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US Guns Feed Mexican Drug Violence, Says Report

by: Daniel B. Wood  |  The Christian Science Monitor

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In Mexico City, a police officer carries weapons seized during an anti-drug operation. (Photo: AP)

    Most of the guns seized by Mexican authorities are from the US, says a Government Accountability Office report.

    Los Angeles - Most of the guns fuelling the drug violence in Mexico originate in the US, according to a US Government Accountability Office report released Thursday that could provoke more heated debate over the flow of guns south of the border.

    The report also criticized the lack of coordination between federal agencies in controlling the illegal gun trade along the southern border.

    About 87 percent of firearms seized by Mexican authorities for the past five years have been traced back to the US, the report says, although it notes that "it is impossible to know" how many firearms are illegally smuggled into Mexico in a given year.

    Many of the firearms come from gun shops and gun shows in Southwest border states, the report says, adding that both US and Mexican law enforcement officials say most of these firearms are intended to support Mexican drug trafficking organizations.

    An increasing number of the guns used are automatic rifles illegally obtained in the US, says the report. Around 1,500 were killed in the first three months of 2009 alone in drug-related violence in Mexico.

    The GAO report also lends credibility to charges that two US agencies - the Dept. of Justice's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and the Dept. of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) - have not effectively coordinated their strategies to combat the flow of firearms available at thousands of border stores into Mexico.

    "The US government lacks a strategy to address arms trafficking to Mexico. Individual US agencies have undertaken a variety of activities and projects to combat arms trafficking to Mexico, but they are not part of a comprehensive US government-wide strategy for addressing the problem," says the report.

    The two agencies lacked clear roles and responsibilities, said the report, and had been operating under an outdated interagency agreement. The agencies therefore duplicated each other's efforts.

    Also on Thursday, the Drug Enforcement Agency and the ICE signed an agreement that would allow the departments to share information and authorize more agents to battle the Mexican drug cartels.

    The GAO report also cited laws and policies in both the US and Mexico that would undermine efforts to establish lasting reforms, noting lax US laws for collecting and reporting information on firearms purchases as well as a lack of required background checks for private firearms sales.

    "US law enforcement assistance to Mexico does not target arms trafficking needs, limiting US agencies' ability to provide technical or operational assistance," the report says. "In addition, US assistance has been limited due to Mexican officials' incomplete use of ATF's electronic firearms tracing system, an important tool for US arms trafficking investigations."

    Another significant challenge facing US efforts to assist Mexico is corruption within some Mexican government entities. "Mexican federal authorities are implementing anticorruption measures," the report says, "but government officials acknowledge fully implementing these reforms will take considerable time, and may take years to affect comprehensive change."

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Geez, how come these huge

Geez, how come these huge agencies and our Federal government can't get a handle on this? Well, it might just be that they are the ones providing the guns and dealing the drugs. This scenario is a fave of the CIA in destabilizing a region so that we will have a good excuse to send in the troops to restore order. It looks like our good neighbor to the south is in for trouble. If I was Canadian, I would be just a little bit nervous about this whole thing.

Government Accountability.

Government Accountability. Now THERE'S two words that can never be correctly used in the same sentence. The CIA doesn't want any competition in drug dealing.........Theres another! Agency and intelligence in the same sentence. The US of Alphabet soup Empire... Or Mpyre is more like it. CIA DEA NTSB DHS FBI ...........M.O.U.S.E.

EDGEOFNOWHERE - Canada is

EDGEOFNOWHERE - Canada is very, very nervous. They are experiencing hostilities at the border that are fairly new and they just don't get why. Neither do I. I have friends in Michigan and Washington, and heading over the border is one of the most fun things we do. As to the guns - hey, Dems - get off the gun craze over American owners. As long as gun running from the U.S. to Mexico is happening - and it is rampant and very, very profitable - we in the U.S. are gonna have our guns. The percentage of violent crimes with guns by illegal Mexicans is huge and always rising. I live in AZ and we are far more than just worried over the situation. Legalize marijuana, already! That's the biggest problem!

OIf course they use firearms

OIf course they use firearms from the US. What does the Mexican police force or military use? they use US firearms because THEY WORK!! Can you name th eMexican Firearm company? Besides when you get the guns from a foreign government agency such as the DEA or CIA it beats the hell out of paying for them - especially when the Paso is rapidly approaching parity with the USD.

You need to research your

You need to research your information better. This contention has been thoroughly refuted, even if you couldn´t see throught the logical fallacy of the claim. Those weapons are AK37 knockoffs or the real thing, none of which come from the US.

US Army - 65-68. The weapons

US Army - 65-68. The weapons in the stack below th etop may be AK varietals (The flash suppressors and front sight configurations look correct but my eyes are failing) but the thing on the Top is an AR15/M16. It was most assuredly made in the US. But, because the AKs are much more reliable many US troops abandoned the M16s because they jammed with a grain of sand or grit. The AKs are like Timex watches. They take a licken' and keep on ticken'. But in this case the ticken was coating US Soldiers their lives. For the benefit of the DOD who wrote the specs for the damn things. This is much in the spirit of providing the military with 9MM toy pistols and removing perhaps the finest semi-automatic pistol in history - The Colt .45. The M16/AR15 is was "the Body armor Fiasco" of the VietNam Campaign.

Small arms are bought or

Small arms are bought or stolen from the US, this is true. However, the full auto military styled weapons come up from the south into Mexico, not down from the north. In 1998 the FBI revealed that many of the arms showing up in Mexico were indeed stolen from the US (not bought). The primary victim of these thefts is the US MILITARY. They were traced as stolen in California and other states and quite a few turned up in L.A. as the pipeline to Mexico. So, if you see a military grade American made gun in Mexico, think stolen from the US Military. If you see an AK47, think central america. Small arms are deadly, but these reports of military weapons from the US are a TEN YEAR OLD REHASH. I've come to expect better reporting from the Monitor.