Corroborating what Judicial Watch uncovered years ago, a U.S.
military intelligence report discloses that Muslim terrorists are being
smuggled into the country through Mexico. The government calls them
Special Interest Aliens (SIA) and Latin American smuggling networks are
helping them cross the border, according to information obtained from a
U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) Intelligence dispatch.
Located in Miami, Florida SOUTHCOM is one of nine unified combat
commands in the Department of Defense (DOD). It’s responsible for
providing contingency planning operations and security cooperation in
Central and South America as well as the Caribbean. The internal
assessment on SIA smuggling has not been made public, but a conservative
Washington D.C. online newspaper
obtained key points from the command’s J-2 intelligence directorate. A
SOUTHCOM Army colonel told the paper that in 2015 more than 30,000
migrants who entered the U.S. through the southwestern border were from
countries of “terrorist concern.”
The new SOUTHCOM report specifically mentions Sunni extremists, the
news article states. The terrorists are using a known alien smuggling
network in Latin America to reach the U.S. but the network has not been
identified by military officials. “Networks that specialize in smuggling
individuals from regions of terrorist concern, mainly from the
Afghanistan-Pakistan region, the Middle East, and East Africa, are
indeed a concern for SOUTHCOM and other interagency security partners
who support our country’s national security,” a SOUTHCOM Army Colonel,
Lisa A. Garcia, says in the story. “There are major hubs that serve as
entry points into the region for migrants from those areas of concern
attempting to enter the U.S. along our border with Mexico.”
Judicial Watch has reported for years on the critical national
security threats created on the southern border by Islamic terrorists
teaming up with Mexican drug cartels to infiltrate and attack the U.S.
As part of an ongoing investigation Judicial
Watch has interviewed local, state and federal law enforcement
officials as well as military sources on both sides of the border. Our
reporting confirmed that ISIS has a training cell just a few miles from
El Paso, Texas in an area known as “Anapra” situated just west of Ciudad
Juárez in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. We also verified that Mexican
drug cartels are smuggling
foreigners from countries with terrorist links to stash areas in a
rural Texas town called Acala. Once in the U.S., the SIAs wait for
pick-up in the area’s sand hills just across a state road several dozen
miles from El Paso.
Earlier this year Judicial Watch uncovered State Department records
confirming that “Arab extremists” are entering the U.S. through Mexico
with the assistance of smuggling network “cells.” Among them is a top Al
Qaeda operative wanted by the FBI. The government documents also reveal
that some Mexican smuggling networks actually specialize in providing
logistical support for Arab individuals attempting to enter the United
States. The top Al Qaeda leader in Mexico was identified in the State
Department records, via a September 2004 cable from the American
consulate in Ciudad Juárez, as Adnan G. El Shurkrjumah. In December,
2014 Shukrijumah was killed by the Pakistan Army in an
intelligence-borne operation in South Waziristan. But before he died
Shukrijumah helped plan several U.S. attacks, including plots to bomb
Oprah Winfrey’s studio and detonate nuclear devices in multiple American
cities. For years Shukrijumah appeared on the FBI’s most wanted list
and, despite being sought by the agency, he crossed back and forth into
the U.S. from Mexico to meet fellow militant Islamists in Texas. Back in
2014 Judicial Watch reported that,
as one of the world’s most wanted terrorists, Shukrijumah piloted an
aircraft into the Cielo Dorado airfield in Anthony, New Mexico.
In 2014 Judicial Watch also exposed
a plot by Islamic terrorist groups operating in the Mexican border city
of Ciudad Juárez. Judicial Watch’s high-level law enforcement and
intelligence sources specifically identified ISIS in the plot and
confirmed that a warning bulletin for an imminent terrorist attack on
the border had been issued. Agents across a number of Homeland Security,
Justice and Defense agencies were placed on alert and Ft. Bliss, the
U.S. Army post in El Paso, increased security measures. Military experts
contacted by Judicial Watch said the increased security at a key Army
base near the Mexican border indicates the facility was a target.
Military installations in the U.S. only make changes to security
measures when there are clear and present threats, according to the
senior military officials.
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