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The border war: Mexico is quietly waging war on our Southern border with the complicity of elements in our government who seek to meld the nations of this hemisphere into a regional superstate. (Immigration).


Robert Maupin and his daughter Denise share an unwanted distinction: They are probably the only American citizens to be detained and forcibly disarmed, at gunpoint, on U.S. soil, by Mexican soldiers. The incident, which took place in 1985, is not the only time the Mexican military illegally entered our country. Such incursions, like the one that took place near Ajo, Arizona For the airport with this IATA location identifier, see .
Ajo is an unincorporated community and a census-designated place in Pima County, Arizona, United States. The population was 3,705 at the 2000 census.
, on May 17th of this year, are becoming increasingly common and breathtakingly brazen.

In the summer of 1985, Maupin recalled to THE NEW AMERICAN, "I mentioned to a friend who used to be a narcotics narcotics n. 1) techinically, drugs which dull the senses. 2) a popular generic term for drugs which cannot be legally possessed, sold, or transported except for medicinal uses for which a physician or dentist's prescription is required.  agent that I could smell ether on my property [near Tierra del Sol, California]. He pointed out that ether is used to make methamphetamine. The only neighbor we had was a small building about a half-mile south of the border, which was usually empty. However, sometimes a Mexican flag would be flying over it, there would be activity inside, and it would be guarded by guys in plain clothes carrying military weapons. I noticed that the ether smell would be really strong when the prevailing breeze came from that direction."

Maupin's friend told him that he was going to give the information "to our [drug enforcement] counterparts in Mexico." "I'm pretty sure that's where my problems began," Maupin comments.

On the following Sunday, Robert and Denise went out for some afternoon target practice in a shooting range improvised from "an old dry dam A dry dam is a dam constructed for the purpose of flood control. Dry dams typically contain no gates or turbines, and are intended to allow the channel to flow freely during normal conditions.  right on the border." While they were shooting, Maupin and his daughter saw what appeared to be "a bunch of kids wearing toy helmets" perilously close to their line of fire. When they went to investigate, Maupin and his daughter suddenly found themselves surrounded by "seven Mexican soldiers toting FN/FAL rifles" -- fully automatic, .308 caliber rifles used by NATO NATO: see North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
NATO
 in full North Atlantic Treaty Organization

International military alliance created to defend western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion.
 troops.

The sergeant in charge of the squad "told me in fairly good English that they were 'looking for illegal guns and drugs,'" Maupin recounted to THE NEW AMERICAN. "He also said specifically that they were looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 'Senor Maupin,' which made it pretty clear to me that I had made somebody in the Mexican government angry by sticking my nose into their drug business."

"I told the sergeant, 'We're in the U.S.A. The guns that I and my daughter are carrying are legal, but yours aren't.' But the sergeant told one of his guys to disarm us." When the soldier reached to confiscate To expropriate private property for public use without compensating the owner under the authority of the Police Power of the government. To seize property.

When property is confiscated it is transferred from private to public use, usually for reasons such as
 Denise's holstered hol·ster  
n.
1. A case of leather or similar material into which a pistol fits snugly and which attaches to a belt, strap, or saddle so that it may be carried or transported.

2.
 .357 Magnum, "she backhanded him and just about knocked him flat," relates Maupin. "Several of the other soldiers started working the bolts on their rifles. We were outnumbered and outgunned, so I emptied my rifle, handed it to them, and told Denise to do the same with her gun."

Telling the sergeant that he had the proper paperwork for his guns back at his home, Robert led the squad back to his ranch house. As they walked with him, Robert told Denise that he would stall the soldiers at the corral corral

a small fenced-in enclosure with high, wooden fences, suitable for holding cattle or horses.


corral system
a management system in which range cattle are put into corrals and fed hay for a period when the environment is most
 long enough for her to get to a telephone and call the Border Patrol. It was to the ambivalent good fortune of Maupin and his family that these particular Mexican soldiers weren't particularly professional. "They didn't notice Denise was gone until they heard the door closing," Maupin notes. "But when they realized that she had gone into the house, they dropped the bipods on their rifles and aimed them at the house."

By this time Denise had contacted the Border Patrol, which set up a roadblock and sent three agents to the Maupin ranch. Meanwhile, the Mexican soldiers had calmed down. Maupin got them some icewater to drink and amused his uninvited guests
See also: Uninvited Guests (Buffy comic)


Uninivited Guests is the twelfth episode of the fourth series of the British comedy series Dad's Army that was originally transmitted on Friday 11 December 1970.
 with his broken Spanish. Eventually Maupin casually remarked that he had called for "an official interpreter" to come help out. "The guy in charge got an 'uh-oh' expression on his face, and ordered one of his men to scribble scribble - To modify a data structure in a random and unintentionally destructive way. "Bletch! Somebody's disk-compactor program went berserk and scribbled on the i-node table." "It was working fine until one of the allocation routines scribbled on low core.  out a receipt for our guns," declared Maupin. "He got really agitated ag·i·tate  
v. ag·i·tat·ed, ag·i·tat·ing, ag·i·tates

v.tr.
1. To cause to move with violence or sudden force.

2.
 and yelled at his men to move out. When they got to our fence line they took off." A short time later they were caught and disarmed by Border Patrol agents, who retrieved Robert and Denise's firearms. After being informed that he "would have to be in court for 90-120 days straight" if he chose to pursue legal redress, Maupin decided to let the matter drop -- even though he and his family had been detained by a foreign army invading our sovereign territory.

"When we grabbed those guys [involved in the border incursion in·cur·sion  
n.
1. An aggressive entrance into foreign territory; a raid or invasion.

2. The act of entering another's territory or domain.

3.
], they were decked out in full combat gear, carrying fully automatic rifles, and they claimed that they had 'gotten lost,'" former Border Patrol agent Bob Stille recalled to THE NEW AMERICAN. But Stille and his Border Patrol colleagues weren't buying the story: "Even back then we had dealt with border incursions of this sort, which were usually connected in some way to drug smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain ."

Since the mid-1980s, continues Stille, "Drug enforcement people have discovered tunnels running under the border in the area by Tierra del Sol, which have been used to smuggle smug·gle  
v. smug·gled, smug·gling, smug·gles

v.tr.
1. To import or export without paying lawful customs charges or duties.

2. To bring in or take out illicitly or by stealth.
 multiple tons of cocaine and every other kind of narcotics into this country. And a few years ago the Mexican government started some kind of homestead program on their side of the border, where they've built a small city out of cardboard shacks. It's basically a jumping-off point Noun 1. jumping-off point - a beginning from which an enterprise is launched; "he uses other people's ideas as a springboard for his own"; "reality provides the jumping-off point for his illusions"; "the point of departure of international comparison cannot be an  for smuggling illegal aliens and drugs into the U.S."

Robert Maupin and his wife still live on their ranch in Tierra del Sol. "We've had a couple more skirmishes since then," he commented to THE NEW AMERICAN. One episode in the mid-1990s involved an abortive abortive /abor·tive/ (ah-bor´tiv)
1. incompletely developed.

2. abortifacient (1).

3. cutting short the course of a disease.


a·bor·tive
adj.
1.
 effort by drug smugglers to cross the border in a Chevy Suburban loaded down with contraband. "They tried to do a 'Dukes of Hazzard' - style stunt jump at a border crossing, and ended up high-centered on a rock," recalls Maupin. "They ended up with the bumper in the U.S. and the rest of the Suburban in Mexico, The people got out and scurried back across the border, just abandoning a very nice, latemodel vehicle - which, as it happened, had been stolen in Texas and re-registered in Baja, California. And when our [law enforcement] people got a close look at it, they found that it was just crammed full of illegal drugs."

"We've been living here for over 50 years, and they haven't driven us out yet," continues Maupin. "Sometimes it doesn't seem as if we live in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , but we've learned firsthand about a reality that most American citizens ignore. A lot of people in this country simply don't understand that our nation is under assault from our supposed friend to the south. There's an invasion going on, and it has potential consequences for all of us, not just those of us living down here on the border."

Tancredo Takes Tough Stance

The May 17th Mexican military incursion near Ajo, Arizona, illustrated anew that the invasion Maupin refers to consists not only of an unremitting flood of illegal immigrants and drug smugglers, but also occasionally takes the form of a brazen armed border violation by elements of the Mexican military.

As described by Immigration and Naturalization Service Noun 1. Immigration and Naturalization Service - an agency in the Department of Justice that enforces laws and regulations for the admission of foreign-born persons to the United States
INS
 (INS INS
abbr.
1. Immigration and Naturalization Service

2. International News Service

Noun 1. INS
) spokeswoman Lori Haley, a Border Patrol agent spotted three Mexican soldiers in a Humvee on the Tohono O'odham Tohono O'Odham (tōhō`nō ō-ō`dəm) or Papago (păp`əgō', pä`–)  Indian Reservation, approximately five miles inside U.S. territory. In keeping with established policy, the agent did a quick U-turn, to avoid a confrontation in which he would be outnumbered and outgunned. Nonetheless, shots were fired at the Border Patrol vehicle, shattering the rear window and endangering the agent's life.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Representative Tom Tancredo This article or section contains information about one or more candidates in an upcoming or ongoing election.
Content may change as the election approaches.
 (R-Colo.), who was en route to a meeting in Mexico to discuss border-related issues at the time of the incident, U.S. officials said that the Mexican soldiers "had interdicted a huge shipment of drugs. Therefore everyone was antsy ant·sy  
adj. ant·si·er, ant·si·est Slang
1. Restless or impatient; fidgety: The long wait made the children antsy.

2.
." While the congressman is convinced that a drug shipment was involved in the incident, he disputes the claim that the Mexican soldiers had "interdicted" it.

"I have spent a lot of time talking with Border Patrol and counter-narcotics people about these incursions," Rep. Tancredo told THE NEW AMERICAN. "What I have learned is that they are apparently staged, most of the time, to provide cover or a diversion when there's a big, big shipment. They're used to draw away our agents from a targeted border zone, which is pretty easy to do, since they're already so badly over-stretched. And in some cases the soldiers are actually protecting the shipments themselves."

While Tancredo specifies that he doesn't believe that "these incursions and drug shipments represent the official policy of the Vicente Fox government," he points out that "they are getting official help from elements of the Mexican government, obviously, since the Army is involved. We may be dealing with a rogue element of some kind. I just don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 how far up it goes. The State Department assured me that they are discussing these incursions 'at the highest levels,' but they're not displaying any particular urgency."

Nor are such incursions rare, continues the congressman. "Since 2001, there have been 23 incursions -- 19 by the Mexican Army The Mexican Army is the land arm of the Mexican Military, and the largest branch of Mexico's armed services. In September 2007, the Secretary of Defense reported it consists of 181 mil 356 men and women of the Mexican Army serving Mexico (about 0. , and four by the Federal Police. Since 1996, there have been at least 118 documented and confirmed incursions by armed Mexican military and law enforcement personnel," he told THE NEW AMERICAN. "These figures don't represent every reported incident, just those that have been officially tallied by our bureaucracy. The actual number of border violations by armed Mexican personnel may be three or four times higher."

The May 17th incident in Arizona would likely be among the unconfirmed incidents had a Border Patrol captain not leaked the story to the congressman. Shortly after the incident took place, Tancredo received an e-mail from the captain informing him of what was, in effect, an attempted assassination Assassination
See also Murder.

assassins

Fanatical Moslem sect that smoked hashish and murdered Crusaders (11th—12th centuries). [Islamic Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 52]

Brutus

conspirator and assassin of Julius Caesar. [Br.
 of a fellow Border Patrol officer by Mexican soldiers. "Here we had a federal law enforcement officer, in a clearly marked federal vehicle, shot at by members of a foreign military who had invaded our nation -- and we probably wouldn't even know about it if the captain of his unit hadn't e-mailed me," comments Tancredo.

According to Tancredo, the Bush administration "should tell Mexico that we won't allow any more uncontested violations of our border, which are acts of aggression -- indeed, when they involve shots being fired on federal personnel, they could be considered acts of war Tom Clancy's Op-Center: Acts of War is a technothriller by Jeff Rovin Plot introduction
The mobile Regional Operations Center (ROC) in Turkey investigates a dam blown up by Kurdish terrorists.
. I don't want these incidents to escalate into tragedies in which anybody, American or Mexican, gets shot or killed. But we have to make it plain to Mexico that we won't put up with this any longer, and that the next Mexican Army Humvee they send across our border might return with some bullet holes in it."

Unfortunately, Tancredo predicts, "We're not going to see anything done about these outrages anytime soon, because Washington wants to maintain the fiction that Mexico is a good 'partner' in policing our border."

Immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important.  vs. Migration

During a visit to Arizona's Coronado National Forest The Coronado National Forest includes an area of about 1.78 million acres (7,200 km²) spread throughout mountain ranges in southeastern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico.

The National Forest is divided into five ranger districts.
 near the border, Tancredo examined some of the damage wrought by the Mexican invasion. "The Forest Service supervisor has a staff of seven people to police a 60-mile stretch of border," the congressman points out. "So it's hardly a surprise that the forest is being torn apart. We have hundreds of thousands of people coming through that area every year, many of them transporting drugs. They've left behind mountains of garbage and human waste. And they often start small campfires at night that are left unattended when they leave -- which helps explain why so far this year there have been more than 50,000 acres burned in the Coronado Forest, which is one of our nation's oldest national forests."

Since arriving in Congress, Tancredo has taken a high-profile position favoring drastic immigration reform Immigration reform is the common term used in political discussions regarding changes to immigration policy. In a certain sense, reform can be general enough to include promoted, expanded, or open immigration, but in reality discussions of reform often deal with the aspect of . Predictably, he has had less than amicable relations with officials in the Fox regime in Mexico and in the Bush administration -- both of which support the effective abolition of the U.S.-Mexican border.

"During a visit to Mexico, a group of us from Congress met with Juan Hernandez, who has a very interesting title: He heads the Ministry for 'Mexicans living abroad,'" recalls Rep. Tancredo. "To put it bluntly, this guy's job is to ensure that as many Mexicans are sent north to the United States as possible, by any means necessary By any means necessary is a translation of a phrase coined by the French intellectual Jean Paul Sartre in his play Dirty Hands.

I was not the one to invent lies: they were created in a society divided by class and each of us inherited lies when we were born.
. And in the course of our meeting, he kept using the term 'migration' to describe the movement of Mexicans across our border, whether legally or illegally. I pointed out to him that this was an improper use of the term. When referring to movement of people within borders, I reminded him, the proper term is 'migration'; when that movement takes place across borders, it's 'emigration' or 'immigration.' And when it happens in a way that violates our laws, it's by definition illegal immigration "Illegal alien" and "Illegal aliens" redirect here. For other uses, see Illegal aliens (disambiguation).
Illegal immigration refers to immigration across national borders in a way that violates the immigration laws of the destination country.
."

According to Tancredo, Senor Hernandez reacted by smiling and insisting: "Congressman, we're not talking about two countries -- it's just one single region."

Observes Tancredo: "This is the whole point of the issue -- the question of the existence of borders, whether we have them or not. There are people in the [Bush] administration, and in Mexico, and in Congress, who believe that we should do away with borders entirely. Their ultimate goal is to create this hemispheric 'free trade' area consolidating all of North and South America into some kind of 'United States of the Americas.' Sometimes, as was the case with Mr. Hernandez, they're very candid about the matter. But for the most part they're simply creating facts on the ground, thereby merging the U.S. and Mexico in practice, if not in terms of actual legal status."

"This is a legitimate political issue, and it should be discussed and debated openly," he continues. "Americans -- the public at large as much as some of our policymakers -- are letting this take place without a frank discussion. We are undergoing a radical change in our national character and social structure, and it shouldn't be allowed to happen without at very least the informed consent of the public. I'm among those who believe that it shouldn't be allowed to happen, period -- and I believe that this remains a majority view, which is probably why it's being done by stealth and misdirection MISDIRECTION, practice. An error made by a judge in charging the jury in a special case.
     2. Such misdirection is either in relation to matters of law or matters of fact.
     3.-1.
."

Fox Unmasked

In remarks made for public consumption in this country, Mexican President Vicente Fox, hailed by the Bush administration and many conservative Republicans as a pro-American reformer, has said little about abolishing the border. However, he was breathtakingly candid in a recent address before the "Club XXI" at the Hotel Eurobuilding in Madrid, Spain.

Speaking on May 16th, Fox proudly outlined his government's involvement in what he called the "nueva agenda global" -- "new global agenda," or, in more familiar phraseology phra·se·ol·o·gy  
n. pl. phra·se·ol·o·gies
1. The way in which words and phrases are used in speech or writing; style.

2.
, new world order. He referred to the "harmonization of Mexican legislation with international norms" and Mexico's more assertive role in "using its voice and its vote [in the United Nations] to promote ... fundamental rights throughout the world." One example of this activism cited by Fox was Mexico's prominent role at the UN's World Summit on Racism in Durban, South Africa -- an orgy of America-bashing and anti-Semitism that climaxed with the demand that the West, led by the U.S., pay "reparations reparations, payments or other compensation offered as an indemnity for loss or damage. Although the term is used to cover payments made to Holocaust survivors and to Japanese Americans interned during World War II in so-called relocation camps (and used as well to " for slavery (a proposal energetically supported by Gilberto Rincon Gallardo, Mexico's delegate at Durban).

According to Fox, the nueva agenda global has already impacted the "large Mexican communities settled in [the United States], more than 20 million Mexicans." (That figure includes American citizens of Mexican ancestry, as well as immigrants both legal and illegal.) "In the last few months we have managed to achieve an improvement in the situation of many Mexicans in [the United States], regardless of their migratory status, through schemes that have permitted them access to health and education systems, identity documents, as well as the full respect for their human rights," asserted Fox.

What the Mexican leader describes here is his success in embedding a large, unassimilated population of illegal immigrants in our society -- often with the help of various welfare benefits underwritten by U.S. taxpayers. But this is only the beginning, insisted Fox: "Eventually our long-range objective is to establish with the United States, but also with Canada, our other regional partner, an ensemble of connections and institutions similar to those created by the European Union European Union (EU), name given since the ratification (Nov., 1993) of the Treaty of European Union, or Maastricht Treaty, to the

European Community
, with the goal of attending to future themes [such as] the future prosperity of North America, and the movement of capital, goods, services, and persons."

Unfortunately, Fox observed, there is a large impediment to this vision, "what I dare to call the Anglo-Saxon prejudice against the establishment of supra-national organizations." So in addition to the supposed bigotry of Americans who insist that our immigration laws be obeyed, visionaries of Fox's ilk have to contend with the irrational prejudice of Americans who value their national independence.

Fortunately for Fox, many American activists and policymakers display none of the prejudice he criticizes. Two radical attorneys in Yuma, Arizona, recently filed a $41.25 million wrongful death The taking of the life of an individual resulting from the willful or negligent act of another person or persons.

If a person is killed because of the wrongful conduct of a person or persons, the decedent's heirs and other beneficiaries may file a wrongful death action
 lawsuit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on behalf of families of 11 illegal immigrants who died while attempting to cross the Arizona desert in May 2001. The impetus for the lawsuit came from a Tucson-based leftist left·ism also Left·ism  
n.
1. The ideology of the political left.

2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left.



left
 group called "Humane Borders," which has set up water stations in the desert for the benefit of illegal immigrants.

According to attorney Jim Clark, one of the litigators involved in the case, the federal government's refusal to allow the group to set up a water station in the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge The Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge is located in the Sonoran Desert in southwestern Arizona in the United States. The refuge, established in 1939 to protect Desert Bighorn Sheep, is located along 56 miles of the U.S.  east of Yuma led to the death of the illegal aliens. Of course, this assertion ignores entirely the legal concept of "assumption of risk," under which criminals are solely responsible for injuries they sustain in the course of committing illegal acts. But under the perverted per·vert·ed
adj.
1. Deviating from what is considered normal or correct.

2. Of, relating to, or practicing sexual perversion.
 concept of "social justice" that characterizes the nueva agenda global, this utterly spurious lawsuit has a decent chance of succeeding.

Indeed, the INS has already handed a victory to the illegal immigrant lobby. The AP reported on May 24th: "Illegal immigrants lost in the vast desert near Yuma this summer will be able to summon help by pressing a button on one of six 30-foot-tall rescue beacons." Called "disco towers" by local immigration agents, the beacons "are covered in mirrors and topped with fist-sized flashing strobe lights that blink every 10 seconds and can be seen from as far away as four miles during the day and five miles at night. The towers have instructions in Spanish and English, as well as simple pictures showing illegal migrants [sic] how to push an alarm button if they're in trouble. They're located in places where agents have rescued illegal immigrants before."

Isabel Garcia of a leftist, pro-illegal immigration group called "Coalicion de Derechos Humanos" scornfully dismisses the rescue beacons as an inadequate measure. "We don't believe that the measures to beef up and militarize mil·i·ta·rize  
tr.v. mil·i·ta·rized, mil·i·ta·riz·ing, mil·i·ta·riz·es
1. To equip or train for war.

2. To imbue with militarism.

3. To adopt for use by or in the military.
 the border will do anything to protect [illegal immigrants]," complained Garcia. "We will see more deaths and more suffering along the border this summer."

While it is easy to sympathize with the plight of those illegal immigrants fleeing northward to escape Mexico's poverty and all-encompassing corruption, it should be remembered that their plight is being shamelessly exploited by cynical people on both sides of our border wishing to see that border evaporate: Elements of the Mexican ruling class seeking to export that nation's surplus poverty to the U.S.; drug smugglers using illegals as couriers for their contraband; and members of the internationalist Power Elite in Mexico and the U.S. entertaining a grand vision of amalgamating the U.S., Canada and Mexico into an analogue of the European Union.

The Mexican military incursions are skirmishes in a very real war on our southern border, a conflict that is but one front in a larger assault on our national independence. In that struggle, the actions of groups like Humane Borders and the Coalicion de Derechos Humanos are more akin to treason than anything that the notorious "American Taliban" John Walker Lindh

For other people named John Walker, see John Walker (disambiguation).


John Phillip Walker Lindh (born February 9, 1981) is an American who was captured during the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan while fighting there for the Taliban.
 has been accused of doing: Lindh, after all, fled halfway around the world to take up arms Verb 1. take up arms - commence hostilities
go to war, take arms

war - make or wage war
 on behalf of one side in an Afghan civil war The Afghan Civil War is a civil war in Afghanistan that began in 1978 and has continued since, though it has included several distinct phases. Timeline
Soviet involvement

Main article: Soviet war in Afghanistan
. Those abetting a·bet  
tr.v. a·bet·ted, a·bet·ting, a·bets
1. To approve, encourage, and support (an action or a plan of action); urge and help on.

2.
 Mexico's invasion, on the other hand, are lending aid and comfort to a foreign power whose actions are having a measurable -- and growing -- destructive impact on our sovereignty, social order, and standard of living.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Grigg, William Norman
Publication:The New American
Geographic Code:1MEX
Date:Jul 1, 2002
Words:3418
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