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Mexico
faces new drug challenge: mini-submarines

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Miguel
Tovar / Associated Press
SURFACE
TENSION:
A Mexican navy helicopter hovers above the scene as troops approach a
homemade mini-sub and its crew off the country’s southern coast this week.
Officials found tons of what was believed to be cocaine in the vessel.
Colombian
suppliers have increasingly used small, semi-submersibles to try to smuggle
drugs north toward their eventual markets, mainly in the U.S.
By Ken Ellingwood, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer July 18,
2008
MEXICO CITY
-- The capture was worthy of an action thriller: elite Mexican troops
rappelling from a helicopter onto the deck of a mysterious submarine.
The 33-foot vessel turned out to be crammed with parcels apparently
containing cocaine, possibly tons of it. The disheveled crew of four had
emerged in stocking feet and baggy shorts, claiming to have shipped out from Colombia a week
earlier under threat of death.
Drug traffickers use submersibles to...
Mexico's
military confirmed Thursday that the men were Colombian, but it offered
little new information on the capture of the mini-sub off the southern coast
a day earlier.
Capt. Jose Luis Vergara, a spokesman for the Mexican
navy, said authorities were hauling the "very well-constructed" vessel to
shore and had yet to weigh the contraband, which he said probably amounted
to tons.
The unusual episode suggests that the government, already
struggling against drug traffickers by land and air, faces a vexing new
front undersea.
Colombian drug suppliers have increasingly used
small, semi-submersible craft to try to smuggle narcotics north toward their
eventual markets, mainly in the U.S. Colombian forces and the U.S. Coast
Guard have seized more than a dozen such boats during the last 2 1/2 years.
U.S.
officials say the craft are being used more often because they are harder to
detect by radar. The seizures represent a fraction of the 40 or so vessels
that have been spotted since 2007, according to U.S. authorities.
"When they
think they might be caught, the crews tend to scuttle them," said Jose Ruiz,
spokesman for the U.S. Southern Command in Miami, which monitors drug
activities. "They get out of them, sink them, and the drugs go to the bottom
of the ocean so they can't be recovered for evidence."
Wednesday's
seizure of the olive, surfboard-shaped vessel in the Pacific about 125 miles
off the state of Oaxaca was the first of
its kind off the coast of Mexico, authorities said.
The
seizure provided images of speeding navy patrol boats and adrenaline-charged
commandos perched atop the vessel -- a showy victory for President Felipe
Calderon and his 18-month-old crackdown on drug-trafficking gangs.
The crackdown has sent 45,000 federal troops and police agents into the
streets along the U.S.
border and other key drug-smuggling corridors. Drug gangs have ratcheted up
their capabilities by adding grenades and bazookas to their arsenals and,
authorities say, outfitting cars with bombs for possible use against
government forces.
Now authorities apparently face a maritime weapon
as smugglers seek ways to move their product to
U.S.
consumers.
"Mexico
is not prepared for this," said Guillermo Garduño, a national security
specialist at the Autonomous Metropolitan
University in Mexico City. "If there is a naval front by the
traffickers, it means the need [for Mexico] to restructure or modify its
naval forces."
Unlike numerous other Latin American nations, Mexico does not have a submarine
force, which was considered expensive and unnecessary.
But the
growing use of small, hard-to-detect underwater craft could alter that
thinking since such vessels could also be used by terrorists against Mexican
oil-drilling equipment in the Gulf of Mexico,
Garduño said.
In a statement, the navy said its forces moved in on
the vessel after receiving intelligence from "national and international
agencies."
Vergara declined to elaborate on the source of the
intelligence or how the sub was tracked. In a television interview, he said
that although such vessels can evade radar by staying just below the
surface, they're easy to spot from the air because they cannot go deep.
U.S. officials in Mexico City praised the
operation but would say only that they routinely cooperate with Mexican
authorities to fight drug trafficking.
The crew members, interviewed
by Mexican media on land as they were led into custody Wednesday, said they
left the port city of Buenaventura, on
Colombia's Pacific coast, seven days
earlier. If so, they had traveled at least 1,300 miles before their capture.
The men, ranging in age from their 20s to late 50s, claimed to be
fishermen and said they had been kidnapped and forced to make the journey by
men who threatened their families. The sailors claimed they were unaware of
the contents or destination of the craft, which they said was guided by a
satellite navigation system. It was unclear how much control they had over
the sub.
"They told us we had to take [the sub] where they sent us,"
suspect Rafael Jimenez, 27, was quoted in the Reforma newspaper as saying.
The men said they were to be paid $500 each.
Buenaventura is
one of the places where Colombian authorities have seized the fiberglass
mini-subs, some while still under construction. Officials believe that at
least some of the boats have been built at the behest of the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia, of FARC, a rebel group widely considered the
country's leading drug trafficker.
The homemade vessels have become
increasingly sophisticated, with self-propelled models powered by
350-horsepower diesel engines and equipped with ballast and communications
systems that make them hard to spot.
The vessels can be almost fully
submerged, though they lack the diving and resurfacing abilities of true
submarines.
U.S.
law enforcement officials have expressed concern that the vessels could
eventually be used by terrorists against American targets.
______________________________________________
ken.ellingwood@latimes.com
Cecilia Sánchez of The Times' Mexico City Bureau and Times staff writer
Vimal Patel in Washington
contributed to this report.
Los
Angeles Times article at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-sub18-2008jul18,0,7517274.story?track=ntothtml
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