North American Union – “U.S. Super Spy Center” Uncovered in Mexico

November 15, 2010 by  <http://deadlinelive.info/author/supermario/>
supermario   
Filed under  <http://deadlinelive.info/category/featured/> Featured

- Mexican Magazine Proceso reveals the location of a US
Military-Intelligence Megaplex in Mexico City.

-Megaplex includes offices for the CIA, FBI, DEA, Defense Intelligence,
BATF, Department of Treasury and others.

- U.S. Intelligence Operatives will no longer have to disguise themselves as
diplomats.

- Mexico will now have a Military ‘Liaison’ for NORTHCOM.

- U.S. is now in charge of all tactical efforts against the drug war,
counter-insurgency, and counter-terrorism in Mexico.

- Obama and Hillary Clinton are credited for the creation of the Office of
Bi-lateral Intelligence in Mexico (OBI).

 
<http://deadlinelive.info/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Proceso-1776-portada.jp
g> Jorge Carrasco and Jesus Esquivel
proceso.com.mx
Translated by Mario Andrade

With the approval of Felipe Calderón’s Administration, the U.S. Government
finally got what it always wanted: To set up a super spy center in Mexico
City. It was the escalation of the drug war in the country what opened the
door to all U.S. intelligence agencies, including the military, to operate
out of the Federal District without having to disguise their agents as
diplomats.

The establishment of the Office of Bi-national Intelligence (OBI) was
authorized by Calderon, after negotiations with Washington, which began
under the government of his predecessor, Vicente Fox Quesada. The creation
of the super spy center was authorized by the director of the Center for
Investigation and National Security (CISEN), Guillermo Valdés Castellanos,
without taking into account any objections from the Mexican military.

Through the OBI, Calderon has given the green light to U.S. Intelligence
agents to spy on organized crime syndicates and drug cartels. They can also
spy on Mexican government agencies, including the Secretariat of National
Defense, Navy, and the diplomatic missions in Mexico.

The building headquarters, which includes offices from the Pentagon, the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI), the Departments of Justice, Homeland Security, and the U.S.
Department of Treasury is located at 265 Paseo de la Reforma Avenue,
approximately 250 meters from the U.S. embassy.

The most significant presence at the OBI building is that of the Pentagon,
which includes the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the National
Reconnaissance Office (NRO) and the National Security Agency (NSA). It is
followed by the U.S. Department of Justice, also with three agencies: the
FBI, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives (ATF).

With two services, there is the Department of Homeland Security: Coast Guard
Intelligence (CGI) and the Bureau of Customs and Immigration Enforcement
(ICE), while the Treasury Department has officers of the Bureau of
Intelligence on Terrorism and Financial Affairs (TFI) .

In addition, the OBI opened two remote offices: one in Ciudad Juarez and one
in Tijuana, housing U.S. agents and “task force commanders” who coordinate
operations against drug trafficking with the support of Mexican Government
personnel.

It is not known how many intelligence agents from the U.S. are operating in
Mexico with the authorization of the Mexican Federal Government, since the
creation of this center was announced on August 31st. They maintain that the
exact number is “classified.”

The building occupied by the OBI in the Federal District is right next to
the Mexican Stock Exchange and is part of what the security and intelligence
services in Mexico define as a “soft target area” in reference to the
possibility of an attack on U.S. interests in Mexico.

At this strategic point for Washington in the Mexican Federal District,
there are also facilities for transnational corporations such as Ford,
American Airlines, as well as Marriott and Sheraton hotels, among others.

The building where the OBI is located gives the impression of an ordinary
business facility, with banks, insurance, telecommunications, commercial
offices and private offices. The only thing that stands out is the entry and
departure of U.S. citizens.

The building directory lists the names of the occupants all the way up to
the 21st floor. However, after the 22nd floor, there are three penthouses
that are only listed as “occupied.” And on the roof, there is a dozen
satellite dishes placed just above the logo of the telecommunications
company Axtel.

“It’s the best covert location for the agencies to operate,” said the source
that provided the location of the OBI. The ordinary appearance of the
building is the way in which the United States often disguise  intelligence
centers around the world.

The reception and parking are guarded by private security services, while
Federal District Police provide outside support.

Furthermore, the city government has installed special surveillance cameras
with sirens to observe the movement of pedestrians and vehicles outside the
building.

The scope and power of the OBI in Mexico is similar to the El Paso
Intelligence Center, in Texas (EPIC), which dates back to 1974 and operates
exclusively to combat drug trafficking, weapons and money laundering on the
border between Mexico and United States.

EPIC  has been credited for creating the strategies launched against drug
trafficking and organized crime in Mexico. Among the most successful are
“Operation White Tiger,” which was used to investigate the activities of the
Hank Rhon family in 1997, the capture and extradition, a year earlier, of
Gulf Drug Cartel Leader Juan Garcia Abrego, and the discovery of
narco-graves in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, in 1998.

Subordination

Overrun by drug trafficking, the government of Felipe Calderón agreed to the
establishment of the OBI in Mexico, which was a proposal of the then head of
National Intelligence in the United States, Admiral Dennis Blair, who last
March was accompanied by Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, during his
working visit to Mexico.

According to the formal agreement, the new U.S. office workers interact with
their Mexican counterparts, under the coordination of the State Department
and the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE).

For the Pentagon, the strong presence of its agents in Mexico is intended to
merge the intelligence and espionage services of both countries to identify
and exploit the vulnerabilities of drug trafficking organizations and
organized crime gangs.

Under this directive, issued on 18 March by Gen. Victor Eugene Renuart, then
head of Northern Command (NORTHCOM), Mexico has carried out several
operations against drug traffickers.

Since then, among some of the actions taken against the drug lords have been
the killing of Arturo Beltran Leyva, (aka El Barbas),
<http://deadlinelive.info/2010/07/31/mexican-drug-cartel-leader-nacho-corone
l-linked-to-cia-yucatan-cocaine-operations/> Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel, and
Ezequiel Cardenas Guillen (aka Tony Tormenta), in addition to the arrests of
other drug lords, such as
<http://deadlinelive.info/2010/09/28/edgar-%E2%80%98barbie%E2%80%99-valdez-%
E2%80%93-profile-of-a-u-s-intelligence-saboteur/> Edgar ‘Barbie’ Valdez
Villarreal.

Since the killing of Beltran Leyva in December of 2009, U.S. intelligence
services, mainly the DEA, have mentioned their participation in various
operations, against the very Arturo Beltran Leyva, Barbie Valdez, Teodoro
Garcia Simental (aka El Teo), Jose Gerardo Alvarez Vazquez (aka El Indio or
El Chayán), operator of the Beltran Leyva organization and Carlos Ramon
Castro, a drug dealer who worked for several organizations.

As part of the Mexican government’s need to justify the militarization of
the fight against drug trafficking, the Pentagon has strengthened its
cooperation with the Mexican military. In early 2009, just as the Department
of State and the Mexican Exterior Relations Secretariat (SRE) fine-tuned the
details for the establishment of the OBI, the U.S. Department of Defense
stepped up military training for Mexicans in Mexico and in several U.S.
military bases.

The training has been an unprecedented event in the history of military
relations between the two countries. For the first time, the Pentagon has
brought counter-insurgency and counter-terrorism expertise from Iraq and
Afghanistan to their offices in central Mexico.

In the case of Mexico, the training courses are developed and run by the
Defense Department, and are  focused on intelligence and tactical operations
against drug trafficking, terrorism and the implementation of
counterinsurgency tactics.

In addition to the courses offered in Mexico, the Mexican military has
significantly increased the number of special forces troops  in the Army,
Air Force and the Navy to attend specialized intelligence training in U.S.
military bases.

Liaisons

The main example of this cooperation is the presence -for the first time in
the bilateral relationship- a member of the Mexican Army as a “liaison”
between the Mexican military (Central Command) and  the Northern Command in
Colorado (NORTHCOM), according to a military source who spoke to the Mexican
magazine Proceso.

On Wednesday 10, The Washington Post published on its front page a note
informing that the liaison will also serve as deputy commander of the
Institute for Security and Cooperation in the Western Hemisphere at Fort
Benning, Georgia. From the sixties to the eighties, these facilities housed
in the so-called School of the Americas, which went down in history as a
supplying center for Latin American dictators, which are characterized by
the systematic violation of human rights.

A U.S. official, who told the Post on condition of anonymity, said that
given the seriousness of the drug violence in Mexico, “we have received
direct instruction from the President (Barack Obama) and the highest levels
in government, to really examine what more can be done in this
counter-narcotics cooperation with Mexico.”

The establishment of the Office of Bi-national Intelligence (OBI) implies
that for the first time in the history of Mexico, surveillance, supervision
and qualification of work against organized crime between federal government
agencies, including the military, rests in part on foreign officials.

According to the document unveiled by the White House on March 25, 2009 on
the establishment of the OBI, the office is also responsible for overseeing
the proper use of resources that Washington provides the Calderon
administration in combating drug trafficking through the ‘Merida
Initiative.’

“We will be coordinating our efforts with the government of Mexico through
high-level contacts, which in part are related to the new intelligence
services responsible for overseeing the implementation of Merida
Initiative,” according to the document released by the White House
(published by Proceso).

A year later, on March 23, 2010, Hillary Clinton announced during her
working visit to the Federal District, in the context of the implementation
of Plan Merida, the establishment of two “pilot programs” in the Tijuana-San
Diego and Ciudad Juárez-El Paso corridors.

The two governments declared in a joint statement, that in the case of
Ciudad Juárez, the program considers the development of “a model for the
Mexican Government to collect and analyze tactical intelligence” as well as
to “take action against drug trafficking, extortion, kidnapping and other
criminal activities.”

However, the actual operations of the OBI in security and intelligence
services, Mexicans will be subordinates of the U.S.. Agencies of the U.S.
Government will play the role as experts in intelligence  work, apart from
previous advisory roles in order to increase Mexico’s ability to use
information resources against drug cartel operations.

 <http://www.am.com.mx/Nota.aspx?ID=438787> Link to Original Article in
Spanish

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

We have room for but one flag, the American flag...and we have room for but
one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people." ~Theodore
Roosevelt 1919


 


 

 



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