August 16, 2005

Is It Time To Invade Mexico Yet?

When you have things like this happening in Arizona, it would seem to be time to assert our sovereignty aggressively. Maybe a 50-mile irradiated buffer zone on the Mexican side of the border – or a simple conquest of the corrupt nation and eventual incorporation of its territory as states, once it has brought itself up from Third World standards.

At 11:30 a.m. on April 22 this year, a Mexican helicopter landed in the Robinsons' backyard. Arivaca resident R.D. Ayers had driven to the ranch that morning to visit his injured dog, then under Dr. Robinson's care.

Ayers describes stepping outside the house to see what he describes as "a military Huey-type helicopter" circling, at the same time that a truck from the Tucson Fuel Co. was pulling into the yard. The Tres Bellotas gets its power from diesel generators, and that fuel has to be delivered.

As he approached the chopper, Ayers says six men in black, commando-type uniforms stepped out. Five had ski-type masks over their faces, and they wore body armor and carried automatic rifles. On their sleeves, Ayers saw the word, Mexico.

They stood in a defensive posture around a sixth man, their leader, who identified himself as a member of the Mexican police. He pointed aggressively to the fuel truck and asked what it was doing there. Ayers, in Spanish, told the man he was in the United States, not Mexico, and that he had no business in this country and needed to leave.

But the commander refused to listen and began walking toward the truck, at which point Ayers placed himself between the commander and the truck, again telling him to scram. After a few minutes, the tense confrontation ended when the commander ordered his troops into the chopper, and they split back across the border.

Ayers suspects that the Mexicans--one of Robinson's cowboys identified them as federales, Mexican federal police--were escorting a drug shipment to Tucson, and wanted to haul it in the fuel truck. Or they wanted to steal the fuel. The chopper had followed the truck much of the way down Tres Bellotas Road.

"Men with fully automatic weapons and masks don't just show up to say hello," says a still-outraged Ayers, owner of a backhoe company and a former EMT in Arivaca. He added that if he'd had his gun, he might've fired on the invaders. "I wasn't going to back down. This is my country."

These drug incursions occur with some regularity along the border. The Kays and Robinson say they're personally aware of three such incursions this summer alone, and it's worth noting that the men who recently shot two Border Patrol agents near Nogales also wore black, commando-type gear.

But this episode, like the others, has disappeared into the vapor of national security. Tucson Fuel refuses comment. The Border Patrol won't talk about it, saying its agents got to the Tres Bellotas too late to learn much of anything. The FBI in Tucson took a report the same day and forwarded it to Washington, but they're not talking, either

Or is the US so weak that we cannot protect ourselves from the criminals who run our bad neighbor to the south?

Posted by: Greg at 01:21 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
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1 That's some scary stuff. Mr. Ayers has some big bronze ones.

once it has brought itself up from Third World standards.

But that could take forever. I say we annex the country and make it, if not the 51st state, at least a protectorate. Then what incentive would there be for Mexicans to become criminal aliens by illegally crossing the border? California is slowly being reclaimed by Mexico and Cabo San Lucas is practically owned and run by rich white American tourists, so what's the problem?

Posted by: Curtis G. at Tue Aug 16 14:48:39 2005 (IMhNt)

2 Mexico has some serious issues with their law enforcement. Of course after watching what is happening in New Orleans it seems they may not be much different than the US or at least certain parts of it.

Posted by: Mark at Sat Sep 10 07:42:53 2005 (dhQjf)

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