Oh my Gosh! North Korean troops in California! Heh...
Michael Pugliese
Clinton Regime, Media Black Out Border Clashes
The government, in collaboration with the mainstream media, wants to keep you ignorant of violent attacks on U.S. soil by Mexico.
Exclusive to The SPOTLIGHT
By Mike Blair
There is a conspiracy of silence among the mainstream media and the Clinton administration to suppress knowledge of attacks on the United States from across the Mexican border.
In one recent incident, Border Patrol agents were attacked by Mexican soldiers and foreign, possibly North Korean, troops.
The SPOTLIGHT reported in the Nov. 27 issue that on Oct. 24 Border Patrol agents had been attacked near the Otay Mesa border crossing southeast of San Diego by Mexican soldiers, accompanied by oriental troops and blond Caucasian soldiers.
According to a SPOTLIGHT source, the oriental troops were most likely North Korean Commando Rangers and that the Caucasians may have been Russian mercenaries. Both groups, along with the Mexican troops, were supporting operations of Mexican drug cartels.
BLACK-OUT
The Establishment press, including The San Diego Union-Tribune, has not re ported on the Oct. 24 attack.
There has also been a media black-out concerning an incident last March 14 at Santa Teresa, N.M., in which Border Pa trol agents were attacked by Mexican soldiers operating three American-made Humvee military scout vehicles well into U.S. territory.
Border Patrol agents captured one Mexican vehicle. The other two escaped, scurrying back across the border into Mexican territory.
Acting on orders from Washington, the Border Patrol in New Mexico released the Mexican soldiers.
The Clinton administration claimed that the incident was being investigated by both the United States and Mexico. But a few weeks later the Mexican government claimed the clash never oc curred and official Washington never com mented on it.
UNION SPILLS BEANS
The only reason that these incidents were reported at all was because they were revealed by officials of the union that represents the Border Patrol.
On Oct. 27, the National Border Patrol Council Local 1613 demanded an investigation by the U.S. and Mexican governments.
The union represents Border Patrol agents and is a division of the American Federation of Government Employees.
The union not only reported that stray soldiers, including the foreign troops, had fired on agents near Otay Mesa, but that two of them had taken up sniper positions to direct more accurate fire at the American officers.
Keith Weeks, president of the local union, has been critical of the Border Patrol officially "watering down" the Oct. 24 incident.
"I can tell you when the agency called me they told me they were very disappointed we issued our press release," Weeks told reporter Scott Gulbransen of Strategic Jungle Syndicate, an Internet news service. "For whatever reason they're more concerned about keeping it quiet and we don't know why."
Weeks questioned why skilled military personnel would be stationed by Mexico at the border in violation of treaties between that country and the U.S.
"It scares me to think some enemy army may be closer than we think," one Border Patrol agent told Gulbransen. "People out there need to demand the truth and find out what our government knows."
To this day, official Washington has classified as top secret reports of the intrusion of North Korean spy ships and elite troops into North America, which was initially reported by The SPOTLIGHT in its Aug. 20, 1984 issue and supported as facts by articles appearing in The Arizona Republic.
............................................................................ ..................... Date: Sat, 18 Nov 2000 01:48:26 -0500 From: Dave <dkuehne at erols.com> Subject: INS: anti-immigration activity is a hate crime
The INS is supposed to keep "illegal entrants" out of the country, instead they are helping them come into the country. -DK- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Source: http://www.azstarnet.com/star/thu/001116agentswarning.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tucson, Arizona Thursday, 16 November 2000
INS inflames Cochise residents
By Ignacio Ibarra ARIZONA DAILY STAR
DOUGLAS - An official safety bulletin issued to U.S. immigration and border agents last month has Cochise County residents and the Ranch Rescue group fuming over being characterized as racists capable of terrorism.
The bulletin, issued Oct. 25 by the Intelligence Analysis Branch at U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service headquarters in Washington, D.C., is also being criticized by the top Border Patrol official in Tucson.
The bulletin warned that on the weekend of Oct. 27-29, 20 to 30 members of "anti-immigration hate crime organizations" planned to meet in Douglas, and that their presence "may be a threat to illegal aliens and U.S. Border Patrol agents."
Ranch Rescue, a Texas-based group, had asked via the Internet for volunteers to come to Arizona this fall to help Cochise County ranchers repair property damaged by a two-year flood of illegal-entrant trespassers.
The bulletin stated that a grass-roots mission organized by Ranch Rescue and involving the group Concerned Citizens Of Cochise County was "openly recruiting volunteers . . . to come to the aid of ranchers such as Roger Barnett and his brother Donald."
The document also listed other organizations, including the Federation for American Immigration Reform, California Coalition for Immigration Reform, Arizonans for Immigration Reform, the National Grass Roots Alliance, the National Organization for European American Rights (NOFEAR, ex-Ku Klux Klansman David Duke's group), the Klan and the Foundation for Optimal Planetary Survival.
The intelligence report concluded that the involvement of "known racial supremacy hate groups" created an opportunity for acts of violence.
The targets most likely would be illegal entrants, but "a scenario where an act of violence against a U.S. Border Patrol agent, made to look as if an illegal alien committed it, could present itself in a favorable way to support these anti-immigration organizations and supremacy hate groups' cause," the bulletin said.
David Stoddard, a member of the Concerned Citizens group, said he is outraged that citizens would be branded racist criminals for stating their opposition to illegal immigration.
"This is absolute B.S.," said Stoddard, a retired Border Patrol supervisor with 27 years in the service. "I'd like to know what facts they have that indicate any of these organizations belong in the same category as the KKK and NOFEAR."
The chief of the Border Patrol's Tucson Sector is wondering the same thing.
In a telephone interview from San Diego yesterday, Tucson Sector Chief David Aguilar said he did not believe a serious threat to agents or migrants existed at the time of the bulletin's release or at present.
In the end, the focus of concern turned out to be a "non- incident," Aguilar said. "It simply did not occur."
Regardless, he said, "There is no way that members of the community should in any way be associated with the extremist groups and the hate groups mentioned in that bulletin."
He said when he first saw the bulletin he contacted headquarters about his concerns. But by that time the alert had already been distributed to INS offices and ports of entry.
* Contact Ignacio Ibarra at (520) 432-2766 or at nacho at primenet.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~