus encourages us to believe in time. His words reveal an extraordinary
    temporal faith, for even when eternity seems to appear at the horizon of his words, the goal of Christ’s faith is the future of the human race. Jesus’ faith exhorts us to work in the world. The heaven of
    Jesus Christ is found in solidarity with one’s brothers, not in some kind of celestial empiricism. And his hell is found in earthly injustice, not in some bottomless pit consumed by flames. Jesus does, however, extend the values of life on earth to the realm of the eternal:
    ‘For I was hungry and you gave me food; I was thirsty and you gave me drink; a stranger and you welcomed me; naked and you clothed me; ill and you cared for me; in prison and you visited me.’ ‘When did
    we give you all this?’ His listeners asked him. And Jesus replies, ‘Amen I say to you, whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine, you did for me.’

    This I Believe. An A to Z of a Life. Carlos Fuentes. 2006. p. 41.

    In conclusion, I thank the Creator and the power of our ancient Mexicano spirituality for the experience of feeling such spiritual emotions that come from my heart notwithstanding the fact that I reside presently in the world of hatred, cruelty, oppression, injustices, confinement, and loneliness. It is this Mexicano
    spiritual love that has overcome the hatred and inhumane suffering of one’s life. This love that I have for Citlalmina, “illuminating star,” is like the universal cosmic visions of another world. This Mexicano love that I possess for my people is the reason that the
    Creator of all things universally presents to my life in prison, joy, sadness, happiness, suffering, forgiveness, laughter, sorrow, hunger, love, loneliness, life, sacrifice, and the power of ancient Mexicano prayer. All Mexicanos know deep in their hearts that our time has come. We must no longer be afraid.

    In exile,
    Tezcatlipoca
    Mexicano political prisoner
    http://www.freeramsey.com

    Recieved via email from Irma L. Muniz, July 22, 2006.