Friday, January 18, 2013
"Special Operations Command North" to work with Mexico's military

For 26 years, U.S. Southern Command has had a Special Forces component,
Special Operations Command South (SOCSOUTH <http://www.socso.southcom.mil/>),
headed by a general and based in Florida. It coordinates the activities of
Special Operations Forces (elite
“warrior-diplomats<https://www.google.com/search?q=>”
like Army Rangers and Green Berets, or Navy SEALs and Special Boat Units)
in Southcom’s area of operations, which includes all of Latin America
except Mexico, the Bahamas and Puerto Rico.

Mexico falls under the purview of the U.S. Northern Command (Northcom,
founded in 2002), which did not have a formal Special Forces component —
until now, apparently. Special Operations Command North was stood up on
December 31, and its principal focus for now is to deepen training of elite
military units in Mexico.

We know this not from Northcom’s website <http://www.northcom.mil/>, which
doesn’t even mention the existence of Special Operations Command North, but
from a 
story<http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts_law/new-us-special-operations-headquarters-to-help-mexican-forces-to-fight-drug-gangs/2013/01/17/49d67180-6103-11e2-8f16-7b37a1341b04_story.html>
reported
yesterday by the Associated Press.

Based at the U.S. Northern Command in Colorado, Special Operations
Command-North will build on a commando program that has brought Mexican
military, intelligence and law enforcement officials to study U.S.
counterterrorist operations, to show them how special operations troops
built an interagency network to target al-Qaida mastermind Osama bin Laden
and his followers.

The special operations team within Northcom will be turned into a new
headquarters, led by a general instead of a colonel. It was established in
a Dec. 31 memo signed by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta. That move gives
the group more autonomy and the number of people could eventually quintuple
from 30 to 150, meaning the headquarters could expand its training missions
with the Mexicans, even though no new money is being assigned to the
mission.

This news brings up three points (not including persistent
concerns<http://www.wola.org/news/human_rights_organizations_ask_congress_to_maintain_conditions_on_security_assistance_to_latin_>
about
the human rights record of SOCNORTH’s Mexican military partners):

1. It signals a closer relationship with Mexico’s Defense Department
(SEDENA<http://www.sedena.gob.mx/>)
under the new leadership that came in with President Enrique Peña
Nieto. SEDENA incorporates Mexico’s Army and Air Force, which during the
presidency of Felipe Calderón were noticeably less enthusiastic than
Mexico’s Navy (SEMAR) about cooperating with U.S. military counterparts.
“Historically, suspicion of the United States has been a prime driver of a
military bureaucratic culture that has kept SEDENA closed to us,” noted a
leaked <http://wikileaks.org/cable/2010/01/10MEXICO83.html> 2010 State
Department cable. It is notable that U.S. Defense Secretary Panetta signed
the order establishing SOCNORTH only a month after Peña Nieto assumed
office, along with a new SEDENA secretary, Gen. Salvador Cienfuegos.

2. It appears that one of SOCNORTH’s first tasks is helping the Peña Nieto
government to stand up a new intelligence unit within the Interior
Ministry. “The special operations program has already helped Mexican
officials set up their own intelligence center in Mexico City to target
criminal networks, patterned after similar centers in war zones built to
target al-Qaida in Afghanistan and Iraq,” the AP story reports. That unit,
the National Intelligence Center or CNI, will “concentrate in one entity,
like the fusion centers or offices that we have in the United States, all
intelligence information that is gathered by the Army, the Navy, CISEN [the
existing civilian intelligence agency], the PGR [attorney-general’s office]
and all other federal and even state agencies involved in the fight against
narcotrafficking,” a U.S. consultant source
told<http://www.proceso.com.mx/?p=330475>
 Mexico’s Proceso magazine.

3. This is an emblematic indication that the Obama administration’s “light
footprint” strategy is moving ahead. The administration is unlikely to
commit to any large, costly new “Mérida Initiative”-style programs in
Mexico. Budget realities alone determine that. But as we noted last
week<http://justf.org/blog/2013/01/09/new-nominees-and-what-light-footprint-might-mean-latin-america>,
as Special Forces units leave Afghanistan ahead of the 2014 drawdown, there
will be many more of them available for training and other missions in
Latin America. The pace of Special Forces deployments — low-profile, under
the radar, mostly for training, but also serving other purposes, like
intelligence-gathering — is very likely beginning to pick up throughout the
hemisphere. As that happens, the establishment of SOCNORTH to guide work
with Mexico is an important milestone.

   By Adam Isacson at 01/18/2013 - 16:37

http://justf.org/blog/2013/01/18/special-operations-command-north-work-mexicos-military?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+JustTheFactsBlogs+%28Just+the+Facts+blogs%29


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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