Mexico’s Growing Frustration With U.S.-Backed Drug War

Major protests in Mexico this month highlighted mounting frustration among many Mexicans toward violence that has claimed some 36,000 lives in the country since President Felipe Calderón declared war on drug cartels five years ago.

Some are now questioning the implications such public dissatisfaction may carry for the United States, which for the past several years has pursued a policy of supporting Calderón’s fight against the cartels.

… “The criticism,” he added, “is that the Mexican government is fighting a drug war on behalf of the United States, and it’s Mexicans that are doing the vast majority of the dying.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2011/05/mexicos-growing-frustration-with-us.html

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Mexican communities fighting back

“Minutes before 6:00 a.m. on Friday, the community of Salitral de Carreras, municipality of Villa de Ramos, San Luis Potosí, faced a group of armed gunmen.

Witnesses indicate that armed men were traveling in several luxury vehicles, which began to open fire with AK-47s, and as previous occasions they had succeeded to bring terror into the community. However on this occasion, the residents were already waiting to confront them, an act that surprised the gunmen.

Several neighbors of the community began to shoot at the vehicles. In addition, they left in a caravan and chased them to a gas station, where the gunmen decided to abandon their vehicles, which fled from a community that was tired of suffering from the abuses.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2011/05/mexican-communities-fighting-back.html

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Arrest made in Guatemalan massacre

“Former members of a Guatemalan special forces unit are believed to have been involved in the killings of 27 people on a farm in a northern province, the country’s president said.

President Alvaro Colom said Tuesday that the former members of the Kaibiles, as the military group is known, had a hand in the massacre that led to a state of siege being declared in the province of Peten.

Authorities have blamed the killings on the Zetas Mexican drug cartel, which has been linked before to the Kaibiles.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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Marines bring donkey to US from Iraq: “You don’t leave your battle buddy behind.”

Retired marine Colonel John Folsom watches as Smoke, the Iraqi donkey, checks out Annie, a 27 year-old Arabian horse, at the Miracle Hills Ranch and Stables, in Fort Calhoun, Neb., Wednesday, May 18, 2011. After traveling more than 6,000 miles from Iraq, Smoke the Donkey, who became a friend and mascot to a group of U.S. Marines living in Iraq's Anbar Province nearly three years ago, takes up residence in eastern Nebraska. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

FORT CALHOUN — Smoke The Donkey is now at his new home in an eastern Nebraska pasture after a more than 6,000-mile journey.

Smoke became a friend and mascot to a group of U.S. Marines living in Iraq’s Anbar Province nearly three years ago. The chest-high donkey, named for his grayish-tan color, soon became such a part of the unit that he received his own care packages and cards.

Retired Marine Col. John Folsom says Smoke “was a battle buddy, and you don’t leave your battle buddy behind.

So the Marines worked with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals International bring the donkey to the United States.”

http://www.newsvine.com/_news/2011/05/18/6670588-iraq-donkey-named-smoke-now-at-home-in-nebraska

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Assailant suffers injuries from fall

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Nerd Prom for Commandos

From: Washington Wire -WSJ

By Nathan Hodge

Forget the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. The hot ticket this week is SOFIC, the Special Operations Forces Industry Conference in Tampa, Fla.

That’s right: There’s a trade show for everything, and this one is for the often-secretive world of military special operations. And this one is just a short drive from MacDill Air Force Base, home of U.S. Special Operations Command.

… This year’s SOFIC, as in years past, is a chance for the makers of military hardware to show off some of their wares. Everyone from major contractors like BAE Systems to geospatial software designer TerraGo Technologies

more

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Cleaning the FN SCAR 16

From: M-Pro 7

How to clean and break down the FN SCAR 16.

 

http://blog.mpro7.com/blog-home/video-how-to-clean-and-break-down-the-new-fn-scar-16-part-1

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MV-22B Ospreys Land During Bright Star

MV-22B Ospreys assigned to Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 263 (Reinforced) from the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit, land at a bivouac site during Exercise Bright Star 2009 in Egypt. Bright Star is a biennial, multinational exercise designed to improve readiness, interoperability, and strengthen the military and professional relationships among U.S., Egyptian and participating forces. Bright Star is conducted by U.S. Central Command.Photo by Cpl. Theodore Ritchie

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Visegrad: A New European Military Force

Visegrad: A New European Military Force is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

By George Friedman

With the Palestinians demonstrating and the International Monetary Fund in turmoil, it would seem odd to focus this week on something called the Visegrad Group. But this is not a frivolous choice. What the Visegrad Group decided to do last week will, I think, resonate for years, long after the alleged attempted rape by Dominique Strauss-Kahn is forgotten and long before the Israeli-Palestinian issue is resolved. The obscurity of the decision to most people outside the region should not be allowed to obscure its importance.

The region is Europe — more precisely, the states that had been dominated by the Soviet Union. The Visegrad Group, or V4, consists of four countries — Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Hungary — and is named after two 14th century meetings held in Visegrad Castle in present-day Hungary of leaders of the medieval kingdoms of Poland, Hungary and Bohemia. The group was reconstituted in 1991 in post-Cold War Europe as the Visegrad Three (at that time, Slovakia and the Czech Republic were one). The goal was to create a regional framework after the fall of Communism. This week the group took an interesting new turn.

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Tips From a Marine Wife

Family members say goodbye as the guided-missile destroyer USS Russell (DDG 59) departs to join the Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 9. The strike group is deploying to support the Global War on Terrorism as part of a regular deployment rotation. Photo by David Rush

“I keep resilient by staying focused on the bigger picture and what it means for us all. I surround myself with people who support that same cause, and it is not about political party lines. The bottom line is, they are fighting and we are left behind–what can we do about it now? Move forward, don’t look back.

The advice comes from one who knows whereof she speaks. Aime Fountain, 32, is the wife of Marine Corps 1st Sgt. Kevin Fountain, who recently deployed to Afghanistan on his third combat tour. It’s his fifth deployment in total, and Aime has been through them all.

During the first three, the couple did not have children. Now they have two, a boy, 4, and a 2-year-old daughter, and a third child is due before Kevin returns home.

The deployments never get easier, Aime says, but her job as a nurse and a solid network of friends “have helped me keep my sanity.”

Read the rest of this entry »

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Cpl. Miriam M. Alvarez, motor transport mechanic, helps get damaged vehicles back on the road

Cpl. Miriam M. Alvarez, a motor transport mechanic with Maintenance Company, Combat Logistics Regiment 15 (Forward), 1st Marine Logistics Group (Forward), works on the step of a Mine-Resistant, Ambush Protected, Vehicle at Camp Leatherneck, Oct. 9. The Marines of Maintenance Company work long hours in order to get damaged vehicles back on the road in the shortest amount of time possible.

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Drug gangs in remote Guatemala kill 27, beheading 25

By Tim Johnson

MEXICO CITY — “In the worst drug-related violence in modern times in Guatemala, assailants stormed a remote jungle ranch and killed 27 people, beheading 25 of them, an army spokesman said Sunday.

A national civil police spokesman in nearby Santa Elena, Moises Ical, said the killings were related to drug trafficking, and possibly carried out by Los Zetas, a brutal drug gang comprising former enforcers for Mexico’s Gulf Cartel. Los Zetas are known to operate freely in much of the Peten region, often in large convoys equipped with heavy weaponry.”

http://www.sacbee.com/2011/05/15/3628857/drug-gangs-in-remote-guatemala.html#ixzz1MTuYNMsU

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Pfc. James Walkingstick patrols mountains near Sar Howza, Paktika province, Afghanistan

U.S. Army Pfc. James Walkingstick, from Talequah, Ok., patrols in the mountains near Sar Howza, Paktika province, Afghanistan, Sept. 2. Walkingstick is deployed with Bulldog Troop, 1st Squadron, 40th Cavalry Regiment. Photo by Staff Sgt. Andrew Smith

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Confidential U.N. report: North Korea, Iran violate U.N. sanctions, trade missile technology

NEW YORK (Reuters) – “North Korea and Iran appear to have been regularly exchanging ballistic missile technology in violation of U.N. sanctions, according to a confidential U.N. report obtained by Reuters on Saturday.

The report said the illicit technology transfers had “trans-shipment through a neighboring third country.” That country was China, several diplomats told Reuters on condition of anonymity.”

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110514/wl_nm/us_korea_north_iran_un

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Disney tries to Trademark ‘Seal Team 6’

“The Walt Disney Company is attempting to trademark the name “Seal Team 6, the counter-terrorism unit responsible for killing Osama Bin Laden.

Filed May 3 (days after news of bin Laden’s death broke), Disney’s application covers clothing, footwear, headwear, toys, games and “entertainment and education services,” among other things, according to MediaBistro.”

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/disney-seeks-trademark-seal-team-188394

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