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The above list shows replies to the following message: |
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Msg. 43533 of 60008 |
On Point: Co-opted Drug Cartels Are Enemy Hybrid Warfare Operations The AGs said that such destructive "forces just across our southwestern land border, and the Mexican government's inability to control them, pose a threat to our national security far greater than a typical drug-trafficking enterprise..." With national security threatened, all elements of national power must defend American citizens against cartel violence, deadly drugs and social-cultural devastation. The AGs noted drug overdoses killed 100,000 Americans in the preceding 12 months and fentanyl was involved in two-thirds of the deaths. Mexican drug cartels imported fentanyl-making raw materials from China. Communist China is the world's primary source of fentanyl. Beijing either ships it directly to the U.S. or smuggles it via Mexico. In 2017, the National Interest called China's drug strategy vis-a-vis the U.S. the "Reverse Opium War." From 1839-1842 China's Qing dynasty went to war with Britain to stop the Brits from selling opium in China. The drug threatened Chinese social cohesion.
Fentanyl kills Americans and destroys social cohesion. Do the math: Mexican drug cartels collaborate with an FTO that has waged war with America for 40 years. Here's the logic: If X (Hezbollah) is a foreign terrorist organization, and Y collaborates with X, it's slam-dunk certain Y is acting as an operational asset of X. The question that frustrates Beltway bureaucrats: Does operational asset make Y -- in this case Mexican criminal cartels -- an FTO? Soft words, diplomatic hints -- nuances matter when all parties and organizations respect laws and value human life. But the lawless? Count the bodies: Cartels and terrorists are lawless. Unfortunately, Washington bureaucrats, diplomats, lawyers and the Biden administration are constrained by antiquated definitions. In the bleeding world, America's enemies, the terrorists, the criminal cartels and the enemy nation states who employ them have learned how to evade the Beltway Clerks' definitions. In 2008 very smart people were already wrestling with how to define the Mexican cartels' sensational violence. The better minds noted that U.S. anti-drug laws were quite potent, if applied. Moreover, a conflict existed between U.S. domestic law and the law of war. Turning the Cartel War into a U.S. war would effectively rob Mexico of sovereignty -- that was a legitimate argument.
But we no longer face a domestic-versus-international war. We face a type of hybrid war with Foreign Adversary Collaborating Hybrid-Warfare Organizations.
The social destruction operation is right out of Qiao Liang's and Wang Xiangsui's "Unrestricted Warfare." Weather balloons, lawyer jargon, fentanyl, strict definitions of terrorism -- all are weapons Beijing uses to degrade America. Mad Poet Strikes Again. |
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