TAGS: Drug Tunnel, Mexican Drug Cartel, Mexican Drug War, US-Mexico Border

MEXICAN DRUG CARTEL TUNNEL FOUND AT BORDER

President Obama orders troops to the U.S. Mexico Border

U.S. FEDERAL AGENTS DISCOVER MAJOR NEW DRUG TUNNEL UNDER US-MEXICO BORDER

AFP - November 16, 2011

SAN DIEGO, CA — U.S. authorities announced Wednesday that they had uncovered a "significant" new drug-smuggling tunnel under the US-Mexico border, the latest such find on the troubled frontier.

U.S. and Mexican officers seized at least 14 tons of marijuana and arrested two people linked to thIS "sophisticated" new tunnel, which linked warehouses at Tijuana in Mexico and Otay Mesa on the U.S. side in Southern California.

The tunnel measuring 400 yards long was built to link warehouses in an industrial park south of San Diego and the Mexican border city of Tijuana. It was also completely outfitted with both electricity and ventilation the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency said. It was unearthed on Tuesday by the multi-agency San Diego Tunnel Task Force after authorities spotted a suspicious truck leaving the Otay Mesa warehouse. Last year, authorities uncovered two large tunnels linking the gritty industrial city with the strip flanking the border south of San Diego. Measuring around 2,000 feet in length, these tunnels were equipped with rail systems, lighting, ventilation, and all yielded multiple tons of marijuana.

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency service trumpeted the find as a major victory over Mexican drug cartels who are responsible for the overwhelming vast majority of the illegal drug trafficking across the Mexican border into the United States.

"The drug cartels mistakenly believe they can elude detection by taking their contraband underground, but, again and again, we've been able to find these tunnels and shut them down," said ICE official Derek Benner.

Tuesday's operation began when highway police stopped a suspicious looking truck and found three tons of marijuana. Two men were arrested and a warrant was issued to search the warehouse, where agents found another 6.5 tons of marijuana. "Inside the nondescript white building, investigators discovered the entrance to the passageway. From the warehouse floor, the tunnel plunges more than 20 feet to the bottom of the shaft. "The passageway, measuring approximately four feet by three feet, is equipped with structural supports, electricity and ventilation," it added, saying investigators believe the tunnel was only recently completed. Mexican counterparts, alerted by the US side, entered the Tijuana warehouse and found five to six additional tons of marijuana. The find was made by the San Diego Tunnel Task Force, which combines officers from agencies including ICE, US Customs and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).

US authorities have detected more than 75 cross-border smuggling tunnels over the last four years, mostly in California and Arizona. The latest one is the sixth large-scale tunnel discovered in San Diego since 2006. "The fact that this is the third sophisticated cross border tunnel found within a year's time demonstrates the cartels will stop at nothing to smuggle their drugs into the US," said DEA San Diego head William R. Sherman. "The seizure of marijuana coupled with the loss of yet another tunnel will deal a heavy blow to those responsible for constructing this tunnel."

Mexico has seen a wave of unrest in recent years as powerful drug cartels have battled over lucrative trade routes to the United States, with more than 45,000 people killed in drug-related violence since 2006. That year President Felipe Calderon launched a massive military crackdown, which critics say has led the cartels to develop more advanced tactics and more brutal methods without bringing security to border communities.

Authorities on Wednesday also reported the discovery of a much smaller drug tunnel running under the border from Arizona to Mexico's northern Sonora state. That tunnel stretched 70 feet from a drain in Nogales, Mexico, to an area beneath the porch of a house in the namesake city in Arizona, ICE said. (Small portions of this article were also obtained from Reuters - 11/17/11)

U.S. federal agents examine and explore a newly discovered Mexican drug cartel tunnel connecting warehouses from Tijuana to San Diego