Posada Carriles
case reveals Mexico’s submission to the United
States
BY PATRICIA MUÑOZ
RIOS, (Taken from La Jornada)
THE Posada Carriles case shows that the Vicente
Fox government opted for the patronage of the Cuban
contras and that the troubled passage of triangular
relations between Mexico, the United States and Cuba
is not an isolated fact; rather, it is a PAN
strategy to subordinate Mexican foreign policy to
the George W. Bush administration.
During a forum held at Casa Lamm, Carlos Fazio,
who writes on Latin American issues; John Saxe
Fernández, a writer specializing in Mexico-U.S.
relations; researcher and anthropologist Gilberto
López y Rivas; and writer Angel Guerra, all of them
contributors to La Jornada, discussed the
issue of Posada Carriles, his links with the policy
of terror carried out by the US government, and his
relations in Mexico.
One point that all agreed on was the idea that
the US government has maintained a "hypocritical"
posture on the subject of terrorism, given that
while it has protected, supported and financed those
have brought terror to various countries, such as
Luis Posada Carriles himself, the administration
took advantage of the September 11, 2001 attacks to
impose a global state terrorism, attack Iraq with
impunity and impose the Northern Command to uphold
its power in Latin America.
They commented that the Mexican government has
not provided a sufficiently truthful explanation
about Posada’s connections in our country; for
example, how was it that he entered and exited our
territory without any authority learning of his
presence or of the activities that he has engaged in
here, in spite of the fact that he has perpetrated
all types of terrorist acts in Latin America.
Posada Carriles’ Mexican history is not
incidental, according to Carlos Fazio, who explained
that it is extremely strange that this individual,
who has been a terrorist hitman for the CIA and has
a thick "terrorist" file, was recently in Mexico;
entered through Chetumal, traveled to Cancun and
then to Isla Mujeres, where he passed himself off as
a tourist; and then, tried to leave on the
Santrina boat and, after a maritime incident,
opted to leave the country through Matamoros,
Tamaulipas, all without having been detected by the
Mexican government’s intelligence services.
"Doubt hangs over the government of Vicente Fox,
and it is not unwarranted, given that from the
outset -- not to mention his presidential campaign
-- Fox has received help with resources from the
Cuban mafia in Miami in exchange for – as was later
proven – a drastic change in bilateral relations
with Fidel Castro’s government," Fazio affirmed. He
added that all of this coincides with a 2005 PAN-announced
"sponsorship" program for 75 Cuban dissidents, the
same individuals considered to be mercenaries by the
Havana authorities.
In that sense, Gilberto López y Rivas, a
researcher with the National Institute of
Anthropology and History, stated that "the United
States has elevated terrorism to the level of a
global state policy, more harmful and dangerous for
humanity, because it is being carried out by a
specialized and diversified apparatus of subversion,
and with the support of the largest war machine in
the world. The CIA, since its founding in 1947, has
been the main agency used by the US government to
carry out dirty war tasks that cannot be
characterized as anything other than terrorism," he
emphasized.
Along the same lines, during the forum John Saxe
Fernandez gave a preview of his forthcoming book
Terror e imperio (Terror and Empire), a whole
investigation into how the United States has
repeatedly utilized circumstances similar to those
of September 11 to attack various countries; is
using wars to grant multi-million dollar contracts
to the large corporations, increasing its war budget
and militarizing its foreign policy.