Pubdate: Sun, 29 Mar 2009 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Copyright: 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/newspapers/sunday_times/?days=Sunday Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/439 Author: Tony Allen-Mills MEXICAN DRUG VIOLENCE SPILLS OVER INTO US Guns Are Pouring South Of The Border While Murder And Kidnap Are Flowing North BY THE hair-raising standards of torture, murder, kidnapping, extortion and other drug-related mayhem that has become tragically routine along the US border with Mexico, the inspection of a battered red Ford pickup truck travelling south through the Arizona desert this month hardly seemed worth recording. US border patrol agents stopped the vehicle as it headed towards Mexico through the Organ Pipe Cactus national park. A search quickly uncovered seven assault rifles - two of them Russian-made AK47s - a couple of handguns and thousands of rounds of ammunition. Compared with the recent seizure of 500 rifles and 100 fragmentation hand grenades close to the Texas border, it was scarcely a big haul. Yet it was the latest evidence that Mexico's drug cartels are resorting to sinister techniques that are changing the nature of border violence and confronting President Barack Obama with an expanding threat on US soil. US officials call it "ant trafficking". Cartel leaders are bribing or coercing armies of US citizens to buy weapons from American gun shops. They smuggle the guns into Mexico in a continuous operation that steadily builds up arsenals. "The cartels have fingertips that reach throughout the United States," Janet Napolitano, the homeland security secretary, told a Senate panel last week. She said that a recent crackdown at US border crossings had netted 1,000 guns heading into Mexico. "But we need to get beyond getting lucky with [vehicle] inspections," she said. Anthony Placido, chief of intelligence at the Drug Enforcement Administration, told a Senate hearing: "It is an undisputable fact that the weapons and firearms used to fuel the drug-related violence in Mexico can be traced back to guns procured legally or illegally here." After decades of failed attempts to block the northward flow of cocaine, heroin and other drugs - not to mention continuing efforts to keep out illegal immigrants - Washington finds itself struggling to contain a reverse flow of guns and money that has produced sharp rises in drug-related crime in US cities far from the 2,000 mile-long border. While California, Arizona and Texas remain the principal sources of US firearms that turn up at Mexican bloodbaths, Placido said weapons used by drug traffickers had been traced to Denver, Philadelphia and Seattle, among other cities. To the consternation of the authorities in Phoenix, one of America's favourite retirement destinations has acquired a different reputation - - as the American capital of drug-related kidnappings. "What I'm seeing is a fundamental shift in the criminal element from Mexico migrating up here," said Detective Al Richard of the Phoenix police. Last year 368 abductions were reported, up from 117 in 2000. Almost all involved victims with Mexican connections and while most were related to drug violence, others were less easily explained. When Liliana Beatrice Iboa, 20, and her three-year-old daughter Karen were seized in Phoenix last November, their kidnapper initially demanded a $100,000 (UKP 70,000) ransom, but then made no further contact and released them unharmed. While there has been little sign of the extreme violence associated with Mexican cities such as Ciudad Juarez or Guadalajara - where five human heads were found next to a road this month - US officials are alarmed by evidence that the narcotraficantes (drug smugglers) are becoming increasingly reckless on American soil. In San Juan, Texas, a hand grenade was thrown into a bar but failed to explode. The drug trade has been blamed for several murders in Birmingham, Alabama. Many wealthy Americans living in border states are having bulletproof glass and armour installed in their cars. For Obama and Hillary Clinton, his secretary of state, the threat that America's southern neighbour may implode into drug-fuelled chaos presents both a foreign policy challenge and a domestic dilemma. US authorities have committed themselves to what Napolitano described as "a very robust movement of personnel" to border areas. Obama is considering a request from the governor of Texas for 1,000 national guardsmen to be placed on border duty. The Pentagon may supply pilotless drones for the same kind of man-hunting missions as in Afghanistan. Yet most Mexicans are tired of being lectured by US officials about the evils of corruption and the dangers of a "failed state". President Felipe Calderon noted last week that the financial aid Mexico needed from Washington "should be equivalent to the flow of money that American [drug] consumers give to the criminals" - a figure he estimated at between $10 billion and $35 billion. The toughest problem may prove to be the US weapons that arm the cartels. Clinton acknowledged during a two-day visit to Mexico last week that "our inability to prevent weapons from being illegally smuggled across the border to arm these criminals causes the deaths of police officers, soldiers and civilians". Obama will visit Mexico next month and has signalled his support for a ban on assault weapons. But any attempt to tighten gun control laws would promptly bring the president into conflict with America's most powerful lobby - the National Rifle Association. Even if Obama were willing to take on the NRA's 4m gun-carrying members, the legal difficulties of shutting the weapons pipeline look all but insurmountable, as a case spawned by the murder of Juan Manuel Pavon recently demonstrated in Phoenix. Pavon, the Mexican chief of the Sonora state antidrug squad, was assassinated by cartel hitmen hours after attending a US seminar on weapons smuggling last year. The guns used in the murder were later recovered by police and were traced to X-Caliber Guns, an Arizona gun shop owned by a dealer named George Iknadosian. After checking Iknadosian's records, federal agents charged him with selling hundreds of AK-47 assault rifles to so-called "ant traffickers" whom he allegedly knew to be acting illegally on behalf of Mexican cartels. Several witnesses were due to testify, but the trial had hardly got under way when the judge dismissed all charges on technical grounds. Iknadosian had pleaded not guilty. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart