Archive for category Threat Watch

Jaoquin “El Chapo” Guzman will bring war to Tijuana

Tijuana– Headed by Fernando Sanchez Arellano (member of the Arellano Felix dynasty), the Tijuana cartel is recovering territories and markets it had previously lost. They kill, kidnap and offer drugs on a massive scale to a state that is already flooded with them, the ministerial police have been corrupted and are now considered the armed wing of the cartel.

People who live in the city recognize that the violence has diminished, but there are still murders and decapitations, kidnappings and shootouts which are largely ignored by the central government in Mexico City.

There is also suspicion in Tijuana that there is some type of pact between the state government, local business leaders, and the news media to collectively turn a blind eye to these actions.

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/10/el-chapo-will-bring-war-to-tijuana.html

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Blood keeps flowing in Ciudad Juarez

“Nine persons, among them a Municipal Police captain, were shot yesterday afternoon, and during the morning another five Juarenses (read: Juarez residents) were deprived of life violently, so that Tuesday’s total number of victims reaches 14.”

http://www.diario.com.mx/notas.php?f=2010/10/06&id=7cc077f509708ba32b81580aca04b285

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How to Respond to Terrorism Threats and Warnings

How to Respond to Terrorism Threats and Warnings is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

By Scott Stewart

In this week’s Geopolitical Weekly, George Friedman wrote that recent warnings by the U.S. government of possible terrorist attacks in Europe illustrate the fact that jihadist terrorism is a threat the world will have to live with for the foreseeable future. Certainly, every effort should be made to disrupt terrorist groups and independent cells, or lone wolves, and to prevent attacks. In practical terms, however, it is impossible to destroy the phenomenon of terrorism. At this very moment, jihadists in various parts of the world are seeking ways to carry out attacks against targets in the United States and Europe and, inevitably, some of these plots will succeed. George also noted that, all too often, governments raise the alert level regarding a potential terrorist attack without giving the public any actionable intelligence, which leaves people without any sense of what to do about the threat.

The world is a dangerous place, and violence and threats of violence have always been a part of the human condition. Hadrian’s Wall was built for a reason, and there is a reason we all have to take our shoes off at the airport today. While there is danger in the world, that does not mean people have to hide under their beds and wait for something tragic to happen. Nor should people count on the government to save them from every potential threat. Even very effective military, counterterrorism, law enforcement and homeland security efforts (and their synthesis — no small challenge itself) cannot succeed in eliminating the threat because the universe of potential actors is simply too large and dispersed. There are, however, common-sense security measures that people should take regardless of the threat level. Read the rest of this entry »

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Terrorism, Vigilance and the Limits of the War on Terror

Terrorism, Vigilance and the Limits of the War on Terror is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

By George Friedman

The U.S. government issued a warning Oct. 3 advising Americans traveling to Europe to be “vigilant.” U.S. intelligence apparently has acquired information indicating that al Qaeda is planning to carry out attacks in European cities similar to those carried out in Mumbai, India, in November 2008. In Mumbai, attackers armed with firearms, grenades and small, timed explosive devices targeted hotels frequented by Western tourists and other buildings in an attack that took three days to put down.

European security forces are far better trained and prepared than their Indian counterparts, and such an attack would be unlikely to last for hours, much less days, in a European country. Still, armed assaults conducted by suicide operatives could be expected to cause many casualties and certainly create a dramatic disruption to economic and social life.

The first question to ask about the Oct. 3 warning, which lacked specific and actionable intelligence, is how someone can be vigilant against such an attack. There are some specific steps that people can and should take to practice good situational awareness as well as some common-sense travel-security precautions. But if you find yourself sleeping in a hotel room as gunmen attack the building, rush to your floor and start entering rooms, a government warning simply to be vigilant would have very little meaning. Read the rest of this entry »

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Iran unveils their new bomb: the “Ritard”

“Lots of dictatorships love to parade their military might once a year. But this year’s Iranian “Sacred Defense Week 2010 Military Parade” hosted some of the weirdest-looking weaponry outside of a bad 60’s spy movie. Honestly, when you wheel a bomb marked “Ritard” past the reviewing stand, you’re pretty much guaranteed to be the laughing stock of the rest of the civilized world.”

http://photofind.com/featured-photo/ritard-bomb-from-iran

I would not want to be the Iranian guy who recommended this name.

“Everybody salute, here comes the Ritard.”

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Police Academy student decapitated

La Prensa Grafica (San Salvador, El Salvador) 10/2/10

The head of a student of El Salvador’s national police academy (ANSP) was found in a suitcase along a highway near the capital city of San Salvador.

The grim find was accompanied by a message that authorities did not reveal. The body of the youthful student, who was to have joined the police force in six months, has not been located.

http://www.laprensagrafica.com/el-salvador/judicial/144607-decapitan-alumno-de-la-academia-de-la-policia-nacional.html

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Explosions near three government offices in Monterrey

10/2/10: Three explosive devices were detonated near government offices in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, including the US Consulate.

The first explosion occurred late Friday evening in the parking lot of the state treasurer’s office; the second, in the street some 200 yard from the US Consulate and the third, outside the Topo Chico prison.

Some damage to the pavement and nearby vehicles was caused by the explosions and one person suffered a leg injury.

http://www.oem.com.mx/elsoldemexico/notas/n1803054.htm

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Gunfight in Durango leaves 14 dead

“Sunday 10/3/10: Rival criminal bands shot it out yesterday morning near the village of San Jose de la Cruz in the state of Durango, resulting in the deaths of 14 of the combatants. Drug trafficking is believed to be cause of the confrontation.”

http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/713294.html

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Muder Rampant in Juarez, Mexico -more than 8.5 homicides per day

“September closed in Juarez with a total of 289 violent deaths, not quite as many as the 336 registered in August, or the 313 in June, but one more than the total in July.

As of September 30, 2326 homicides have been registered so far this year, still on record pace. In all of 2009 there were 2657 homicides on the year.

At the current pace through September the yearly total will be 3110 at the end of 2010, more than 8.5 homicides per day.”

http://lapoliticanewmexico.blogspot.com/

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Nuevo Leon, Mexico: Lone assailant throws grenade into crowded

“Twelve people were wounded in a grenade attack on a plaza in Guadalupe, a city in the northern Mexican state of Nuevo Leon, a city spokesman said on Sunday.

A lone assailant threw the grenade into the crowded plaza late Saturday, the city official said.

Eight adults and four children were wounded in the attack, which was captured by security cameras installed near city hall.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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How Obama Thinks

Dinesh D’Souza, 09.09.10, 05:40 PM EDT
Forbes Magazine dated September 27, 2010

The President isn’t exactly a socialist. So what’s driving his hostility to private enterprise? Look to his roots.

http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2010/0927/politics-socialism-capitalism-private-enterprises-obama-business-problem.html

Recently the London Times reported that the Obama Administration supported the conditional release of Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the Lockerbie bomber convicted in connection with the deaths of 270 people, mostly Americans. This was an eye-opener because when Scotland released Megrahi from prison and sent him home to Libya in August 2009, the Obama Administration publicly and appropriately complained. The Times, however, obtained a letter the Obama Administration sent to Scotland a week before the event in which it said that releasing Megrahi on “compassionate grounds” was acceptable as long as he was kept in Scotland and would be “far preferable” to sending him back to Libya. Scottish officials interpreted this to mean that U.S. objections to Megrahi’s release were “half-hearted.” They released him to his home country, where he lives today as a free man.

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Victims of illegal alien crime: Deputy Frank Fabiano, Jr. shot to death

“A decorated Kenosha County Sheriff’s Deputy was shot to death during a routine traffic stop by an illegal alien with four prior arrests in four different states.

Local law enforcement is “doing the job the federal government just won’t do” by being the first line of defense against illegal alien crime in America. Unfortunately, these brave officers are often the casualties of the violent, unidentified foreign nationals residing in American communities across the United States.”

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.4043/pub_detail.asp

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U.S. Citizen Shot on Texas Border

Church in the partially submerged old colonial town of Guerrero Viejo that is a common sightseeing destination on the Mexican side of Falcon Lake on the South Texas-Mexico border. A U.S. couple was returning from the site Thursday afternoon when they were intercepted by gunmen on the lake. The husband was reportedly shot, his fate is unknown.

“Gunmen presumed to be Mexican drug operatives opened fire today on a couple riding water skis on the binational Falcon Lake reservoir Thursday afternoon, possibly killing the husband and sending the woman fleeing frantically to the U.S. side.

Zapata County Sheriff Sigifredo Gonzalez said the couple, believed to be from McAllen, Texas, had crossed to the Mexican side when they came under a spray of bullets by two boatloads of men. The man, 30, was shot in the head and his wife said she fears he is dead.

According to unconfirmed reports, the woman circled back to get her husband but the gunmen continued shooting, even after she crossed back to the U.S. side. They saw them approaching and started revving it up back to the U.S. side,” Gonzalez said. “The guys just started shooting at them from behind.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/10/us-citizen-shot-on-texas-border.html

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Five men arrested in Tijuana for operating a kidnapping cell

“Five men were arrested in the state of Baja California for operating a kidnapping cell.
The men allegedly belong to the Tijuana Cartel faction currently run by Fernando Sánchez Arellano, alias El Ingeniero (the engineer) and were captured after an investigation into the kidnapping of 4 students led to their arrest.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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22 Men kidnapped in Mexican resort city of Acapulco

“ACAPULCO, Mexico—Gunmen kidnapped 22 men who were traveling together in Mexico’s Pacific coast resort city of Acapulco, authorities said Saturday.

A shootout between drug gangs, meanwhile, left 14 people dead in remote town in the northern state of Durango, Mexican newspapers reported.

The group of men in Acapulco was visiting from the western city of Morelia and looking for a place to stay when they were abducted Thursday, said Fernando Monreal, director of state investigative police in Guerrero state, where the resort city is located.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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