Caravan for Peace with Justice and Dignity Heads to Chicago
September 2 thru 4
CHICAGO—August
31, 2012.
On
August 12, a broad bi-national coalition of more than 100 U.S. civil society
organizations, including the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP), the National Alliance of Latin American and Caribbean
Communities (NALACC), Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), Global
Exchange and the Drug Policy Alliance joined the Mexican Movement for Peace
with Justice & Dignity (MPJD) to embark on the “Caravan for Peace with
Justice and Dignity” across the United States.
The
Caravan is being led by renowned Mexican poet Javier Sicilia, who emerged as a
leader of the MPJD after his son Juan Francisco was killed in senseless prohibition-related
violence last year, together with family members of Mexican victims of the
drug war. They will unite with victims and supporters from the United States
for a month-long voyage across the continental United States.
The
Caravan for Peace seeks to end the failed drug war that has left more than
60,000 dead in Mexico in the last five years, and resulted in more than 500,000
Americans behind bars for drug offenses.
The
Caravan for Peace arrives in Chicago on September 2. The scheduled events
are below.
Sunday September 2
6:00- 8:00 Mass @ St Pius (6:30
PM) followed by the Kermes
1919 S Ashland. Chicago IL 60608
Host: St Pius
1919 S Ashland. Chicago IL 60608
Host: St Pius
Monday Sept 3
11 am – 12pm
Javier Sicilia salutes Movimiento Migrante @ 11:30 18th & Union Ave
11 am – 12pm
Javier Sicilia salutes Movimiento Migrante @ 11:30 18th & Union Ave
1 pm – 4 pm
Almuerzo y Dialogo Comunitario
Museum of Mexican Art
1852 W 19th Street
Chicago IL 60608
Host: NALACC & Museum of Mexican Art and Network for Revolutionary Change
Almuerzo y Dialogo Comunitario
Museum of Mexican Art
1852 W 19th Street
Chicago IL 60608
Host: NALACC & Museum of Mexican Art and Network for Revolutionary Change
5pm – 7pm
Marching for Peace-Start @ 4005 W. 26 Street (Little Village’s Arch)
Towards New Mount Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Church
Host: Lady of Guadelupe Angelican Catholic Mission and Familias Unidas
7pm – 8pm
Vigilia @ Mount Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Church Reverend Coleman
4301 West Washington Blvd
Host: Chicago Clergy Coalition
Marching for Peace-Start @ 4005 W. 26 Street (Little Village’s Arch)
Towards New Mount Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Church
Host: Lady of Guadelupe Angelican Catholic Mission and Familias Unidas
7pm – 8pm
Vigilia @ Mount Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Church Reverend Coleman
4301 West Washington Blvd
Host: Chicago Clergy Coalition
Tuesday Sept 4
10 – 11 AM Press Conference @ Chicago City Council, 121 N. LaSalle Street
10 – 11 AM Press Conference @ Chicago City Council, 121 N. LaSalle Street
11:30 – 1PM Stories
from Peace Caravan @ Lutheran School of Theology, 1100 East 55th Street,
Chicago
Host: Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago and McCormick Theological Seminary (closed event)
Host: Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago and McCormick Theological Seminary (closed event)
2:00 – 3:00 Stories for peace
Caravan @ Roosevelt University 30 S. Michigan Ave. Congress Lounge
Host Roosevelt University
Host Roosevelt University
3:00 – 5:00 PM Presentation at
Northeastern Illinois University
5500 N Saint Louis Avenue Chicago, IL 60625, Host: NEIU
5500 N Saint Louis Avenue Chicago, IL 60625, Host: NEIU
6:00-8:00PM Presentation at Albany
Park Autonomous Center 3460 W Lawrence Ave Chicago, IL 60625 Host:
MSN and Comunidad Guatemalteca
----------------
Mexico Shooting Exposes
Secret CIA Involvement in the Drug War
Saturday,
September 1, 2012
Source: deadlinelive.info
The failed ambush that took
place last week on two CIA agents in Mexico continues to raise questions
by both people in Mexico and in the U.S. The Mayor of Mexico City is
asking the federal government to clarify what the exact role of the CIA is in
the so-called drug war. In the United States, some Republicans are beginning to
ask the Obama Administrations for answers about this recent incident, which
parallels the shooting of ICE Agent Jaime Zapata when he was ambushed and
killed by Los Zetas almost two years ago. Last Friday August 24 at
approximately 8:30 in the morning, a Toyota SUV with two CIA agents, one
Mexican Marine Captain, and a drug cartel informant onboard was ambushed by
cartel members and the Mexican Federal Police.
Fortunately, no one inside
the Toyota SUV was critically injured because it was bullet-proof. During the
chase, which lasted only a few minutes, the Mexican Marine Officer called the
nearby Navy base in El Capulin
for assistance. When the Mexican Marines arrived at the location, the Federales
and the cartel members fled the scene. Hours later, a crime scene
investigation team from the U.S. State Department arrived. The investigators
were guarded by what appeared to be armed private security contractors and a
platoon of fully equipped Mexican Marines. Some of the first things they
discovered at the crime scene were two different sets of bullet shell casings,
one of 5.56mm caliber (for AR-15 rifles), which is used by the federal police;
the other set of shell casings was of 7.62mm caliber (for AK-47 rifles), which
is used by the drug cartels. Despite disinformation and multiple versions of
the story that mentioned that the Americans were attacked by mistake, this was
key evidence that showed without a doubt that the Federales and the cartel
members were working together.
Mexican Government sources
told DeadlineLive.info that there were no mistakes about this assassination
attempt. When crime scene investigators took a closer look at the
bullet-riddled SUV, and they noticed that most of the bullet holes showed that
the shots were precisely placed on parts of the vehicle where the armor is more
vulnerable. Furthermore, most of the shots were placed targeting the two front
passengers of the vehicle, which sources say the two CIA Agents were sitting.
The drug cartel that has the most expertise in this type of ambushes on armored
vehicles is Los Zetas, the same organization that ambushed Jaime Zapata. Two
years ago and in a similar fashion, Los Zetas also ambushed the would-be
governor of the Mexican State of Tamaulipas, Rodolfo
Torre Cantu, just two days before the 2010 elections. During the ambush
that lasted minutes, Los Zetas also wiped out the entire convoy of SUVs
carrying the candidate’s security team. The attack was so swift and precise
that no one saw them come in and no one saw them leave. It’s no surprise that
Los Zetas can carry out attacks like this; after all, some of them are Special
Forces defectors that were trained by the U.S. Military in Fort Benning,
Georgia. Los Zetas have several motives to carry out an attack like this
against the CIA. The U.S. and Mexican Governments have chased them out of Nuevo
Laredo -their biggest border smuggling route into the U.S. The U.S. Government
has also sent at least 200 U.S. Marines
to Guatemala to intercept their cocaine shipments coming from Colombia.
Their backs are against the wall, so we may expect more similar incidents like
this one.
Just hours after the
shooting, Mexican and U.S. Officials were misleading the public, stating that
the two Americans shot near the city of Cuernavaca were ‘State Department
Employees.’ However, the Mexican Navy issued a statement mentioning that the
Americans had just left a shooting range with Mexican Marines, and that they
were driving to the nearby naval installation in El Capulin. The Mexican media
began to investigate just what exactly takes place in El Capulin. What kind of training does
the Mexican military receive at that facility? And just what are American
citizens are doing there? The recent reports coming out of the Mexican wires
are nothing less than astounding. The naval installations in the heavily wooded
and mountainous area of the El Capulin
not only provide special operations training; it is also a joint Mexico-U.S
intelligence facility, where covert operations planning takes place to
infiltrate, track, and subsequently go after drug cartels and other criminal
organizations. It was then when both Mexican and U.S. Government Officials
finally admitted that the two Americans shot near Cuernavaca were CIA Agents.
The Mexican
press learned that the two CIA Agents had just arrived from Afghanistan a few
days earlier. They also learned that they entered the country illegally, using
fake identities. The names they used were Stan Dove Boss and Philip P.
Quincannon. After the incident, they were transported to a hospital in Cuernavaca.
However, the Mexican Navy picked them up and took them to a nearby Naval
Hospital, where they later helped them get out of the country without notifying
the authorities investigating the case. They left the same way they came in
-secretly.
McHale’s
Navy – The Defense Information Security Agreement of 2008 turns the Mexican
Navy into a quasi-branch of the U.S. Military
Credible news sources in
Mexico, such as Milenio
have uncovered the framework used by U.S. Intelligence Agencies to work with
the Mexican Military, particularly the navy. The framework used by the U.S.
Government and the Mexican Navy is included in what’s known as the Defense
Information Security Agreement of 2008. Since the early 1980′s, U.S. Government Agencies,
like the CIA,DoD, and the DEA have used the Mexican Navy’s collaboration.
In 2008, Mexican Secretary of the Navy, Admiral Francisco Saynez and Assistant
U.S. Secretary of Defense Paul McHale signed the Defense Information Security
Agreement in which the Mexican Navy would follow the same framework as the U.S.
Government when it comes to intelligence and ‘sensitive information’ handling.
Till this day, the Mexican Navy is the only military branch in Mexico that uses
this framework; as a result, it is the preferred agency in which the CIA
participates in joint operations in Mexican territory.
In exchange, as a result of
signing the Defense Information Security Agreement, the Mexican Navy would also
have access to sensitive information from the Pentagon and other U.S.
Government Agencies. They would receive sophisticated U.S. military
communications encryption equipment; they would also follow U.S. Military
protocols for the dissemination and destruction of U.S. information and
encrypting equipment. In essence, the Mexican Navy is now playing the role of
another U.S. Military branch, under the supervision of the CIA, DoD, DEA and
other U.S. Government Agencies.
Two years ago, when the
Mexican Navy killed the leader of the South Pacific Drug Cartel, Arturo Beltran
Leyva in Cuernavaca, U.S. Government Agencies, such as the DEA took credit for
playing the role of ‘advisors’ during the operation. Several Mexican media
outlets reported that it was a joint U.S.-Mexico operation, in which Defense
Information Security Agreement protocols were followed. Mexican Magazine Proceso
is reporting that the CIA Agents that were ambushed last week were tracking and
making preparations to capture Hector Beltran Leyva, Arturo’s brother and
successor as the leader of the cartel. It is also a well-known fact that Hector
Beltran Leyva’s stomping ground is the City of Cuernavaca -not very far from
where the CIA Agents were shot. Were the federales involved in the ambush
working for Hector Beltran Leyva? Were they protecting him from the CIA and the
Mexican Navy? Perhaps it was an act of revenge by Hector Beltran Leyva for the
killing of his brother Arturo. The information is still pouring out and the
full details are still unknown. The federales are still testifying in court and
there will be more information coming out very soon.
Perhaps now the question on
everyone’s mind is this: What’s going to happen when a high ranking Mexican
Admiral with access to secret Pentagon information gets bribed by the drug
cartels? Before Los Zetas built their criminal organization, they used to be
loyal special-forces soldiers in the Mexican Army. Then in the 1990′s, the Gulf Drug Cartel
offered these soldiers an offer they couldn’t refuse by asking them the
proverbial question: ‘Silver or lead?’ This is when a drug cartel asks a
government official, a police officer or a member of the military if they want
to work for them. If they decline, then they die. If they accept, they receive
lots of money and protection from the cartels in exchange for information.
The drug cartels speak the
universal language of money. With a $20 billion-dollar a year drug trafficking
industry, they are more powerful than the Mexican Government. In fact, many
members of the Mexican Government work for them already.
So when are we going to
learn our lesson?
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