Small Wars Journal

2 June SWJ Roundup

Fri, 06/01/2012 - 11:26pm

Small Wars Journal Daily Roundup

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

 

Afghanistan

Insurgents Attack NATO Base in Afghanistan - VOA

Attack on Coalition Base in Khost Thwarted - S&S

Taliban Insurgents Attack NATO Base in Afghanistan - AP

Aussie to Command ISAF Troops - TA

UK Soldier Shot Dead in Helmand - BBC

British Soldier Shot Dead in Southern Afghanistan - AP

Army Drops 1 Charge, Adds Others Against Afghan Shooting Suspect - S&S

Charges Amended for Soldier Accused in Civilian Deaths - NYT

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

 

Pakistan

Lawyer Files Appeal for Pakistani Who Helped US - AP

Pakistan Gets a Cuddle and a Hug - AT opinion

From CIA Agent to Terrorist in Seven Days - TH opinion

 

Syria

UN Demands Independent Probe of Syrian Massacre - VOA

Clinton Says Russian Arms Sales to Syria Raise Concerns - VOA

Clinton Says Russia Stance on Syria Seen as Supporting Assad - Reuters

Putin Fears Civil War but Rejects Intervention in Syria - NYT

Putin Stands Firm on Syria Crisis - BBC

Obama's Atrocities Board Keeps Low Profile on Syria Crisis - Reuters

French President Says Syria's Assad Has to Go - AP

Arab League Requests UN Action Against Syria - Reuters

Activists Say Gunmen Kill 11 State Workers in Syria - AP

Syrian Workers Shot Dead, Rebels Blame Assad Forces - Reuters

US Publishes Satellite Images of Syria - Reuters

Gruesome Video Details Syria Horror - CNN

Rock the World - WP opinion

The Smart Way to Intervene in Syria - WP opinion

Is Syria Unsolvable? - CNN opinion

 

Iran

Report: Obama Knew of Cyber Attacks on Iran - VOA

Stuxnet was Work of US and Israel, Officials Say - WP

US Says Iran Must Show Action by Moscow Talks - AP

Russia Toughens Iran Stance, Still Opposes US Missile Defense - VOA

 

Middle East / North Africa

US Asks Iraq to Extradite Hezbollah Suspect - Reuters

UAE's Crackdown on Dissidents Intensifies - VOA

Some Egyptians Admit Facing Depressing Choice in Runoff Election - VOA

Former Egyptian President to Hear Verdict Saturday - VOA

Egypt: Judge to Rule in Mubarak Trial - BBC

Egypt Awaits Mubarak Verdict and Its Aftermath - NYT

Egypt's Democratic Hopes Imperiled - TNI opinion

Obama's Mideast Fantasy Land - JP opinion

 

US Department of Defense

US Navy Establishes Coastal Riverine Force Command  - S&S

Battleship Iowa Gets a New Mission... in Hollywood - S&S

Dempsey: Military Must Persevere to Solve Suicide Issue - AFPD

Navy Rolls Out Several Uniform Changes for Enlisted Sailors - S&S

 

United States

Loose Lips and the Obama National Security Ship - CNN

Appeals Court Considers Bush Wiretapping Program - AP

Petraeus in Langley - WP opinion

What Happens When They Get Drones? - TA opinion / book review

 

United Kingdom

UK Prepares for Jubilee Events - BBC

Britain Prepares for Jubilee Celebrations - VOA

Queen Elizabeth's 60th Anniversary Party Gets Under Way - Reuters

 

Africa

Sudan Says It Pulls Police From Disputed Region - Reuters

Sudan Expels Aid Groups from East - BBC

Cluster Bombs Terrorize Civilian Areas in Sudan - CNN

UN Chief Urges International Support for Somalia - VOA

Turkey Tells UN and Aid Donors to Move to Somalia - Reuters

Somalia Funding 'Goes Missing' - BBC

Deal Between Mali Tuaregs, Islamists Breaks Apart - VOA

Twin Crises Converge on Burkina Faso - VOA

 

Americas

SOUTHCOM’s Engagement Program Promotes Human Rights - AFPS

Mexico's Pena Nieto Feels the Heat With Finish in Sight - Reuters

Mexico Seeks Freeze on Politician's Bank Accounts - AP

PepsiCo's Mexico Snack Subsidiary Attacked Again - AP

Mexico Police Scour Highways After PepsiCo Truck Torched - Reuters

Colombian Rebels Want French Negotiating Help - AP

Venezuela Bans Private Gun Owners - BBC

Paraguay: Exposing Drug Secrets, From a Well-Guarded Bunker - NYT

DEA Investigating Honduras Drug Raid Shooting - AP

Chilean Court Absolves 6 in Terror Bomb Plot - AP

Brazil's Silva Says He'd Run Again for President - AP

 

Asia Pacific / Central

Panetta: US Strategy Aims to Build Peace, Stability in Pacific - S&S

Panetta Reveals Plan to Shift Military’s Focus Toward Pacific - WP

More US Warships in Asia-Pacific Under New Strategy - Reuters

CJCS Dempsey Meets With Singapore Defense Officials - AFPS

China Is Said to Detain Official Who Spied for the US - NYT

China 'Arrests High-Level US Spy' - BBC

Google to Alert Users to Chinese Censorship - NYT

China's Manufacturing Slowdown to Hit African Suppliers - VOA

Aung San Suu Kyi Cautions Leaders on Burma Reforms - VOA

Suu Kyi Warns on Burma 'Optimism' - BBC

Democracy Leader Cautions Against ‘Reckless Optimism’ in Burma - NYT

Cambodian Opposition Tempers Expectations Ahead of Elections - VOA

US Can Boost Its Power in Southeast Asia - JP opinion

 

Europe

Ireland Votes in Favor of EU Treaty - VOA

Ireland Approves Treaty to Set European Union Budget Controls - NYT

Ireland Approves European Fiscal Pact - WP

Greek Leftist Challenges Europe on Austerity - NYT

6 Wounded in Clashes Between Kosovo Serbs, NATO Peacekeepers - DPA

Serbia President: Srebrenica Deaths 'Not Genocide' - BBC

Bosnia Leader Slams Serbia's Nikolic on Srebrenica - Reuters

Report: Arab Spring Increases Migration to EU - AP

The Euro Can be Saved. Can the EU? - WP opinion

 

South Asia

India’s Telecom Success Story Turns Sour - WP

Nepal Backslides Into Political Crisis - VOA

This Week at War: Enough Talk, Obama

Fri, 06/01/2012 - 1:19pm

In my Foreign Policy column, I discuss how the Pentagon can provide options to support U.S. diplomacy over Syria, and wonder why it can't do the same regarding Iran.

 

Over the past week, the Obama administration's hopes for negotiated resolutions to the violence in Syria as well as the standoff over Iran's nuclear program have slumped. A particularly brutal massacre in al Houla, Syria that left over a hundred civilians murdered and that resulted in the expulsion of Syrian diplomats around the world, is increasingly calling into question the value of continued talks with President Bashar al-Assad. Meanwhile, talks in Baghdad over Iran's nuclear program ended badly, and with Tehran pledging to sustain production of 20 percent enriched uranium in spite of international pleas to suspend such work. Meanwhile, fresh satellite imagery showed that Iran continued this week to cleanse its Parchin site, where analysts suspect it tested components for a nuclear weapon.

Both cases show the increasing risk the Obama administration may be assuming by maintaining a commitment to further talks. This commitment in the face of belligerent actions by Syria and Iran will increasingly be viewed as a display of naiveté and weakness rather than prudent patience. Acquiring such a reputation could hurt the administration's credibility on other foreign policy issues as well.

To prevent its reputation from slipping further, the Obama team will come under pressure to get tougher over Syria and Iran. But how? With further economic sanctions either tapped out or blocked at the U.N. Security Council by Russia, the question of using military force in Syria and Iran will inevitably return to the surface. When it comes to deciding whether it is time to start using military tools against Syria and Iran, the Obama administration will likely arrive at two very different answers.

Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, produced a grim prognosis for Syria. With no hope for self-restraint by Assad's enforcers, Rice concluded that the "most probable" case is a sectarian proxy war, with arms flowing into the conflict from other countries in the region. To avert this outcome, Rice urged the Security Council to place additional pressure on the Syrian regime, a course that would require Russia's acquiescence.

Rice's diagnosis was aimed at Moscow and implied that if her forecast proved true, Russia stood to lose both its ally in Damascus and any future influence in the country after the rebels eventually gained power. Rice was thus attempting to create an incentive for the Russians to cooperate on either pressuring Assad or helping to establish a post-Assad Syria.

But if the Obama administration is to obtain leverage over Moscow, it will have to show a willingness to help create the grim scenario Rice described, something the White House seems unwilling to contemplate, at least yet.

Direct U.S. military intervention in Syria is not required. Nor is the United States required to organize its own covert operation inside Syria to support the rebels. At this point, the United States need merely get onboard with allies such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and others which are apparently already arming the Syrian opposition. The U.S. government could provide certain items and services -- specialized communications equipment, portable anti-tank weapons, night-vision optics, and intelligence data -- and leave the provision of more common categories of weapons and supplies to the other suppliers.

U.S. willingness to escalate its assistance in this manner would bolster its credibility with its allies and the rebels, something that will be valuable in post-Assad Syria. And for little risk, it will provide Washington with some negotiating leverage over Moscow. For the United States, Syria is a case where a willingness to step up military support, even if indirectly, will boost its diplomatic leverage.

The administration faces a tougher calculation on Iran. In Syria, military assistance to the rebels will bolster the prospects for negotiations with Russia and with Assad himself. In Iran, there does not seem to be a similar entry-level military action the United States could take to increase its negotiating leverage. And the only other alternative military action -- a large-scale air campaign against Iran's nuclear complex -- is a step the White House wants both itself and Israel to avoid, at least until next year.

On Friday morning, the New York Times confirmed long-held suspicions that the U.S. government has waged a prolonged cyberwar against Iran. According to the article, President Barack Obama took up this war from the Bush administration and urged its acceleration. This week we also learned about the Flame computer virus, a large and sophisticated reconnaissance program that has listened in on Iran's computers for at least two years.

Yet in spite of all of the computer engineering talent put into Flame and Stuxnet, its more destructive sibling, Iran's nuclear fuel production continues to advance, with output currently triple its pre-Stuxnet rate, enough for two atomic bombs per year. Cyberwarfare, one type of entry-level military action, has neither held back Iran's nuclear production nor provided negotiating leverage over its leaders.

The White House faces a grim dilemma over Iran. In the midst of a reelection campaign, the Obama team is desperate to avoid the severe economic and financial market disruption that an air campaign against Iran would trigger. Tehran knows this, which encourages its obstinacy at the bargaining table. This in turn should give the White House an incentive to walk away from further negotiations to avoid the embarrassing spectacle of unanswered Iranian belligerence. But should the United States admit that negotiations are dead, Israel may conclude that it has to attack, which would cause the chaos the Obama administration is strenuously trying to avoid.

If the White House is to continue negotiations with Iran, it will need to come to the next round with more leverage and credibility than it has possessed thus far. Beyond the goal of actually making progress with Tehran, it will want that leverage to keep face and to persuade Israeli leaders to hold their fire.

Is there any leverage the Pentagon could provide that would be more effective than Flame and Stuxnet, but less dramatic than a large air campaign? In a recent interview, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta declared that his forces were "prepared for any contingency." A full list of contingencies should include options to support diplomacy, in addition to wrecking Iran's air defense system and nuclear complex.

When faced with the Iran problem, it is undoubtedly the case that both Obama and George W. Bush pleaded with the Pentagon to come up with options in addition to a major air campaign. Generating additional options has apparently not been easy. The United States has not taken military action against Iran because policymakers have concluded that the estimated costs and risks of the big air campaign -- the option that seems to get the most attention -- has thus far exceeded its perceived benefits.

But a dearth of options has left U.S. negotiators with Iran with little support, at least from the Pentagon. In spite of their sharpening intensity, Iranian leaders seem unimpressed with the economic sanctions now imposed on their country. Pentagon planners have options, such as indirect support for Syria's rebels, that will help U.S. negotiators there. They should come up with some ideas other than a big air war to support U.S. diplomacy with Tehran.

 

1 June SWJ Roundup

Fri, 06/01/2012 - 6:50am

Small Wars Journal Daily Roundup

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

 

Afghanistan

UN Says Civilian Death Rate in Afghanistan is Unacceptable - VOA

Suicide Car Bomber Kills 5 Police in Afghanistan - AP

Marines Expand Probe of Urination Video - AP

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

 

Pakistan

US Liaisons Are Restored to Border Outpost in Pakistan - NYT

Pakistan Denies Return of US Trainers - VOA

US, Pakistan Military Coordination Improves - AFPS

Pakistani Militant Group Denies Link to Doctor - AP

Pakistani Taliban Vow to Kill bin Laden Doctor - CNN

 

Syria

Russia to Block Syria Military Intervention  - VOA

US Slams Russia, Warns of Promoting Civil War in Syria - VOA

Clinton Says Russian Inaction May Lead to Syrian Civil War - NYT

Clinton Says Intervention in Syria Requires Russian Support - AP

Putin Visits Berlin, Paris Amid Divide Over Syria - AP

Russian Church Is a Strong Voice Opposing Intervention in Syria - NYT

European Voices Go Silent on Syria - WP

For the White House, a Wary Wait as Syria Boils - NYT

Probe: Syria Not at Fault in Houla Massacre - WP

Syria: Military Not Behind Houla Attack - CNN

Pro-Assad Militias Under Scrutiny After Syrian Massacre - VOA

Syria Blames Rebels for Massacre - BBC

New Video of 'Mass Killing' Ahead of UN Meeting - BBC

Europeans Want War Crimes Probe of Houla Massacre - AP

4 Dead as Syrian Troops Shell Massacre Town - VOA

Syrian Rebel Group Says It Kidnapped 11 Lebanese - AP

What to do in Syria - WP editorial

Syria Not a Problem from Hell, Yet - FP opinion

The Case Against Intervention in Syria - Time opinion

Is Syria Becoming the New Iraq? - CNN opinion

 

Iran

Obama Order Sped Up Wave of Cyberattacks Against Iran - NYT

Flame Virus Looms in Debate Over Regulation of Internet - VOA

Israel Rejects Flame Malware Link - BBC

Images Show Alleged 'Sanitization' at Iran Nuclear Site - VOA

Satellite Photos Said to Show Iran Nuke Clean Up - AP

Buildings at Iran Site 'Razed': Think-Tank - Reuters

Iran's Guards Commander Visits Disputed Island - Reuters

 

Middle East / North Africa

Israel to Indict Reporter over Possession of Secret Documents - WP

Israel Returns Bodies of Palestinian Militants - VOA

Palestinian, Israeli Killed in Shootout Near Gaza - AP

Two Killed in Gaza Border Clash - BBC

Lebanese Action Film Takes on Israel-Hezbollah War - AP

Iraq: Baghdad Hit by Deadly Bomb Blasts - BBC

Bomb Attacks in Iraq Kill 18 People, Wound 53 - AP

As Violence Rises, US and Allies Pulled Into Yemen - Reuters

Yemeni Militants Say They Release 27 Soldiers - Reuters

Egypt's State of Emergency Ends - BBC

Egypt’s Emergency Law Expires - WP

Top Egyptian Presidential Candidate Doubts al Qaeda Role in 9/11 - WT

Egypt: Kidnapped Sinai Tourists Released - BBC

Maliki Consolidates Power in Iraq - TN opinion

 

US Department of Defense

Deputy SECDEF Carter: Strategy Before Budget for Future Force - AFPS

STRATCOM Chief Discusses US Nuclear Deterrent Force - AFPS

Air Force Base Breast-Feeders Stir Controversy - S&S

The Rights of Female Soldiers - NYT editorial

 

United States

CIA Probes Publication Review Board over Selective Censorship - WP

Another High-Profile Failure for a Justice Dept. Watchdog - NYT

Hollywood a Longtime Friend of the CIA, Pentagon - S&S

House Takes Up Veterans Funding Bill - AP

VA Partnership Aims to House 10,000 Homeless Veterans - AFPS

VA Pleased with Early Response to Retraining Assistance Program - S&S

Barack Obama: Drone Warrior - WP opinion

The Dark Side of Obama's Drone War - Slate opinion

Obama’s Secret Kill List - WT opinion

Drone War Is a Stain on the West - DT opinion

Obama's Shadow Wars - AC opinion

Obama’s Holocaust Revisionism - WT opinion

Obama Stumbles into a Touchy Polish Debate - Tablet opinion
Obama Pours Salt on a Polish Wound - NYP opinion

 

World

UN Report Predicts Increase in World's Displaced - AP

 

Africa

Is Nigeria’s Boko Haram a 'Foreign Terrorist Organization'?  - VOA

German Hostage Killed in Nigerian Rescue Effort - VOA

German Man 'Killed in Nigeria' - BBC

Status Quo Between 2 Sudans Is Not Quite War, Not Quite Peace - NYT

Sudan: Aid Worker Kidnapped in Darfur Returns Home - VOA

Death Penalty for Congo Mutineers - BBC

Taylor’s 50-year Sentence Sparks Justice Debate in Liberia - VOA

Life for Rwanda Genocide Planner - BBC

Somalia Conference Opens With High Expectations - VOA

Somalia Peace Conference Opens - BBC

Istanbul Conference Seeks to Help Somalia - AP

Al-Shabab Loses Major Somali Town - BBC

Mali Tuareg Leaders Call Off Islamist Pact - Reuters

Mauritania Slave Activist Charged - BBC

 

Americas

A New Front Line in the US Drug War - NYT

SOUTHCOM’s Officer Liaison Program Fosters Partnership, Understanding - AFPS

Mexican Youth Vote on the Streets Against Corporate Media - WP

Venezuela Bombs Airstrips in Anti-Drug Effort - AP

Venezuela Bans Private Gun Owners - BBC

New Honduras Top Cop Once Investigated in Killings - AP

Brazil's Ex-President Lula Says He May Run Again - Reuters

Venezuela's Top Party Prison - NYT opinion

 

Asia Pacific / Central

Panetta Heads to Asia to Back Allies, Avoid Riling China - S&S

Panetta to Stress Commitment to Asia-Pacific - AP

CJCS Dempsey Seeks to Learn From Asia-Pacific Partners - AFPS

ASEAN Sees Role as Regional Security Forum - VOA

China Exhibiting New Assertiveness in South China Sea - NYT

North Korea Proclaims Itself a Nuclear State - CNN

Witnesses Report Massive Chinese Crackdown in Tibetan Capital - VOA

Chen: China’s Communist Party Must Obey Its Own Laws - VOA

Activist Chen Calls on China to Abide by Its Own Laws - WP

Dissident From China Expresses Optimism - NYT

Chen Hopeful on Chinese Democracy - BBC

Blind Activist Hits China's Commitment to Rule of Law - WT

Taiwan President Ma Says Hopeful About China's Next Leader - Reuters

Relations Tested in Case of South Korean Activist Detained in China - NYT

China: Few Believed Still Jailed 23 Years after Tiananmen - AP

Japan Moves Closer to Restart of Nuclear Plant - NYT

Japan Making More Plutonium Despite Huge Stockpile - AP

Third Witness to Massacre in Philippines Is Murdered - NYT

Philippines: Paramilitary Force Out in 4 Years - PDI

Philippines: Extremists Stage More Attacks - AP

Suu Kyi Warns on Burma 'Optimism' - BBC

Suu Kyi Calls for 'Healthy Skepticism' on Burma - AP

Thai 'Yellow Shirts' Bring Parliament to a Halt - Reuters

Thai Politics Heats Up With Protest at Parliament - AP

Malaysia PM's Popularity Slips Ahead of Election - Reuters

 

Europe

Europe's Chief Banker Says Eurozone 'Unsustainable - VOA

ECB Chief Calls Euro ‘Unsustainable,’ Slams Spanish Bank Response - WP

Financial Crisis Sends Euro Zone to Tense Endgame - WP

Count Due on EU Fiscal Pact Votes - BBC

Early Results: Ireland Votes to Approve EU Treaty - AP

Spain Denies IMF Bailout Rumors - BBC

Greek Conservatives Warn of Euro Exit Nightmare - Reuters

Kosovo Serbs and NATO Troops Clash in Tense North - Reuters

NATO Troops Confront Serb Crowds in Kosovo North - AP

Blame Game, European-Style - NYT editorial

Spanish Slowdown - WT editorial

 

South Asia

India’s Manufacturing Hits Brick Wall as Economy Slows - WP

Indian Private Army Chief Killed - BBC

A New Front Line in the U.S. Drug War

Fri, 06/01/2012 - 5:22am

A New Front Line in the U.S. Drug War by Damien Cave, Charlie Savage, and Thom Shanker of the New York Times.

… Throughout 2011, counternarcotics officials watched their radar screens almost helplessly as more than 100 small planes flew from South America to isolated landing strips in Honduras. But after establishing a new strategy emphasizing more cooperation across various United States departments and agencies, two smugglers’ flights were intercepted within a single week in May, a development that explains why American officials say they are determined to press forward with the approach…

Mexican Cartel Tactical Note #12

Thu, 05/31/2012 - 5:22pm

Mexican Cartel Tactical Note #12: Forensics of Recovered Weapons from Piedras Negras Tactical Engagement Between Los Zetas and GATE (Grupo de Armas y Tácticas Especiales)

Note— Borderland Beat Reporter Chivis Martinez provided additional informational support pertaining to the Piedras Negras incident for this tactical note.

Key Information: Chivis Martinez “Gunmen in Piedras Negras Attack, Block Roads and Terrorize the City.” Borderland Beat, Wednesday, March 7, 2012, http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2012/03/gunmen-in-piedras-negras-attack-block.html?m=1.

Chaos and panic erupted last night in Piedras Negras, Coahuila, the Mexican city that shares the border with Eagle Pass Texas.

Around 8PM twitterers and libre network users began reporting that shootouts were occurring in various sectors of the city in what media sources are calling a “narco rebellion”. In the aftermath Sergio Sisbeles, a spokesman for security affairs of Coahuila, stated there were 10 known casualties of the attacks with no apparent losses by the narco group, but possibly there may be civilian casualties.

Elements of GATE (special weapons and tactics group) and the narco group engaged in battle on Highway 75 and various parts of Piedras Negras. Using combat weapons and granadazos (grenades) the attacks lasted for hours.

Terror gripped the city causing widespread turmoil. The first confrontation broke out on Highway 57 at around 5 PM and the Micare plant and offices. The violence triggered American federal authorities to close the two international bridges in Eagle Pass, Texas.

A girls softball tournament was in progress while the violence was occurring, as the shootout ensued close to the playing field creating hysteria by the players and those attending the game, as they ran to safety.

Buses were stopped by the gunmen, passengers robbed and the buses set afire.

The armed gunmen are believed to be the Los Zetas cartel known to have control of Piedras Negras and are most likely responsible for the attacks.  The border with Mexico, Eagle Pass and Piedras Negras was closed to protect American citizens and prevent the violence from crossing over into the United States.

By using buses and a crane, it was the gunmen themselves that blocked highway 57, and the Acuna/Piedras highway, virtually isolating and paralyzing the city.  Bullet ridden vehicles were left inoperable by the gunmen shooting out the tires leaving hundreds of “ponchallantas” (punctured tires) scattered and blocking the main traffic arteries of the city.

A GATE officer was killed in the shootings, Maria Guadalupe Delgadillo, age 21, was dead at the scene however her fellow officer was alive but seriously wounded, he and the other wounded officers were taken to IMSS Clinic 11 for medical treatment, one in critical condition, four others serious condition and five in fair condition.

Army tanks remained at the hospital to protect the safety of the wounded officers. This action was taken hoping to prevent the gunmen from gaining entrance and killing the officers, as often occurs in Mexico to survivors of such attacks.

Recently, Piedras was one of the border cities receiving additional security as additional troops arrived such as the Marina and equipment including helicopters. On Monday of this week GATE troops arrived, and clearly preventing even greater loss of human life and property.

UPDATE:  Coahuila's Prosecutor's Office   announced the arrest of Eusebio Hernandez Olivas, alias “El Chebo” and Eduardo Hernández Reyes alias “El Guero”. These individuals were arrested in the vicinity of the road that leads from Piedras Negras to the ciudad Acuña and were arrested for involvement in the Piedras attack.  (see fotos below)  The state also emphasized that the GATE elements were deployed to Piedras this week to combat the alarming elevation of kidnapping and carjacking incidents in the city.

Among the items confiscated from the attack:

  • Black Durango model 2000
  • A Toyota Tundra burgundy
  • A GMC Sierra crew cab gray
  • A Toyota Tundra, double cab, white, 2010 model
  • A double cab DODGE RAM, color red, model 2010
  • 50 AK-47s
  • Two rocket launchers
  • Three grenade launchers
  • Grenades
  • Ammunition
  • Six radios (communication type)
  • Three bullet-proof vests
  • Camouflaged boots
  • Camouflaged uniforms;
  • HK machine gun with ammunition
  • Machine gun MDD
  • Long gun (shotgun)
  • 20 long gun (R15
  • A 22-caliber rifle
  • A 33 caliber rifle
  • Drugs
  • An antenna base

The images of the captured weapons below are from Boletín de Prensa Piedras Negras- Detención 07 de Marzo 2012, https://www.facebook.com/notes/fiscal%C3%ADa-de-coahuila/bolet%C3%ADn-de-prensa-piedras-negras-detenci%C3%B3n-07-de-marzo-2012/337563779628298.

This photo is an untouched original.

GATE/For Public Distribution

Who: Between Los Zetas (assumed) and GATE.

What: An engagement between criminal insurgents and Mexican state authorities that turned into running gun battles with infantry small arms (assault rifles, light machine guns, thrown/launched grenades, and rocket propelled grenades). Vehicles (with tires shot out) and buses (set on fire) were utilized by Zeta tactical units to channel opposing forces (to create kill zones) and to block main avenues of approach/hinder the mobility of responding GATE/law enforcement elements. Note—The reporting of army tanks protecting the hospital is in error; rather armored cars (non-tracked vehicles) were deployed. Ten allied Mexican state casualties were noted from this engagement.

When: Initially at 5:00 PM and then from 8:00 PM on for hours afterward, on Tuesday, 6 March, 2012.

Where: On Highway 75 and in various parts of Piedras Negras, Coahuila (Across from Eagle Pass, Texas).

Why: The Mexican government is deploying additional forces to Piedras Negras in order to retake de facto political control of the city from Los Zetas.

Outside Expert Analysis: Sid Heal, a retired SWAT Captain (later Commander) with the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department and retired CWO5 with the U.S. Marines, was asked to evaluate the level of this engagement. According to Commander Heal “Clearly, the confrontations between the authorities and criminals have escalated to war in all but name only.” After some reflection, he further went on to state:

One thing that occurred to me in retrospect is the long understood principle that the weaker adversary always seeks refuge.  The nearest and safest refuge is a short distance to the north. Inevitably then, some of these violent episodes will follow and I believe we are starting to see that very thing.  Moreover, there are historical precedents, not the least of which are the execution of 18 Americans by Pancho Villa in 1916 which resulted in the incursion by Gen. Pershing.  Accordingly, if the Mexican government is unable to protect their own citizenry it is at least not incredible that they would seek refuge because it would provide both a temporary sanctuary and potential punitive actions against the assailants by a stronger government.

Commander Heal’s concerns are being echoed by many law enforcement officers along the U.S. Border. Increasingly, we are witnessing the emergence of zones of “dual-sovereignty” being established by the cartels on U.S. soil. The potential for the loss of

de facto political control in rural areas of Southern Texas across from Piedras Negras and other borderland towns controlled by the Mexican cartels is becoming a U.S. national security concern.

Photographic Analysis: The following two photographs originally posted by GATE have had numbers added to them in order to label and identify the various weapons and hardware recovered. A third photograph of weapons on the table has then been enhanced and has had numbers added. It should be noted that the cartels are increasingly being armed with military grade weaponry—the same weaponry that would be provided to squad and platoon sized military units of insurgent forces and national armies. 

GATE/For Public Distribution

GATE/For Public Distribution

Note:  This roster is a culmination of the weapons and/or components shown in main photograph, the photographic enhancement of the items to the extreme right (displayed on the table nearest the banner).  Weapons and components were moved around as the photographs were taken and, therefore, some will appear only in certain photographs.  Additional enhancement of the photographs has revealed the presence of certain weapons that were not previously apparent due to placement and lighting.

  1. AK-47, 7.62 X 39mm, fixed stock.
  2. Grenade launcher, 40mm, rifle mount (mount configuration unknown).
  3. Assorted Ammunition, Rifle, .30 caliber or greater, type unknown.
  4. Grenade launcher, 40mm, M-79, standard format.
  5. Grenade launcher, 40mm, Multiple, 6-round capacity, mfg. unknown.
  6. Grenade launcher, 40mm, HK 69A1 “Granatpistole,” retractable butt-stock (Heckler & Koch).
  7. (7) 40mm Spin-stabilized Grenades, HE // HEDP:  (2) types present:

      (4) Bearing strong resemblance to the U.S. M433 HEDP (Fragmentation / Shaped-charge).

      (3) Bearing strong resemblance to the S. Korean K200 HE (Fragmentation / High Explosive).

  1. Ammunition, Rifle, .30 caliber or greater, type unknown.
  2. AK-47, 7.62 x 39mm, unknown origin, folding stock.
  3. AK-47, 7.62 x 39mm, military issue, fixed stock.
  4. Model 1919A4.30 cal. Browning Machine Gun, belt-fed, (U.S. produced or exact foreign copy).
  5. PG-7 Booster charge – for RPG-7 munitions.
  6. RPG round – PG-7VM (Romanian) HEAT with a modified fuze or an improvised fuze safety cover; heavily carried.
  7. RPG round – PG-7V Anti-tank; consistent with RFAS or Bulgarian mfg.
  8. RPG round – PG-7V Anti-tank; consistent with RFAS or Bulgarian mfg.
  9. RPG round – PG-7VM (Romanian) HEAT.
  10. RPG-7 Launcher, 40mm Russian (RFAS) or Eastern Bloc, heavily carried and recently fired.
  11. RPG-7 Launcher, 40mm Russian (RFAS) or Eastern Bloc, heavily carried.
  12. M-60 machine gun, 7.62 x 51mm, U.S. issue, produced sometime between 1996 and 1999.
  13. Ammunition, Military Ball, linked, 7.62 x 51mm (for the M-60).
  14. AK-47, Weapon origin uncertain, however, the folding stock that it is equipped indicates that it is Romanian, Polish, or post 1985 East German.
  15. Weapon not identifiable from view angle, but may be a semi-auto shotgun, box magazine fed.
  16. AK-47, 7.62 x 39mm, fixed stock.
  17. This firearm appears to be a pump-action rifle, .30 cal. or above, model / origin unknown.
  18. Limited item view prevents positive identification.
  19. Magazines, 7.62 x 39mm, 30-round capacity, loaded.  Magazine count:  108 // Total rounds:  3,240 rnds.
  20. (2) Hand-held Transceivers (appear to be VHF).
  21. Magazine, Drum, 7.62 x 39mm, AKM, 75-round capacity.
  22. Hand Grenades, delay fragmentation, M-26A1 design, country of origin not identifiable; possibly:  South African, South Korean, or U.S.
  23. Hand Grenade, appears to be an RFAS RDG-5 with UZRGM Fuze.
  24. Unknown container, possibly Deta-sheet (flexible explosive) rolled, or similar foreign compound.
  25. Packing container containing at least one PG-7 booster charge – for the PG-7 rounds.
  26. Canister, PG-7 booster charge.
  27. Canister, PG-7 booster charge.
  28. Tactical Vest, hand grenade configuration.
  29. Body armor, military.
  30. Tactical gear pouches.
  31. Tactical duty belt.
  32. Tactical Rifle sling, padded.
  33. Body Armor, tactical, threat level (Bullet resistance) unknown.
  34. This appears to be a ceramic plate/s for body armor shown (Item No. 40).

Note:

HK69A1 40mm Grenade launcher (“Granatpistole”) [Item No. 6; is a very high quality 40mm launcher that is produced in Germany and is in service with a number of military and police forces, all of which are overseas.  There is a high likelihood that this weapon was hijacked or interdicted during a shipment of legitimate arms, possibly destined for delivery to the Mexican government.  Another probable example of a hijacked weapon in this group would be Item No. 19, the M-60 Machine gun of U.S. mfg.

RPG-7 Presence:  The presence of two RPG-7s’ (Item Nos. 17 & 18) in this cache may have significance based upon their origin.  Components of the Mexican army appear to have fielded small numbers of RPG-7s within the past several years from sources currently unknown.  The RPG-7 has seen very limited use on the southern continent, with the exception of the El Salvador conflict that occurred in Central America in the mid 1980’s.  While the dates of manufacture of these weapons are not readily apparent, they appear far too new to be from the El Salvador conflict.  They do however, appear, to be of European (RFAS or former Eastern Bloc) or Middle Eastern origin.

Significance: Arms Transfer; Cartel TTPs; Cartel Weapons; Cross Border Violence Potentials; SWAT; Urban Combat

Background Source(s):

Buggs, “Problems in Piedras Negras.” Borderland Beat, Sunday, October 16, 2011, http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2011/10/shootout-in-piedras-negras.html.

Overmex, “Mexico Army arrests 7 U.S. citizens in Piedras Negras, Coahuila.” Borderland Beat, Wednesday, September 7, 2011, http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2011/09/mexico-army-arrests-7-us-citizens-in.html.

Gerardo, “Piedras Negras in the Grip of Fear.” Borderland Beat, Friday, May 28, 2010, http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/05/piedras-negras-in-grip-of-fear.html.

Gerardo, “Fall from Grace.” Borderland Beat, Sunday, August 15, 2010, www.borderlandbeat.com/.../fall-from-grace.html.

31 May SWJ Roundup

Thu, 05/31/2012 - 1:11am

Small Wars Journal Daily Roundup

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

 

Afghanistan

UN: Civilian Casualties Drop in Afghanistan - VOA

Drop Is Seen in Casualties for Afghans - NYT

UN: Civilian Deaths Drop 36 Percent in Afghanistan - AP

Detainees Handed Over to Afghans, but Not Out of Americans’ Reach - NYT

Afghan Schoolgirl Poisonings an Omen? - CNN

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

 

Pakistan

US Military Trainers Trickle Back Into Pakistan - Reuters

Court: Pakistani Doctor Jailed for Militant Ties, Not Helping CIA - VOA

Doctor Who Helped Find Bin Laden Convicted Militant Ties, Not CIA - LAT

Details Emerge on Conviction of Pakistani Who Aided Bin Laden Search - NYT

New Pakistani Reason for Jailing Bin Laden Case Doctor - Reuters

 

Syria

For the White House, a Wary Wait as Syria Boils - NYT

Pentagon Supports Diplomatic, Economic Pressure on Syria - AFPS

US Envoy Sees Grim Outcome for Syria - NYT

US Warns of Failed Syrian Peace Plan - AP

US Hints at Bypassing UN on Syria - Reuters

World Powers Worry Syria Sliding to Civil War - AP

Diplomats Condemn Latest Syrian Violence, Lament Lack of Options - WP

Israel Urges Tougher Action Against Assad - Reuters

Syria Massacre Pushes Moscow Toward Decision Point - Reuters

Syria Rebels Set 48-hour Deadline - BBC

More Killings and Ultimatum Deepen Syria Conflict - Reuters

Security Council Briefed on Syrian 'Lowpoint' - VOA

Syria to Place Blame for Houla Massacre - CNN

13 Corpses Found in Syria Amid Massacre Fallout - AP

Families Herded 'Like Sheep' to Die in Houla Massacre - Reuters

11-Year-Old Played Dead to Survive Syria Massacre - AP

Syrian Honorary Consul in California Quits - Reuters

Time for Military Action in Syria? - WP opinion

Why Syrians Feel Abandoned - WP opinion

Obama's Syrian Policy? Ask Putin - WS opinion

A Peace Plan in Name Only - NYT opinion

Syria: Diplomatic Deadlock, Deaths Go On - CNN opinion

 

Iran

Iran: 'Flame' Virus Fight Began with Oil Attack - AP

Researchers Find Clues in Malware - NYT

'Flame' Virus Raises Cyberwar Stakes - CNN

Israel Skeptical of Diplomacy on Iran - WP

Ahmadinejad Sees No Breakthrough at Moscow Talks - Reuters

Image Shows Buildings Gone at Iran Nuclear Site - Reuters

 

Middle East / North Africa

Secretary Clinton Extends US Support to Middle East Activists - VOA

Israeli Official Weighs an Imposed Palestinian Border - NYT

In Yemen, US Airstrikes Breed Anger and Sympathy for al-Qaeda - WP

Yemeni Nobel Laureate Says Drone Strikes Ineffective - Reuters

Iraqi President Rebuffs Move to Unseat Premier - AP

Egypt: Mubarak Sons to Face New Trial - BBC

Can Muslim Brotherhood Unite Egypt? - CNN opinion

A Worst-Case Scenario for Egypt? - TNI opinion

Promise of Arab Spring Eluding Egypt? - CNN opinion

 

WikiLeaks

WikiLeaks's Assange Loses Extradition Appeal - VOA

British High Court Denies Assange Appeal of Extradition - WP

WikiLeaks Founder Loses Another Bid to Halt His Extradition - NYT

 

US Department of Defense

Defense Official: Sequester Would Create ‘Absurdities’ - WT

With Plan X, Pentagon Turns Focus to Offense in Cyberspace - WP

USS Iowa Reaches LA; Opens as Museum July 7 - S&S

 

United States

Romney Clinches Republican Nomination - VOA

Some GOP Foreign Policy Experts Are Tepid on Romney - NYT

House Orders Solid Base Line on Border - WT

VA Figures Show Steep Decline in Number of Homeless Vets - S&S

White House: Obama Misspoke on 'Polish Death Camp' - AP

White House Issues Veto Threat on Veterans Bill - AP

Targeted Assassination: Too Much Power for a President - NYT editorial

Flexible Fuel to End Foreign Oil Dependence - WT opinion

 

United Kingdom

UK PM's Ex-Adviser Charged with Perjury - BBC

Ex-Aide to Cameron Charged in Scottish Perjury Case - NYT

 

Canada

Canada Manhunt after Limbs Posted - BBC

Canada Names Suspect in Body Parts Case - AP

 

Africa

Nigeria Gets Foreign Aid to Fight Boko Haram - VOA

Sudan, South Sudan Peace Talks Yield Progress Slow - VOA

UN Condemns Upsurge in 'Blind Violence' in Eastern Congo - VOA

Somali Rebels Say Repel Kenyan Attack on Afmadow - Reuters

Liberia's Taylor Sentenced to 50 Years for War Crimes - VOA

Ex-Liberian Leader Gets 50 Years for War Crimes - NYT

Mixed Reaction to Sentencing of Liberia's Charles Taylor - VOA

Charles Taylor and the Next 50 Years - NYT opinion

 

Americas

Interagency Task Force Mounts Aggressive Counter-Drug Effort - AFPS

Mexico Cartel Drops Aerial Leaflets Against Gov't - AP

Mexico Cartel 'Targeting' Snack Company - CNN

UN Group Urges Release of American in Nicaragua - Reuters

French Reporter Freed in Colombia - BBC

Colombia: Reporter Criticizes FARC for Release as Propaganda - AP

Bolivian Politician Takes Refuge at Brazilian Embassy - NYT

Peruvian Police Arrest Mayor Over Mining Protests - AP

Repsol's Likely Departure a Blow to Cuba's Oil Hopes - Reuters

Should Latin America End the War on Drugs? - NYT opinion

Cuba: Obama’s Lovefest with Cold War Foe - WT opinion

 

Asia Pacific / Central

Panetta Travels to Asia to Discuss Refocus on Region - AFPS

Dempsey in Hawaii for First Leg of Asia-focused Trip - AFPS

US: No Commando Spies in North Korea - VOA

Controversy Follows Comments on Military Operations in N. Korea - VOA

South Korean Teens Flock Online to Scrub Pro-North Posts - AP

China Steals $114 Million US Defense Deal with Peru - WT

China Begins New Round of Stimulus, With Caution - NYT

Mother of 3 Dies After Self-Immolating in Southwestern China - VOA

Groups Say Tibetan Woman Sets Self on Fire - AP

China Denies Diplomat Spied on Japan - AP

In Thailand, Burmese Workers Call Out to ‘Mother Suu’ - NYT

Suu Kyi Offers Hope to Burma Workers in Thailand - AP

Prospect of Thaksin Return Heats Up Thai Politics - AP

Thai Webmaster Found Guilty of Computer Crimes - VOA

China’s Stimulus Addiction - WP editorial

 

Europe

Fears for European Banks as Greek Depositors Withdraw Money - VOA

European Union Recommends Resuming Aid to Hungary - NYT

Irish Voters Are Expected to Approve Fiscal Pact - NYT

Polish Premier Denounces Obama for Referring to a ‘Polish Death Camp’ - NYT

Poles Outraged Over Obama's Words on Death Camps - AP

New French Government to Review to Review Drone Plans - Reuters

Police Convinced Norwegian Mass Killer Acted Alone - AP

Loose Lips Sink Ships or ???

Wed, 05/30/2012 - 5:22pm

Controversy Follows Comments on Military Operations in N. Korea

by Steve Herman, Voice of America

SEOUL - A U.S. Army general has stirred controversy this week about comments about American and South Korean military operations in the North. The U.S. military is denying reports that the head of U.S. special operations in South Korea acknowledged that American and South Korean commandos operate covertly in North Korea.

There are concerns about the ramifications of what the leader of the U.S. special operations command in South Korea said at a panel discussion in Tampa, Florida, on May 22.

Brigadier General Neil Tolley, to an audience of hundreds of people at the Special Operations Forces Industry conference, discussed the challenges the United States faces determining what is inside North Korea's many secret tunnels.

Freelance combat reporter and technology writer David Axe was among those listening to the general.

"He was describing the utility of human intelligence on the ground in North Korea. He was describing it as though it were actually happening right now," said Axe. "He since has walked that back to say that he was speaking hypothetically, although he didn't say at the time he was speaking hypothetically."

Another person who attended the panel discussion said he heard the same thing and a partial transcript corroborates Axe’s recollection.

“Without going into too much detail on our war plans, we send ROK [South Korean] soldiers, Koreans, to the North and U.S. soldiers, to do the old special reconnaissance mission" Tolley said during the discussion. "We used to do it in the 80's in Europe. It’s roughly the same kind of thing.”

If true, such cross-border operations would be a violation of the 1953 armistice that brought to a halt the three-year Korean War. Still,  Axe says he did not realize the apparent significance of the general's remark at the time he wrote his story.

"I thought it was interesting. I hadn't heard that before, but I wasn't shocked by it because I've encountered U.S. special forces all over the world, in some places where their presence is not widely known or known publicly at all. It seemed kind of obvious they would be in North Korea," he stated.

Axe's report was published on Monday by the Japan-based online publication The Diplomat. In it, he also asserted U.S. special forces were “parachuting” into North Korea to spy on extensive underground military facilities. It prompted an unequivocal denial from U.S. Forces Korea, which insisted the quote was “made up."

The Diplomat then pulled Axe's blog post, acknowledging the possibility that the general was speaking about future war plans, not current operations.

Pentagon spokesman George Little reiterated to reporters at Tuesday's regular briefing that General Tolley was misquoted.

"My understanding is that the general's comments were contorted, distorted, misreported and that there is in no way any substance to the assertion," Little stated. "Again, that was misreported that there are U.S. boots on the ground in North Korea. That is simply incorrect."

North Korea has repeatedly violated the terms of the truce, over the years. The North sent commandos into South Korea repeatedly in decades past, with sometimes tragic consequences for both the infiltrators and South Korean civilians.

There are far fewer reports of violations from the South Korean or American side. In February of this year, during a defense committee hearing, a member of South Korea's National Assembly, Lee Jin-sam, made a stunning revelation. Lee claimed that in 1967 he was part of a secret mission that infiltrated the North, killing 33 enemy soldiers and sabotaging dozens of facilities.

The Kookmin Daily newspaper quotes a defense ministry official saying South Korean forces have not been involved in any such operations since 1972.

But a spokesman for the defense ministry in Seoul who handles international media inquiries says he cannot confirm that information.

A U.S. military veteran has written of his participation in five secret Marine Corps missions after the armistice to find and rescue fellow service members still held by the North Koreans. In the book, The Untold Experiences of a Navy Corpsman, C. Gilbert Lowery claims U.S. Marine reconnaissance patrol teams in the North freed 26 prisoners of war.

General Tolley's comment last week raised speculation about whether contemporary U.S. special forces covertly infiltrate the North. Most analysts consider that highly implausible because of the great risks of such missions compared to their scant potential intelligence gains.

Nevertheless some Asia watchers, such as Chris Nelson of Samuels International Associates, are expressing concern. Writing in his influential Nelson Report he accuses Tolley of “proving the adage 'loose lips sink ships...this time with potentially deadly consequences.”

Nelson worries that the comment - even if it was a hypothetical - could be used by North Korea's leadership “grasping at any excuse for some kind of military 'response'” to perceived American and South Korean provocations.

At his home in South Carolina, reporter Axe says this is one story he no longer cares to pursue.

"I'm bewildered and I regret diving into waters that are far deeper than I had ever imagined," he said.

Axe says he has resigned as a contributor to the online publication which carried his controversial blog post.

Mexican Cartel Tactical Note #11A

Wed, 05/30/2012 - 6:42am

This is an addendum on the potential source of MG-34 GPMGs seized by the Mexican Government at Ixtlan del Rio, Nayarit, as originally discussed in Mexican Cartel Tactical Note #11.

Note: The presence of MG-34 General Purpose Machine Guns in Mexico can be traced back to the 1954 Guatemalan Civil War and illuminates often-ignored arms smuggling routes into southern Mexico.

Key Information: Kristen Bricker, Chiapas Government Tries to Pin Narco Arsenal on Peasant Leader, Narconews, October 2009

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/kristin-bricker/2009/10/chiapas-government-tries-pin-narco-arsenal-peasant-leader

Another MG-34 (initially misidentified as a “Barrett”) was part of what was described as the largest weapons seizure in the history of Chiapas, and the biggest weapons seizure in the entire country to that date in 2009. While the Mexican government claimed that the cache belonged to Chiapan peasant leader Jose Manuel “Don Chema” Hernandez Martinez, substantial circumstantial evidence actually pointed to the Zeta cartel ownership. Martinez was arrested on September 30th and subsequently released on November 24th, 2009.

Who:  Chiapan peasant leader Jose Manuel “Don Chema” Hernandez Martinez, probably Zeta cartel.

What: Weapons cache seizure by the Mexican Government.

When: Reportedly October 9, 2009, press release dated October 18, 2009

Why: Conflicting arrest accounts of three men later linked to the Zeta cartel

Where: Frontera Comalapa, Chiapas, Mexico

Photo Analysis : MG-34 seized in October 2009 raid, originally misidentified as a “Barrett”.

Note: The most likely source for the 7.92mm MG 34 General Purpose Machine Guns seized in October 2009 and January 2012 was a 1954 Czechoslovakian shipment to Guatemala. At that time, Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán circumvented an arms embargo by arranging for two thousand tons of weaponry to be smuggled into his country via the Swedish motor vessel Alfhem. 

While the vast majority was detritus from Czech arsenals, part of the Alfhem’s cargo included 7.92mm MG-34 GPMGs (along with 9mm MP-40 submachine guns, 7.92mm K98 and G43 rifles) which were delivered to the Guatemalan Army’s 1st and 2nd Regiments. A period post-coup newsreel about Carlos Castillo Armas clearly shows several of these weapons on display at the 1.09 mark.

http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675024188_Ceased-guns_large-crowd-in-street_C-C-Armas-in-meeting_rifles-and-machine-guns-displayed

Exactly how and when these weapons could have crossed into Mexico over the next 55 years remains a mystery, but corruption has been singled out as the main problem affecting Mexico’s southern border management and the Customs Service.

While most of the media’s attention still focuses on Mexico’s northern border, Guatemala remains a major source country for cartel weaponry (both Central American Cold War left-overs and new arms trafficked into Guatemala from the U.S.).

Ironically, former CIA employee Samuel Cummings’ INTERARMCO was the first arms dealer to set up shop in Guatemala, re-equipping the 5,000-strong army in 1954 with American WWII weaponry surplused from Britain.

As noted in #11, the absence of linked ammunition at the time that the weapons were recovered indicates a potential lack of tactical relevance. While the MG-34 and MG-42 share the same non-disintegrating belts, the 7.62 NATO MG-3 (a modernized MG-42 license produced by SEDENA in Mexico) uses M13 disintegrating links. Substitution of disintegrating link belts for non-disintegrating would be problematic, without some imaginative modifications.

Significance: Cartel Weaponry, Smuggling Routes, Weapons Sources (Potentials)

Further Reading(s):

Jorge Kawas, “Guatemala and the Black Market for US Weapons”, Insight Magazine, November 25, 2011

http://www.insightcrime.org/insight-latest-news/item/1896-guatemala-and-the-black-market-for-us-weapons

K. Bricker, “OCEZ Political Prisoners' First Day Of Freedom After Nearly Two Months", NarcoNews.com, November 2009

http://lists.mutualaid.org/pipermail/mexico-week/2009-November/000366.html

David M. Barrett, “Congress, the CIA, and Guatemala, 1954”, Center for the Study of Intelligence

https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/kent-csi/vol44no5/html/v44i5a03p.htm

CIA documents relating to the 1954 Guatemalan Civil War

http://www.foia.cia.gov/search.asp?pageNumber=1&freqReqRecord=Guatemala5.txt

M/V ALFHEM ARMS SHIPMENT (W/ATTACHMENTS)         

http://www.foia.cia.gov/docs/DOC_0000934451/DOC_0000934451.pdf

Johnson, George B. & Hans Bert Lockhoven, INTERNATIONAL ARMAMENT. Vol. II. International Small Arms Publishers, Cologne, Germany. 1965.

Brogan, Patrick & and Albert Zarca, DEADLY BUSINESS: Sam Cummings, Interarms, and the Arms Trade, Norton, 1983.