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  1. #1

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    we're talking about Hamas

  2. #2

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    you sir, are an idiot, who doesnt understand the history of israel and the middle east.

    the relationship between the US and mexico is NOTHING LIKE the relationship between israel and the middle east.

    your ignorant analogy grants you an instant IL+1. do not pass go. do not collect $200.

  3. #3

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    [The way Israel is bombing Lebanon for Hezbollahs actions]

    3 Baja cops, civilian found decapitated; cartels blamed

    By Anna Cearley
    STAFF WRITER

    June 22, 2006

    ROSARITO BEACH ? The decapitated bodies of three police officers and a civilian were discovered here yesterday morning, and their heads were found hours later in Tijuana in what some see as a particularly grisly message from drug cartels.

    ?We haven't seen this level and kind of killing before,? said Victor Clark, a Tijuana-based human rights activist who follows crime trends.

    The Arellano F?lix drug trafficking organization has used Rosarito Beach for years as a place to bring in drugs by land and sea before transporting them through Tijuana and into the United States.
    Other groups have been muscling their way into the area, challenging the Arellanos' power in this part of Mexico.

    ?We are seeing battles over the control of territories and routes . . . and the form of executions becomes more unusual as a way of sending messages that only those who are in the know understand,? Clark said.

    The case was turned over to Baja California's organized crime investigations group, which mostly probes drug and kidnapping rings. State authorities provided little information other than saying that the men were abducted Tuesday evening and that their bodies were found the next day.

    According to city officials, the abduction took place as two of the officers were investigating a complaint while accompanied by a police officer on leave and a civilian.

    It's not unusual for Mexican police near the border to be targeted by drug groups or for authorities to run across mutilated bodies.

    But the level of violence and the rank of some of the officers killed is raising questions about the motive. The assailants took pains to dump the heads in Tijuana while leaving the torsos in Rosarito Beach. All of the men's bodies showed signs of having been beaten, according to a news release from the state Attorney General's Office.

    According to Rosarito Beach city officials, the three officers are: Ismael Arellano Torres, 36, who had been on work leave because of an injury; Jes?s Hern?ndez Ballesteros, 42, who oversaw the commercial police division, which provides protection for businesses; and Benjam?n Fabi?n Ventura, 35, who was a bodyguard for city Public Security Director Valente Montijo Pompa, whose post is similar to that of police chief.

    The fourth man was identified by Rosarito Beach city officials as Fernando Avila, 28, of Phoenix. It wasn't clear if he was a U.S. citizen. He had apparently been visiting Montijo and one of the other officers killed yesterday, said Felipe Hern?ndez Villela, a spokesman for the Rosarito Beach city government.

    State investigators said the officers were seized while investigating a report of an abduction.

    Rosarito Beach authorities, however, said the incident began when the men attempted to investigate a report of armed men in a rural section of the city called Huahuatay.

    Hern?ndez said that authorities speaking at a news conference explained how the inactive police officer and Avila became involved:

    Arellano had been at the police headquarters with Avila to pick up equipment for his next assignment as a bodyguard. He was scheduled to return to service July 2.

    When the call about the armed men came through, the two active-duty officers set off to investigate in their patrol car, and Arellano and Avila tagged along in a separate car, he said. The men were apparently caught by surprise by about 70 people in 40 cars, according to Rosarito Beach city officials.

    ?They didn't know there were such a large number of cars involved,? Hern?ndez said. ?Lots of times, you get calls of armed people and you go out there and it turns out to be a drug addict acting disorderly.?

    According to a news release from the city of Rosarito Beach, members of the armed group initially identified themselves as federal agents who had come from Mexico City to conduct a special operation. Criminals here often identify themselves as police, but the Mexican Federal Attorney General's office released a statement saying it wasn't any of its officers.

    Around 7 a.m. yesterday, authorities found the bodies of the four men wrapped in blankets and tied with string and binding material, according to the Rosarito Beach news release. The bodies were left on a dirt road behind an auto shop.

    Crime experts here have suspected in recent years that a rise in killings in Rosarito Beach ? from six 6 in 2004 to 29 in 2005 ? is the result of rival groups challenging the Arellanos, who have had ties or understandings with certain high-ranking law enforcement officials to guarantee safe passage of their drugs. That is one of the theories behind the killing last year of the city's top security administrator, Carlos Bowser Miret. Mexican authorities have never fully explained the motive of the crime.

    The Arellanos, who have been arrested in greater numbers since 2000, are believed to have ceded control several years ago over eastern Baja California to rival groups, though they are said to be dominant in Tijuana ? which rubs shoulders with Rosarito Beach's boundaries.

    Hugo Torres, president of the Business Coordinating Council of Rosarito Beach, said it was important for yesterday's killings to be solved.

    ?We're concerned about this group of criminals that made their presence known in such a strong and ostentatious manner,? he said.

    Yesterday afternoon, extra security measures were being taken at Rosarito Beach City Hall, where an officer with an assault rifle stood guard in front of the mayor's office. Meanwhile, the front doors of the Rosarito Beach police station were locked, though workers could be seen inside. A posted sign said the office was closed ?for unforeseen circumstances.?

  4. #4

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    This thread is in reference to LEBANON and HEZBOLLAH, Neither Hamas nor Palestinians is mentioned anywhere.

  5. #5

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    You're a fucking hypocrit.

  6. #6

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    The mission of Israel is not to kick all the Arabs out of the region. For Hezbollah, their mission is to kick all the Jews out of the region and kill them off if possible.

  7. #7

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    Yeah first things first... lets evacuate fucking UNINHABITED AREAS that are a clusterfuck of terrorist activity, give that back... they've earned it for being a good boy.... then we'll give the other launchpad of rockets back to Syria, who have been an absolute champ with this entire ordeal.

    LASTLY.... Lastly.... lets give the shitpit that is West Bank back to the very rats who wage suicide bombings on Israeli civilians.

    Yeah that sounds fair.

    Give your fucking head a shake.

  8. #8

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    Islam.

    And what has been the Muslim agenda since day 1?

    Kill all those who are not Muslim.

  9. #9
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    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    The West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem are disputed lands that the Palestinians hope to keep for a future state. The metasticizing of settlements there is a big part of the fighting.

  10. #10

    Should we invade Mexico and bomb Mexico City?

    And why did Israel invade? Because Palestinians were attacking them from Lebanon. I suppose Israel should have let this continue?

 

 

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