Jan. 6, 2007
Armed Mexicans Attack Unarmed National Guard Troops on U.S. Soil
By Jim Kouri
Special to Huntington News Network
In a story that should have rang alarm bells in very newsroom across
the
nation, armed Mexicans entered the United States and attacked unarmed
National Guard troops working at a border patrol post near the
US-Mexican
border. The troops had to retreat to safety.
Not surprisingly, the news story received scant coverage by the
mainstream
news media and hardly a mention on the Fox News Channel. It's a story
that
should outrage all Americans including President George W. Bush.
Unfortunately, President Bush and his Administration did not even
comment on
this vicious attack on unarmed US troops as well as the unbridled
assault on
American sovereignty. During a press conference held on Friday
afternoon,
Jan. 5, 2007, by Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff, there
was
not one word about this unprovoked attack on soldiers.
According to syndicated columnist and journalist Sher Zieve, the attack
was
initiated by several Mexican nations at about 1:00 a.m. (ET) Thursday
morning, Jan. 4, 2007 at one of the National Guard entrance
identification
team posts near Sasabe. The troops retreated to safety. According to
KVOA TV
News reports in Tucson, AZ, no shots were fired and no one suffered
injuries.
The US Border Patrol is conducting an investigation into the attack.
Investigators are attempting to determine who the armed men were, what
they
were doing and why they approached the post before returning to Mexico.
A Border Patrol agent, who requested anonymity, says that the
well-armed
intruders were drug traffickers who are fully aware US National Guard
troops
are prohibited from carrying any type of weapon and have been ordered
not to
confront lawbreakers coming across the border. The Guard troops are not
allowed to apprehend illegal entrants, as well.
"Basically, the National Guard troops are doing what private groups
such as
the Minuteman Project have done at US borders -- observe and report,"
said a
Homeland Security Department official.
What he failed to mention is that the Minutemen didn't cost taxpayers
millions of dollars to just stand at the border unarmed and act as the
eyes
and ears of the already stretched-thin Border patrol agents.
"We don't know if this was a matter of somebody coming up accidentally
on
the individuals, coming up intentionally on the individuals, or some
sort of
a diversion," Rob Daniels, spokesman for the Border Patrol's Tucson
Sector
told KVOA News.
The west desert corridor has been the busiest in the Tucson Sector for
marijuana seizures since last year. According to Immigration and
Customs
Enforcement, agents have seized 124,000 pounds of marijuana there
since
October 1, 2006.
With more Border Patrol agents and National Guard troops patrolling the
Arizona section of the U.S.-Mexican border, it has become more
difficult to
smuggle drugs and people across may have caused drug and human
smugglers to
become more aggressive.
Since arriving in mid-June, the Guard has assisted the Border Patrol by
manning control rooms, doing vehicle and helicopter maintenance,
repairing
roads and fences, constructing vehicle barriers and fences and spotting
and
reporting illegal entrants in entrance identification teams.
There are dozens of National Guard entrance identification teams along
the
Mexican border, including east and west of both Nogales and Sasabe and
on
the Tohono O'odham Nation. All of the teams are unarmed.
"This is one of the most expensive dog-and-pony shows dreamed up by the
Washington establishment in recent history. Imagine using trained
troops on
the US border unarmed and prohibited from taking action. It's a scam,"
says
Mike Baker, a political analyst.