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Home Front: WoT
Sheriff warns of terror threat at the border
2006-02-04
A West Texas sheriff's deputy warned federal lawmakers Friday that drug traffickers are helping terrorists with possible al-Qaida ties cross the porous Texas-Mexico border into the United States.

Terry Simons, the chief deputy in Val Verde County, offered little evidence publicly of his claims. An FBI special agent in Houston, Shauna Dunlap, said there's "no credible evidence" that supports the warning.

Simons, part of a group that has been pushing state and federal officials for more law enforcement funding on the border, told congressmen meeting in Houston that Texas authorities have learned of newly established camps in Mexico, where so-called "narco-terrorists" are getting trained in "escape and evasion, as well as fighting techniques and combat maneuvering."

Simons also said the FBI has informed the border sheriffs that suspects with Islamic backgrounds — and possibly al-Qaida ties — are training with them.

Simons and other members of the Texas Border Sheriffs Coalition outlined the threat in a presentation to U.S. Reps. John Culberson, R-Texas, and James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis.

"We need more boots on the ground," Simons said. "The thing we're facing, it's a war."

Culberson said the FBI told him that suspected terrorists from countries "with known al-Qaida connections" have adopted Hispanic surnames and are "blending in with the other illegals coming over the border."

Sensenbrenner said protecting the border is now a national security issue.

"What I learned today is the type of people who are coming across the border have changed," Sensenbrenner said. "Now, a lot of the people coming across the border are criminals, and potentially terrorists — people who have a mind to commit crimes against Americans and maybe to blow us all up and kill us."

In December, the U.S. House passed a border security bill authorizing $100 million for the sheriffs in the border counties. The money can be used to hire more deputies, build detention facilities and buy equipment, including weapons.

"The threat has changed on the border," Culberson said.

The bill is now pending in the Senate.,

In Austin, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said immigration reform and border security are "very high" on the Senate's agenda and could be addressed as early as mid-March.

"We know in a post 9/11 world, the same vulnerability that allows people who want to come across to work can be exploited by criminals, drug cartels and those who perhaps want to come to the United States to perhaps terrorize innocent Americans," Cornyn said.

Federal officials in San Antonio Friday announced nearly 30 arrests and the seizure of explosives, machine guns and other weapons in a crackdown that started in July in the border city of Laredo.

Officials with the Border Enforcement Security Task Force said they had arrested 28 people and seized materials to make 33 lower-grade explosive devices, such as pipe bombs or grenades. They also seized dozens of assault rifles, machine guns, silencers, hundreds of pounds of narcotics and $1.4 million in cash.

Cornyn warned against assuming the seized items belonged to terrorists.

"This is concerning, but I would say we have to be careful and make sure we get the facts and not act on the basis of rumor or speculation," he said.

The task force is made up of federal, state and local police who coordinate efforts and also exchange intelligence with Mexican law enforcement.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#6  This is why the Minutemen are so valuable. they are a force multiplier for both Federal and local authorities, and they cost nothing -- neither funding nor planning effort on the part of the professionals. Give them a shared wavelength, and wait for the phone to ring!
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-02-04 20:33  

#5  Sounds like the feds are suffering again from that malady called "Failure of Imagination".
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2006-02-04 14:48  

#4  Because the MSM keeps its head in the sand in Iraq, they are unable and unwilling to learn that the link between smugglers, bandits, and terrorists is a natural alliance. Watch them 'discover' the problem after the fact, once again. Explain to me again, why the MSM is protected under the Constitution and the Internet is not?
Posted by: Ebbavins Flemp6662   2006-02-04 10:00  

#3  'moose - how do you see the narcos responding to something like this, given their increasing dominance of the coyote traffic?
Posted by: lotp   2006-02-04 09:48  

#2  Dang it, I keep saying, there is only *one* way to really seal that US-Mexico border to terrorists, and that is to look at it as a separate problem from that of illegal Mexicans crossing the border.

Pay Mexicans a BOUNTY on any non-Hispanic trying to cross. For a TINY amount of money, that border would be as airtight as an unopened Pepsi can.

Sure, some al-Qaeda would try to bribe them more to help them across. The Mexicans would take their money, and *then* inform on them for the reward. It's a proud custom.

In Mexico, a BOUNTY of this kind would attract as many players as a multi-state lottery does in the US. No illegal foreigner could get within 500 miles of that border without a dozen pairs of eyes looking at them greedily.

$5,000 -- $10,000 -- $20,000 for a really big one. To the Mexicans who live just South of the border, that amount of money looks like MILLIONS of dollars.

The BOUNTY doesn't even have to be offered by the government. Even a private organization could set up a phone line and print a bunch of flyers. The word would spread like wildfire.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2006-02-04 09:43  

#1  It's only been a matter of time, tick tick tick

protecting the border is now a national security issue NOW??? Well Dah

Officials with the Border Enforcement Security Task Force said they had arrested 28 people and seized materials to make 33 lower-grade explosive devices, such as pipe bombs or grenades. They also seized dozens of assault rifles, machine guns, silencers, hundreds of pounds of narcotics and $1.4 million in cash Woo Hoo!

exchange intelligence with Mexican law enforcement. Now is this really fair?
Posted by: Jan   2006-02-04 03:10  

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