Posted on Aug 27, 2019
Mexican Navy seizes 25 tons of fentanyl from China in single raid
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Six tons of illegal drugs seized by Mexico's Navy
The Mexican Navy said it had seized six tons of illegal drugs on March 7 in operations off the coast of the state of Sonora in Northwest Mexico. The six tons...
Thank you my friend SPC Britanny *Winnie* Balthaser for posting.
By the way the U.S Coast Guard and Mexican Navy have been working on sharing intel for some time. The U.S. Navy and Mexican Navy have coordinated for decades.
Mexico has extensive borders on the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific Ocean. It is not at all surprising that they have a navy.
Six tons of illegal drugs seized by Mexico's Navy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfVd4JD8qoI
Background from
"SAN DIEGO — The U.S. and Mexican governments are sparring over immigration and trade, but the two countries are joining forces on the high seas like never before to go after drug smugglers.
The United States, Mexico and Colombia will target drug smugglers off South America’s Pacific coast in an operation that is scheduled to begin Sunday and last for the foreseeable future, Coast Guard officials told The Associated Press.
U.S. Coast Guard Adm. Paul F. Zukunft teased the idea during a recent defense conference in San Diego, saying the United States “can’t do it alone.”
“It’s no secret we are besieged with the flow of drugs from Latin America to the United States,” he said.
U.S. and Mexican forces have routinely worked together at sea, but the latest effort “marks a significant step in terms of information sharing, collaboration and cooperation between the United States, Mexico and other partner nations,” according to the Coast Guard.
The Americans and Mexicans will exchange intelligence more freely than in the past, which could mean sharing information on well-traveled routes for drug smugglers or preferred paths for specific smuggling organizations, Coast Guard spokeswoman Alana Miller said.
They will also board the other country’s vessels to view operations and gain expertise, Miller said. In 2015, three members of the Mexican navy boarded a Coast Guard vessel during a port call in Huatulco, Mexico, but this operation calls for more frequent exchanges, and they will be at sea.
The operation will last “for the foreseeable future as long as it’s working for everyone,” Miller said. “It’s sort of open-ended.”
Traffickers over the years have increasingly turned to the sea to move their illegal goods, traversing an area off South America that is so big, the continental United States could be dropped inside. Smugglers routinely move cocaine out of countries like Colombia to Central America and Mexico via fishing boats, skiffs, commercial cargo ships — even homemade submarines.
The operation comes after five years of record seizures by the Coast Guard. But U.S. officials say because of limited resources, the U.S. military’s smallest service still catches only about 25 percent of illegal shipments in the Pacific.
Even so, the Coast Guard annually seizes three times the amount of cocaine confiscated at the U.S.-Mexico border. Yet ocean smuggling has not grabbed lawmakers’ attention like the flow of drugs across the nearly 2,000-mile-long (3,200-kilometer-long) land border, where the Trump administration wants to spend billions to build a continuous wall.
As much as 20 percent of the cocaine moving through South America ends up in the United States, and most of it lands first in Mexico from seafaring smugglers. The hope is boats will be stopped before their shipments are loaded onto Mexican trucks that fan out on various routes bound for the U.S. border, authorities said. Large boats can cart 20 tons (18 metric tons) of cocaine or more.
Mexico has historically been among the Latin American countries that are most reluctant to join operations with the U.S., which can be traced back to the Mexican-American War that was fought 170 years ago. The United States cannot open military bases in Mexico, and U.S. officials, for instance, cannot venture into Mexican waters without prior permission, even if they are chasing drug vessels.
The Coast Guard now stops its pursuit and alerts Mexican authorities if suspicious boats cross into their territorial waters.
It’s unclear whether this new cooperation will affect those restrictions."
FYI PO2 Jeffery Marcussen Sr LTJG Robert M. CAPT (Join to see) PO3 (Join to see) PO2 Jonathan Scharff LCDR (Join to see) CMC Robert Young CWO3 Dave Alcantara PO1 John Johnson LTJG Richard BruceCAPT Bob Bechill LCDR Gordon Brown LT John Chang CDR Thomas Gatliffe CDR (Join to see) PO3 John Wagner PO2 (Join to see) TSgt Randal Groover PO3 (Join to see)
By the way the U.S Coast Guard and Mexican Navy have been working on sharing intel for some time. The U.S. Navy and Mexican Navy have coordinated for decades.
Mexico has extensive borders on the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific Ocean. It is not at all surprising that they have a navy.
Six tons of illegal drugs seized by Mexico's Navy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfVd4JD8qoI
Background from
"SAN DIEGO — The U.S. and Mexican governments are sparring over immigration and trade, but the two countries are joining forces on the high seas like never before to go after drug smugglers.
The United States, Mexico and Colombia will target drug smugglers off South America’s Pacific coast in an operation that is scheduled to begin Sunday and last for the foreseeable future, Coast Guard officials told The Associated Press.
U.S. Coast Guard Adm. Paul F. Zukunft teased the idea during a recent defense conference in San Diego, saying the United States “can’t do it alone.”
“It’s no secret we are besieged with the flow of drugs from Latin America to the United States,” he said.
U.S. and Mexican forces have routinely worked together at sea, but the latest effort “marks a significant step in terms of information sharing, collaboration and cooperation between the United States, Mexico and other partner nations,” according to the Coast Guard.
The Americans and Mexicans will exchange intelligence more freely than in the past, which could mean sharing information on well-traveled routes for drug smugglers or preferred paths for specific smuggling organizations, Coast Guard spokeswoman Alana Miller said.
They will also board the other country’s vessels to view operations and gain expertise, Miller said. In 2015, three members of the Mexican navy boarded a Coast Guard vessel during a port call in Huatulco, Mexico, but this operation calls for more frequent exchanges, and they will be at sea.
The operation will last “for the foreseeable future as long as it’s working for everyone,” Miller said. “It’s sort of open-ended.”
Traffickers over the years have increasingly turned to the sea to move their illegal goods, traversing an area off South America that is so big, the continental United States could be dropped inside. Smugglers routinely move cocaine out of countries like Colombia to Central America and Mexico via fishing boats, skiffs, commercial cargo ships — even homemade submarines.
The operation comes after five years of record seizures by the Coast Guard. But U.S. officials say because of limited resources, the U.S. military’s smallest service still catches only about 25 percent of illegal shipments in the Pacific.
Even so, the Coast Guard annually seizes three times the amount of cocaine confiscated at the U.S.-Mexico border. Yet ocean smuggling has not grabbed lawmakers’ attention like the flow of drugs across the nearly 2,000-mile-long (3,200-kilometer-long) land border, where the Trump administration wants to spend billions to build a continuous wall.
As much as 20 percent of the cocaine moving through South America ends up in the United States, and most of it lands first in Mexico from seafaring smugglers. The hope is boats will be stopped before their shipments are loaded onto Mexican trucks that fan out on various routes bound for the U.S. border, authorities said. Large boats can cart 20 tons (18 metric tons) of cocaine or more.
Mexico has historically been among the Latin American countries that are most reluctant to join operations with the U.S., which can be traced back to the Mexican-American War that was fought 170 years ago. The United States cannot open military bases in Mexico, and U.S. officials, for instance, cannot venture into Mexican waters without prior permission, even if they are chasing drug vessels.
The Coast Guard now stops its pursuit and alerts Mexican authorities if suspicious boats cross into their territorial waters.
It’s unclear whether this new cooperation will affect those restrictions."
FYI PO2 Jeffery Marcussen Sr LTJG Robert M. CAPT (Join to see) PO3 (Join to see) PO2 Jonathan Scharff LCDR (Join to see) CMC Robert Young CWO3 Dave Alcantara PO1 John Johnson LTJG Richard BruceCAPT Bob Bechill LCDR Gordon Brown LT John Chang CDR Thomas Gatliffe CDR (Join to see) PO3 John Wagner PO2 (Join to see) TSgt Randal Groover PO3 (Join to see)
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LTC Stephen F.
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COL Mikel J. Burroughs Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen Lt Col Charlie Brown LTC Greg Henning LTC Jeff Shearer Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. "Bill" Price Maj Marty Hogan CPT Scott Sharon CWO3 Dennis M. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SSG William Jones
COL Mikel J. Burroughs Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen Lt Col Charlie Brown LTC Greg Henning LTC Jeff Shearer Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. "Bill" Price Maj Marty Hogan CPT Scott Sharon CWO3 Dennis M. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SSG William Jones
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SPC Britanny *Winnie* Balthaser
Makes you wonder if we should have a larger Coast Guard Force with the amount of territory they have to cover and the little that results from our efforts. I didn't know that we couldn't have a military base in Mexico. I may have to read more on that in the future. Thanks for the very educational response. LTC Stephen F.
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LTC Stephen F.
Remember that the U.S. Coast Guard not only supports our coastal areas and ports, etc, they have also supported overseas deployments - especially in WWII SPC Britanny *Winnie* Balthaser. A friend of mine was a USCG Higgens Boat crew member bringing Marines and Soldiers to assault beaches in the Pacific in WWII.
FYI PO2 Jeffery Marcussen Sr LTJG Robert M. CAPT (Join to see) PO3 (Join to see) PO2 Jonathan Scharff LCDR (Join to see) CMC Robert Young CWO3 Dave Alcantara PO1 John Johnson LTJG Richard Bruce
FYI PO2 Jeffery Marcussen Sr LTJG Robert M. CAPT (Join to see) PO3 (Join to see) PO2 Jonathan Scharff LCDR (Join to see) CMC Robert Young CWO3 Dave Alcantara PO1 John Johnson LTJG Richard Bruce
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SPC Britanny *Winnie* Balthaser
Agreed. Considering my sister-in-laws oldest just passed away from a heroin overdose, found with the needle still in his arm. They sent his body to be autopsied apparently Utah is having an issue with heroin laced with fentanyl. Sadly, her brother had learned of his ex wife's passing and took it really hard to the point of shooting up (he'd been clean for a short time)
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Lt Col Charlie Brown
SPC Britanny *Winnie* Balthaser - I am so sorry to hear this. The stuff on the street is laced with all sorts of things these days.
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Sgt Jim Belanus
That is some bad stuff. we have had a number of deaths in our area from fent. most young people in early 20's. The states attorney did start a large investigation that went all the way to china. I believe there is an arrest warrant out for the chinesse national that was making the stuff. no chance of getting him though but lots of prison time for the locals selling it . it has cooled off since those arrests
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