America’s porous southern border and the recent
surge of illegal immigration is more than just a “humanitarian crisis,” claims
the top U.S. general in charge of Central and South America, it’s a threat to
the United States’ very existence.
Marine Corps Gen. John Kelly is commander of the
U.S. Southern Command, or SOUTHCOM, charged with responsibility for the
Caribbean Sea and all lands south of Mexico.
Particularly in regards to the drug trade,
murder rates and terrorist activity brewing in Central America, Kelly says, the
waves of Latin Americans sweeping through Mexico and illegally into Texas
presents a threat to the U.S. every bit as serious as Iran or North Korea. “In
comparison to other global threats, the near collapse of societies in [this]
hemisphere with the associated drug and [illegal immigrant] flow are frequently
viewed to be of low importance,” Kelly said in an interview with Defense One.
“Many argue these threats are not existential and do not challenge our national
security. I disagree.”
It isn’t the first time
Kelly has sounded the alarm. In testimony
before the Senate Armed Services Committee in March, Kelly complained that budget cuts in recent years have
handcuffed the military’s ability to shut down many drug and human trafficking
corridors. “Last year, we had to cancel more than 200 very effective engagement
activities and numerous multilateral exercises,” Kelly said, explaining that a
full 74 percent of “actionable illicit trafficking events” simply go
unanswered, because he doesn’t have the funds or resources to do anything about
it. “I simply sit and watch it go by,” he continued. “And because of service
cuts, I don’t expect to get any immediate relief, in terms of assets, to work
with in this region of the world.”
Worse yet, he continued, with smuggling routes
wide open for business, it’s far more than cocaine or children seeking a better
life getting a free pass across the border. “Clearly, criminal networks can
move just about anything on these smuggling pipelines,” Kelly said in testimony
before the House Armed Services Committee in February. “Terrorist organizations could seek to leverage
those same smuggling routes to move operatives with intent to cause grave harm
to our citizens or even quite easily bring weapons of mass destruction into the
United States.”
SOUTHCOM’s intelligence assets reveal the
possibility is far more than just crying wolf. “Supporters and sympathizers of
Lebanese Hezbollah are involved in both licit and illicit activities in the
region,” Kelly told Congress. “Members, supporters, and adherents of Islamic
extremist groups are present in Latin America. Islamic extremists visit the
region to proselytize, recruit, establish business venues to generate funds,
and expand their radical networks. Some Muslim communities in the Caribbean and
South America are exhibiting increasingly extremist ideology and activities,
mostly as a result from ideologues’ activities and external influence from the
Middle East, Africa, and South Asia. Mr. Chairman, we take all these activities
seriously.”
Threat spreads through
U.S. As America’s top military eye on Central America,
Kelly is also warning that the recent spike in illegal immigrants moving from
countries like Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras across the U.S. border
presents another level of threat. Those three countries, he noted, are all
among the Top 5 nations worldwide in homicide rates, in part because of their
rampant gang activity. “Although there are a number of other countries I work
with in Latin America and the Caribbean that are going in the same direction,”
Kelly told Defense One, “the so-called Northern Triangle (Guatemala, El
Salvador and Honduras) is far and away the worst off.”
Since October, tens of thousands of migrants
have made the dangerous journey north from Latin America to the United States
border. Many are children, and statistics show the vast majority of the
immigrants in the recent influx are unaccompanied minors who have traveled from
Central America’s “Northern Triangle.” And between rampant drug trafficking and
human trafficking of Central American youngsters, Kelly warned Congress, cartels
and gangs that have already spread throughout the U.S. will only grow more
dangerous. “Chairman, gone are the days of the ‘cocaine cowboys,’” Kelly
testified. “Instead, we and our partners are confronted with cocaine
corporations that have franchises all over the world, including 1,200 American
cities, as well as criminal enterprises like the violent transnational gang
Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, that specialize in extortion and human trafficking.
“The FBI has warned that MS-13 has a significant presence in California, North
Carolina, New York, and northern Virginia, and is expanding into new areas of
the United States, including Indian reservations in South Dakota,” he
concluded. Roger Noriega, an American Enterprise Institute fellow and former
assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs during the George
W. Bush administration, was quoted last month in the Washington Free Beacon
putting a fine point on how gang activity and arms smuggling could create
problems not just along the border, but anywhere in the country. “There’s going
to be a time when MS-13 fires an RPG into an Alexandria [Va.] police car, and
[Americans] are going to say, ‘What the hell happened?’” Noriega said.
Kelly concluded his appeal before the House
Armed Services Committee by arguing the U.S. needs to call upon and equip the
military to protect our southern border, now more than ever. “Some of my
counterparts perceive that the United States is disengaging from the region and
from the world in general,” Kelly said. “We should remember that our friends
and allies are not the only ones watching our actions closely. … And in the
meantime, drug traffickers, criminal networks, and other actors, unburdened by
budget cuts, cancelled activities, and employee furloughs, will have the
opportunity to exploit the partnership vacuum left by reduced U.S. military
engagement.”
Source:http://www.wnd.com/2014/07/general-border-crisis-threatens-u-s-existence/
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/07/general-border-crisis-threatens-u-s-existence/#85UvHQ9KmFJf7abe.99
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/07/general-border-crisis-threatens-u-s-existence/#85UvHQ9KmFJf7abe.99
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