Washington is 'Arming' Mexico's Intelligence with Advanced Intercept Technologies
Amid recent reports
that the bodies of four Mexican journalists were discovered in a canal
in the port city of Veracruz, less than a week after another journalist
based in that city was found strangled
in her home, the U.S. State Department "plans to award a contract to
provide a Mexican government security agency with a system that can
intercept and analyze information from all types of communications
systems," NextGov reported.
The most glaring and obvious question is: why?
Since President Felipe Calderón declared "war" against some
of the region's murderous drug cartels in 2006, some 50,000 Mexicans
have been butchered. Activists, journalists, honest law enforcement
officials but also ordinary citizens caught in the crossfire, the vast
majority of victims, have been the targets of mafia-controlled death
squads, corrupt police and the military.
Underscoring the savage nature of another "just war" funded by U.S. taxpayers, last week The Dallas Morning News
reported that "23 people were found dead Friday--nine hanging from a
bridge and 14 decapitated--across the Texas border in the city of Nuevo
Laredo."
The arcane and highly-ritualized character
of the violence, often accompanied by sardonic touches meant to instill
fear amongst people already ground underfoot by crushing poverty and
official corruption that would make the Borgias blush, convey an
unmistakable message: "We rule here!"
"The latest massacres are part of a continuing battle between the paramilitary group known as the Zetas and the Sinaloa cartel," the Morning News averred. "The violence appears to be part of a strategy by the Sinaloa cartel to disrupt one of the most lucrative routes for drug smugglers by bringing increased attention from the federal government."
According to investigators the "two
warring cartels are fighting for control of the corridor that leads into
Interstate 35, known as one of the most lucrative routes for
smugglers."
But as Laura Carlsen, the director of the Americas Program pointed out last month in CounterPunch,
"In a series of 'Joint Operations' between Federal Police and Armed
Forces, the Mexican government has deployed more than 45,000 troops into
various regions of the country in an unprecedented domestic
low-intensity conflict."
The militarization of Mexican society, as
in the "Colossus to the North," has also seen the expansion of a bloated
Surveillance State. Carlsen averred that when the Army and Federal
Police are "deployed to communities where civilians are defined as
suspected enemies, soldiers and officers have responded too often with
arbitrary arrests, personal agendas and corruption, extrajudicial
executions, the use of torture, and excessive use of force."
But expanding the surveillance
capabilities of secret state agencies as the State Department proposes
in its multimillion dollar gift to the Israeli-founded firm, Verint Systems,
far from inhibiting violence by drug gangs and the security apparatus,
on the contrary, will only rationalize repression as new "targets" are
identified and electronic communications are data-mined for "actionable
intelligence."
Indeed, The New York Times
reported last summer that "after months of negotiations, the United
States established an intelligence post on a northern Mexican military
base."
Although anonymous "American officials" cited by the Times
"declined to provide details about the work being done" by a team of
spooks drawn from the Drug Enforcement Administration, the CIA and
"retired military personnel members from the Pentagon's Northern
Command," they said that "the compound had been modeled after 'fusion
intelligence centers' that the United States operates in Iraq and
Afghanistan to monitor insurgent groups."
Such developments are hardly encouraging considering the role played by "fusion centers" here in the heimat. As the ACLU
has amply documented, "Americans have been put under surveillance or
harassed by the police just for deciding to organize, march, protest,
espouse unusual viewpoints, and engage in normal, innocuous behaviors
such as writing notes or taking photographs in public."
In Mexico, the results will be immeasurably worse; with corruption endemic on both sides of the border, who's to say authorities won't sell personal data gleaned from these digital sweeps to the highest bidder?
Only this time, the data scrapped from
internet search queries, emails, smartphone chatter or text messages
grabbed by bent officials won't result in annoying targeted ads on your
browser but in piles of corpses.
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