Monday, February 26, 2018

AZMEX EXTRA 24-2-18

AZMEX EXTRA 24 FEB 2018


Note: Several photos, etc. at link. From the good folks at Borderland Beat.
Reynosa is across from McAllen, TX.
In the past few months homicides in Mexico have increased at a record rate.
Thx


Friday, February 23, 2018
Mexican Cartel Tactical Note #36: Claymore Anti-Personnel Mines Recovered in Reynosa, Tamaulipas
Posted by El Profe for Borderland Beat from SWJ

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2018/02/mexican-cartel-tactical-note-36.html#more

by Robert J. Bunker and John P. Sullivan

Two anti-personnel mines (minas antipersonales) were recovered from suspected members of the Cartel del Golfo (Gulf Cartel) in Reynosa, Tamaulipas on Wednesday, 7 February 2018 by Mexican Army (Ejército Mexicano) (SEDENA) personnel from the Eighth Military Zone (Octava Zona Militar).

Key Information: "Decomisan dos minas antipersonales en Tamaulipas." El Heraldo de México. 7 February 2018, https://heraldodemexico.com.mx/estados/tamaulipas-decomisan-dos-minas-antipersonales/:

[Translated from Original Post]

Two antipersonnel mines, among other high power weapons drugs and fuel were seized by personnel of the Mexican Army.
This occurred in various deployed actions, in Reynosa, Tamaulipas. In these events, three people were arrested.

By intensifying the patrol and the search for criminal signs during the last 48 hours, in gaps located in the vicinity of the Rio Grande, the military elements detected hiding places in vacant areas that were hidden among dry brush and garbage.

The personnel of the eighth Military Zone secured 17 assault rifles known as goat horns, two .50 caliber Barret rifles, as well as two antipersonnel mines. In addition, they found a grenade launcher, a 38 special caliber pistol, two ballistic plates for a vest, 55 magazines and 458 rifle cartridges.

Five vehicles were also confiscated, a cistern pipe, 45 doses of white powder with characteristics of cocaine, a communication radio, 21 thousand liters of hydrocarbon and three people were arrested in flagrante delicto.

Key Information: "Asegura Ejército armas, droga y 21 mil litros de huachicol." El Mañana. 7 February 2018
, https://www.elmanana.com/asegura-ejercito-armas-droga-21-mil-litros-huachicol-reynosa-armas-aseguradas-droga-huachicol-militares/4306481:

[Translated from Original Post]

Reynosa, Tamaulipas, February 7, 2018- Staff of the Eighth Zone Military secured a large quantity of weapons, loaders, cartridges and vehicles, as well as doses of white powder with the characteristics of cocaine and 21 thousand liters of hydrocarbon (fuel) in various actions carried out in gaps located in the vicinity of the Rio Grande, in Tamaulipas territory.

By intensifying the patrolling and searching for criminal signs during the last 48 hours, elements of the Mexican Army detected hiding places in vacant places that were hidden among dry brush and garbage. Three people were arrested in flagrante delicto.

In all the actions, 17 assault rifles known as Cuernos de Chivo (AK or clones), 2 Barret rifles caliber .50; 2 anti-personnel mines, 1 attachment that launches grenades, a 38 special caliber pistol, 2 ballistic plates for a vest, 55 magazines and 458 rifle cartridges; 5 vehicles, one cistern, 45 doses of white powder with cocaine characteristics, a communication radius and 21 thousand liters of hydrocarbon (fuel, gasoline or diesel?).

Other Weaponry—including two .50 Cal Sniper Rifles—
seized along with the Claymore Anti-Personnel Mines
Source: SEDENA Photo [For Public Distribution]

Key Information: "Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDS) in Mexico from 2009 to 2011." Defense Intelligence Agency. CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN (FOIA; Freedom of Information Act—Title 5, Section 552): 17, www.dia.mil/FOIA/FOIA-Electronic-Reading-Room/FOIA...Mexico/.../110969/:
2. (U//FOUO) ON 10 SEPTEMBER 2009 IN APIZACO, TLAXCALA, MEXICAN FORCES RECOVERED AN UN-DETONATED IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICE (IED) CONSISTING OF A CLAYMORE MINE, A VARTA LONGLIFE BATTERY, AND A SIMPLE MECHANICAL ALARM-CLOCK AS THE INITIATOR. THE MINE WAS TRACED BACK TO EL SALVADOR MILITARY STOCKS AS A U.S. FOREIGN MILITARY SALE (FMS) FROM THE 1980S. LA FAMILIA MICHOACANA INTENDED TO DETONATE THE MINE AT THE SEPTEMBER 2009 INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE IN APIZACO. **Following Sentence Not Released Per (b)(3):10 USC 424**
Key Information: David A. Kuhn and Robert J. Bunker, "Mexican Cartel Tactical Note#10: Claymore Anti-Personnel Mine (and Other Military Hardware) Recovered in Zacatecas." Small Wars Journal. 14 May 2012, http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/mexican-cartel-tactical-note-10:

Engagement between Mexican military personnel and traffickers who had a large amount of marijuana and military weapons and hardware in their possession.

The municipalities of Teul de González Ortega and Florencia de Benito Juárez in the state of Zacatecas. Military Region V and XI Military Zone.

January 26-27, 2012.
The photograph of the weaponry recovered and shown on the tarp is from La Secretaría de la Defensa Nacional (SEDENA).
*Numbers were added during the writing of the tactical note for forensic analysis of the seized weaponry.

Teul de González Ortega and Florencia de Benito Juárez, Zacatecas; 26-27 January 2012
5. M18A1 Claymore Anti-personnel Mine (or exact foreign production copy)
6. M18A1 electrical wire (detonating) and storage reel
7. Firing Device, electric impulse, hand, M18A1 Claymore AP Mine
8. Electrical wire, supplemental, M18A1
Source: "Mexican Cartel Tactical Note#10." Small Wars Journal

Who: Cartel del Golfo (Gulf Cartel) (Alleged)

What: 2 Anti-personnel mines (Claymore M18A1) along with high caliber small arms (including 2 .50 caliber Barret rifles, 17 "Cuernos de Chivo" or AK-47s, grenade launchers, ammunition, 21,000 liters of stolen fuel (hydrocarbons) and tools for petroleum theft.

When: Wednesday, 7 February 2018, approx. 0600 hrs.
Where: Reynosa, Tamaulipas (proximate to the Rio Grande/Rio Bravo)
Why: Counter-narco interdiction by Mexican Army (Ejército Mexicano) (SEDENA)

Analysis

Alleged members of the Cartel del Golfo (Gulf Cartel) were interdicted near illegal petroleum taps (tomas clandestinas) proximate to the Rio Grande/Rio Bravo by Mexican Army (Ejército Mexicano) (SEDENA) personnel from the Eighth Military Zone (Octava Zona Militar). The SEDENA enforcement operations augmented similar operations by the Federal Police (Policía Federal) and la Marina (SEMAR) supporting Fuerza Tamaulipas (Tamaulipas State Police) to combat cartel violence and fuel theft. The state of Tamaulipas and the Reynosa plaza have been intensely contested in recent months and the area is considered a cartel battlefield (campo de guerra) characterized by gunfights, blockades (narcobloqueos), and explosions.[1]

In this incident, two Claymore Anti-personnel Mines were recovered in an underground weapons cache. Imagery of one of the mines clearly shows it to be a U.S. M18A1 mine (or exact foreign copy) along with accompanying electrical wire (detonating) and storage reel and a electric impulse hand-triggered firing device. This is not the first case where anti-personnel mines (minas antipersonales) have been discovered in the hands of Mexican criminal cartels. Table 1 describes three specific cases dating back to 2009. Additional statistics regarding interdictions are contained in the following text. Thus far, all reported cases of cartel possession of anti-personnel mines have resulted in interdictions and seizures of the devices.

This incident (7 February 2018) also highlights the downside of hasty news analysis using popular terminology, as seen in a recent Breitbart Texas article related to it:
While the Gulf Cartel and other Mexican criminal organizations have used grenades and Russian-made RPGs in the past, this appears to be an early case of U.S. military-grade landmines near the border.[2]
Claymores are not traditional landmines—they are a command-detonated directional anti-personnel mines mounted vertically on stakes (not buried horizontally in the ground).[3] No land mines—anti-personnel or anti-vehicular—are known to have been utilized by or recovered from the cartels in Mexico. Nor is this an 'early warning incident,' given that open source reporting of an earlier cartel claymore incident took place 6 years ago in Zacatecas (or even 8½ years ago in Apizaco, based on newer information released by the DIA).[4] While some concern exists that the claymores in possession of the cartels were found just south of the U.S.-Mexico border, such military anti-personnel mines have also recently been found in a buried weapons cache in a far larger quantity on the U.S. side of the border in Pine, Arizona.[5]

According to news reports citing the Procuraduría General de la República (PGR), Mexican authorities decommissioned 18 anti-personnel mines in the last days of the Calderón Sexenio ending in November 2012. The PGR determined that the majority of the antipersonnel mines they captured were M18A1 Claymore mines that were shipped to El Salvador during the 1980s and 90s. The devices were decommissioned from the hands of various criminal groups in Baja California, Tlaxcala, Chiapas, Tamaulipas, Michoacán, Nayarit, Zacatecas, and Tabasco. Drug cartels are believed to have purchased these devices in El Salvador. Similar devices have also been used by guerillas, the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia) and ELN (Ejército de Liberación Nacional), and criminal groups in Colombia.[6]

In addition, according to SIEDO data, between September 2014 and June 2015, 66 explosive artifacts or munitions were confiscated from cartels in Mexico. Various types of anti-personnel mines accounted for 23% of that total.[7] Anti-personnel mines have several potential applications by cartels. They can be used to protect personnel, safe houses, laboratories, and illicit shipments of drugs and stolen fuel from competitors and the police and military. They can also be used to enhance the effectiveness of narcobloqueos (blockades) and protect the sites of illicit fuel taps (tomas clandestinas) and be deployed offensively to create "killing ground" in which to ambush Mexican federal police and military personnel. Concerning the deadly potentials of these devices:

The M18A1 "Claymore" Anti-personnel Mine carries an explosive weight of 682-grams (1.50-lbs. of Composition C-4). It will deliver steel fragments over a 60° fan-shaped pattern that is 50-meters wide and 2-meters in height, and is effective up to a range of 100-meters. These blast fragments are still dangerous up to 250-meters forward of the mine.[8]

The proliferation of anti-personnel mines into the hands of drug cartels and gangs has disturbing potentials. While anti-personnel mines are not unknown in non-international armed conflict settings, having been used by FARC and ELN guerillas in Colombia for example, their increasing presence in Mexico can potentially lead to their actual field use, ratcheting up the already high levels of casualties and violence taking place.
The proliferation of anti-personnel mines from guerrillas to BACRIM (bandas criminals emergentes) in Colombia has already been noted.[9] In addition, Brazilian gangs and Colombian BACRIM have been recruiting demobilized FARC commandos; it would not be a surprise if they bring TTPs (tactics, techniques and procedures) involving use of anti-personnel mines with them in the future.[10]

Significance: Ambushes, Booby Traps, Cartel del Golfo (Gulf Cartel), Cartel Weaponry, Foreign Arms Transfers, La Familia Michoacana, M18A1 Claymore Antipersonnel Mine (AP Mine), Minas Antipersonales

[Refer to all Notes and Sources on original page]
Borderland Beat Reporter El Profe Posted at 9:19 AM

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