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Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Amanda Carpenter :: Townhall.com Columnist
Violent Attacks from Mexico on the Rise
by Amanda Carpenter
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Although progress is slowly being made towards securing the southern border attacks against agents of the U.S. Border Patrol and tourists are on the rise.

“This fiscal year 744 incidents of violence have been perpetrated against Border Patrol agents, a 26 percent increase over the same time last year,” reported Department of Homeland Security Secretary Micheal Chertoff in his third “State of Immigration Address” Monday.

He said the border violence is a grim sign of progress. “That's typically what happens as you start to enforce and you make it harder, they start to fight over the shrinking pie, so to speak, and who gets the best opportunity to exploit what additional space is left,” Chertoff said. “So that's, in some sense, a good sign. The bad news is it causes a lot of violence and death and it's created a lot of havoc, particularly in Mexico.”

While DHS has witnessed more attacks on their staff, other government agencies have shown concern about attacks on U.S. tourists traveling in Mexico.

Earlier this year, the State Department issued a travel alert to caution U.S. tourists against increasing violence in Mexico that will be in effect through the summer.

“Recent Mexican army and police force conflicts with heavily-armed narcotics cartels have escalated to levels equivalent to military small-unit combat and have included use of machine guns and fragmentation grenades,” the State Department’s alert said. “Dozens of U.S. citizens were kidnapped and/or murdered in Tijuana in 2007. Public shootouts have occurred during daylight hours near shopping areas. Criminals are armed with a wide array of sophisticated weapons. In some cases, assailants have worn full or partial police or military uniforms and have used vehicles that resemble police vehicles.”

The alert noted “criminals have followed and harassed U.S. citizens traveling in their vehicles, particularly in border areas Nuevo Laredo, Matamoros, and Tijuana.”

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About The Author
Amanda Carpenter is National Political Reporter for Townhall.com.
 
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Subject: Akagi--more on China and AEW
In my previous post I forgot to explain that the choice for Red China is not, "Phalcon or nothing", but "Phalcon or some other AEW system". Depriving Red China of the Phalcon is not a huge blow to them, nor would its presence massively improve their armed forces. They can buy other systems, such as the Russian Beriev A-50 Mainstay, other Russian AEW, or even AEW made in Europe.

The real question is, "Why are they unable to build their own?" It's a big country, with a big economy, and supposedly lots of scientists. Odd.

Akagi--more on China military
Continued:

4. Patriot tech provided by Israel to China was the older generation Patriot, not PAC-2 or PAC-3, and it wasn't even the complete package. Only certain technologies were transferred. Nothing comparable to the SM-3 tech, which would have been a major problem. Would it have been better if these technologies had not been transferred? Yes, but it is not major. I am not an "Israel first" analyst as you derisively and inaccurately claimed in your blog. I personally would have preferred some sort of sanctions against Israel for this transfer, but I can see why our military found it to be something that can be overlooked. Do you know anything about the ABM? That is one of the projects that has earned Israel some slack.

4. What you call AWACS is actually the Israeli "Phalcon" AEW system. It is newer than the U.S. AWACS, but it is not higher in performance overall. It is designed to a price level and to be installed even in small airliners, so it has certain limitations. When we replace our AWACS in a decade or so, I can guarantee you that Phalcon will not be it. The Israelis were asked not to sell it to China, and they complied. However, several years ago they did sell a similar arrangement (installed in a Russian Ilyushin IL-76) to India, which has run into major problems and delays, so it will not likely be ready for operational deployment until 2010 or even later. Given Red China's record of slow assimilation of foreign high tech into a broad-based operational training and maintenance regime, it is not obvious that they would have had an operational AEW force before 2020. By that time, it would be nearly obsolescent.

More to come at your blog site, and maybe here if you respond.
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