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Caribbean-Latin America
U.S. border police train Mexican police for drug fight
2010-04-25
(Reuters) – In a warehouse in this Arizona border city, a U.S. Border Patrol trainer teaches a Mexican federal policeman to slip into a boxing stance and press a military assault rifle to his shoulder. Taking aim at a silhouette just a few paces away, the policeman lets off a rapid burst of practice fire in an exercise designed to recreate the urban drug war raging just across the border in Mexico.

"They're getting into close-quarter combat all the time with the drug smugglers and the cartels," Border Patrol instructor Tom Pittman said during a break from training a group of nine Mexican federal agents on Friday. "We're hoping this will help them prevail, to win, to stay alive," he added.

Since taking office last year, U.S. President Barack Obama has pledged increased support for his Mexican counterpart, Felipe Calderon, in fighting drug cartels that have killed some 22,800 people south of the border since Calderon took office in December 2006. Mexican authorities along the nearly 2,000-mile (3,200-km) border face lethal fire from well-armed cartels battling for lucrative cocaine, heroin, marijuana and amphetamine smuggling routes to U.S. markets. Mexican police and soldiers are frequent targets of the drug gangs.

U.S. officials are increasingly concerned the violence may take hold in U.S. border communities. "It's a collaborative effort to make both sides of the border safer," Mark Qualia, a spokesman for the Border Patrol in Washington, said of the program, funded under Plan Merida, the $1.4 billion U.S. program started in 2007 to help Mexico fight the cartels.

The training program is part of a pioneering effort allowing Border Patrol agents to pass on skills gained from policing the Arizona border corridor -- the principal drug and immigrant smuggling route between the two countries -- to carefully vetted Mexican federal police.

Since it started earlier this year, Border Patrol agents have trained 48 federal police officers assigned to battle drug traffickers and human smugglers in hot spots along the border. When the group now being trained graduates next week, the total will be 57.

Aside from teaching police to enter buildings and fire assault rifles, the twice-monthly courses give first-aid training, teach patrolling in all-terrain vehicles and share tips for finding hidden vehicle compartments used to smuggle drugs north over the U.S. border, and illicit guns and bulk cash heading south to Mexico.

The training program has also led to benefits for U.S. Border Patrol agents in Nogales, Arizona. They say they get a swift response when they reach out for assistance from colleagues in Mexico to respond to incidents such as Mexican smugglers hurling rocks across the line at U.S. agents.

"It helps putting a face to the uniform," said Border Patrol agent David Jimarez, who noted assaults on U.S. agents had dropped by two-thirds to an average of three a week since the program started. "We all belong to the same brotherhood."
Posted by:trailing wife

#3  ION FREEREPUBLIC> CHICAGO: SEND IN THE TROOPS TO KEEP LAW AND ORDER [Illini NatGuard], + LAWMAKERS: MILITARY COULD HELP QUELL VIOLNCE.

Iff AZTLAN = AZTLAN, + DETROIT = "SARAJEVO" [Dateline NBC], WHAT'S CHICAGO = AL BUNDY-LAND???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2010-04-25 23:45  

#2  Sooner or later, I suspect the federales will need to be trained as a heavy weapons platoon rather than urban police.
Posted by: SteveS   2010-04-25 11:51  

#1  The "War on Chemical Choice" will merely drive up prices and thus profits and involve more non-state force.

Better to mitigate the effects of drug use, than ban them and enable a huge illegal business.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2010-04-25 11:29  

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