OBAMA
COMMENTS ON MEXICO DECEPTIVE, SAY LAW OFFICERS
By
NWV News Writer Jim Kouri
Posted 1:00 AM Eastern
May 8, 2013
© 2013 NewsWithViews.com
Posted 1:00 AM Eastern
May 8, 2013
© 2013 NewsWithViews.com
During
President Barack
Obama's press conference in the White House press room, he was asked
by a Latino reporter about both the immigration debate in the U.S. Congress
and the U.S.-Mexican "war on drugs." Obama stated he planned
to meet with Mexico's new leader, President Enrique Pena Nieto, on his
trip to Mexico City to discuss joint police and anti-drug strategies.
But,
Obama
failed to mention a small problem with his drug cartel-busting plan:
Mexico has notified U.S. officials that its federal police and military
are terminating the unfettered access it gave to U.S. police and security
agencies in fighting drug traffickers and organized crime gangs, characterized
by many U.S. law enforcement personnel as narco-terrorists.
"The
president’s press conference was jammed with half-truths, evasions
and out-and-out misrepresentation, some so stunning that even mainstream
reporters took to snarking in their tweets. The tone of condescension
was striking," said the Washington Post's Jennifer
Rubin.
President
Enrique
Pena Nieto, who was sworn-into office on Dec. 1, 2012, claims that
his government is curtailing the direct sharing of intelligence with
U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies in order to attempt diplomatic
solutions to the death and violence that has all but destroyed his country.
While
President Felipe Calderon was praised by many U.S. police officials
repeatedly for increasing cooperation between the Mexico and the United
States as he led an intense attack on Mexico's drug cartels, Pena Nieto
will probably be heralded by the U.S. left, said a former American narcotics
enforcement official.
"In
my first conversation with the president he indicated to me that he
very much continues to be concerned about how we can work together to
deal with transnational drug cartels," said
Obama during the afternoon press conference.
"I'm
not going to yet judge how this will alter the relationship between
the United States and Mexico until I've heard directly from them what
exactly they are trying to accomplish," Obama told the Washington
press corp in answer to the Latino reporter's question.
Many
U.S. police officials have said they are not surprised about Pena Nieto
likely changing the relationship between U.S.
and Mexican security departments.
"The
new Mexican president is as far-left as other Latin American leaders
and as far-left on the political spectrum as President Obama. They believe
talking and discussing are viable solutions when dealing with thuggish
leaders of rogue nations, Islamofascist terrorist groups, and organized
crime gangs such as Mexico's cartels," said former drug enforcement
and intelligence officer Christopher Colon.
"Under
Calderon, the alphabet agencies -- FBI, CIA, DEA, ATF, ICE and border
patrol agents -- had almost complete access to units of Mexico's Federal
Police, army and navy and worked side by side with those units,"
Colon noted.
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But
a former NYPD detective says she's not putting much stock in Obama
and Nieto discussing crime and terrorism. "In fact, Obama said
it himself: a lot of the conversation in Mexico will be on economics,"
said Det. Iris Aquino. who worked undercover in New York City subway
trains and tunnels.
The
six-year war against the Mexican narco-terrorists took an estimated
70,000 lives and saw the disappearance of thousands more. But now the
Mexican government will do with narcotics what the Obama administration
routinely does Islamic terrorism: Pretend it doesn't exist.
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