Pubdate: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 Source: East Valley Tribune (AZ) Copyright: 2006 East Valley Tribune. Contact: http://www.eastvalleytribune.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2708 Author: Bill Richardson Note: Retired Mesa master police officer Bill Richardson lives in the East Valley DEALING WITH GLOBAL DRUG DEALERS Washington Isn't Focused on the Real Threat of Cartels Joining Forces The people elected the Democrats to fix what was broken in Washington. The fact that new Speaker-to-be Nancy Pelosi even considered assigning Florida Rep. Alcee Hastings as the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee is frightening. Hastings is the impeached federal judge who was taking payoffs from drug dealers at a time when the Colombians controlled Florida's drug trade. It took Pelosi almost a month to distance herself from Hastings. Pelosi's support of Rep. John Murtha for house majority leader is also telling. During the ABSCAM congressional corruption investigation, Murtha failed to make an affirmative rejection to a bribe by undercover FBI agents posing as Middle Eastern thugs. It's the same old Washington with the same old politics, where almost anything and anyone can be bought. And there are people out there who have the money to buy whatever they want. During the recent campaign, we heard continual hoopla and tough talk from many who -- until the 2006 campaign -- had shown little or no interest in our southern border, the "no man's land" that runs for 2,000 miles from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico. We got tough talk about immigration from politicians who demonstrated they had no clue to the enormity of the border problems and the threat from Mexican organized crime. Retired Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department Sergeant Richard Valdemar, one of the most respected experts on organized crime and criminal gangs in America, told FullDiclosure.com, "The Mexican drug cartels have infiltrated several city councils and political campaigns in Los Angeles County." Valdemar said "with the money the cartels have, they can literally buy local elections and infiltrate governments under the guise of being local businessmen." In the past couple of years, Arizona FBI agents have arrested more than 50 public officials for corruption. Corruption is here and so are the cartels. Retired Drug Enforcement Administration special agent and former head of the El Paso Intelligence Center Phil Jordan told me: "The Mexican drug cartels, or the Mexican Drug Federation as we called it at EPIC, control the 2,000-mile-long border and several cities on both sides." It could get worse. Jordan went on to say, "The nightmare that I fear is a marriage between the Mexican godfathers and the radical factions of Islam who produce heroin in Afghanistan. A marriage between Islamic terrorists and the Mexicans would make the current Colombian-Mexican drug cartel marriage look like a wedding rehearsal. American law enforcement and our youth have already paid a heavy price for America having allowed the Colombian-Mexican merger to be consummated." Jordan added, "The drug cartel's continuing attacks on Mexican law enforcement, public officials and judges can be compared to Colombia where the drug cartels declared war on the government in the 1980s and '90s. The killing fields of Mexico could soon be in American border towns and major metropolitan areas." The Mexican cartels are used to getting what they want no matter what it takes to get it. According to a 1998 report, the United Nations Drug Control Program said the illegal drug market is worth $400 billion per year, equivalent to 8 percent of world trade. The U.S. drug trade was worth $100 billion per year. It's gone up since 1998. Who controls our hemispheric drug trade, the Mexican cartels? Why wouldn't the Mexican cartels buy local governments and anyone else they can to enhance their operations in the United States? They've done it at all levels of government in Mexico, why not in America, the land of opportunity? The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime reported recently "Afghanistan accounts for 92 percent of world supply of opium that is fuelling insurgencies and feeding international mafias." MSNBC reported on Sept. 2 that, "Afghanistan's opium cultivation rose a staggering 60 percent this year enough to make 610 tons of heroin outstripping the demand of the world's heroin users by a third." According to Jordan, South American terrorist groups already work with the Colombian drug producers who've partnered with the Mexicans. Someone has to move the heroin into the United States, why not a partnership between Afghan terrorists and the Colombian-Mexican cartels that Jordan fears could become a reality? Cartels buying public officials, partnerships between worldwide drug producers, international mafias and terrorists, billions in profits -- it's a very real picture of our future unless it's stopped. Does Washington even have a clue what exists outside of the beltway? It's an ugly and dangerous world out there, especially in states along the Mexican border. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine