[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 29 (Tuesday, March 1, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H1399-H1400]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BORDER WAR CONTINUES--NO END IN SIGHT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Poe) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, the border war continues, and there is
no end in sight. This week, President Calderon of Mexico is coming back
to Washington D.C. He is going to meet with our President. It will be
interesting to see if he continues to blame America for his problems.
You remember the last time he was here, he stood here on the House
floor and dressed us down as Members of the United States House of
Representatives, blaming us for his problems, blaming us for the
corruption, blaming us for the drugs that are in Mexico, blaming us for
the violence in Mexico, blaming the folks in Arizona for trying to
protect their own border. I wonder if he will continue the blame game.
The problem is the situation is worse, not only on the border, but in
Mexico. Corruption along the border with Mexican law enforcement
continues, even though the Mexican military is doing a fairly good job
of reining in the drug cartels.
And he blames the United States for the guns that are in Mexico. You
must remember, Mr. Speaker, just some of the guns that go to Mexico are
from the United States. Guns from all over the world end up in Mexico.
There are a lot of reasons for that. One of those is Mexico doesn't
protect its borders any better than we do.
People throughout the world know if you can get to Mexico by any
means, whether you want to bring contraband, drugs, guns or people, you
can eventually get into the United States. Mexico, like the United
States, doesn't have operational control of the mutual border between
the United States.
Even the General Accountability Office, who are the people who keep
up with statistics, made this report recently, that on the United
States border with Mexico, only 44 percent of the border is under the
control of the United States and only 15 percent is airtight.
So who controls the other 56 percent of the U.S. border with Mexico?
If it's not the United States, it's not Mexico, who controls it? We
don't know. Probably the outlaws, the drug cartels. They are the ones
that have operational control of both sides of the border because the
situation on the border continues to get worse.
Mexico doesn't protect its border from people going into Mexico from
any direction, and the United States doesn't protect its border
adequately to keep drugs and violence from coming into the United
States.
{time} 1100
Unfortunately, this is continuing to get worse. Last year, 65
Americans were killed in Mexico, and to my knowledge, none of those
cases was solved. You see, Mexico has a terrible record of solving
crimes not only against Americans, but against Mexican nationals. Over
3,000 people were killed in Juarez last year. That's more people than
were killed in Afghanistan last year. It is a serious, violent
situation.
And will it continue to come across the border? Some say, oh, it
won't come to America. Let me give you one statistic. The 16 border
counties in
[[Page H1400]]
Texas that border Mexico, on any given day, about 35 percent to 40
percent of the people they have in their jails are foreign nationals
charged with crimes in the United States. These are not immigration
violations. These are crimes, some of them violent crimes--35 percent
to 40 percent. So the crime is already pouring over because people can
go back and forth across the U.S.-Mexican border at will because there
are parts of the border that no one controls.
In fact, the situation is so bad this year that the Texas Department
of Public Safety today has made a statement telling young people about
spring break. And here is what they say: ``Various crime problems exist
in many popular resort areas of Mexico such as Acapulco and Cancun, and
crimes against U.S. citizens often go unpunished.''
``The safety message is simple: avoid traveling to Mexico during
spring break and stay alive.'' So, we are even being warned not to let
your kids go to Mexico during spring break because it is not safe.
So what do we do about this? Well, there was raids recently this week
because of an ICE agent that was killed in Mexico. Raids were made in
the United States, and 676 drug cartel members were arrested, $12
million was seized, lots of drugs and lots of guns. And it's a point
that we need to understand as citizens, that the drug cartels operate
in Mexico, but they operate in the United States as well. They bring
those drugs to other gang members throughout the cities of America, and
they sell those wares here in the United States. So the crime does
occur on both sides of the border. And we need to understand that.
It is important that we deal in reality and understand that the
border is a war zone. A Texas Ranger once told me, he said,
``Congressman Poe, after dark on the Texas-Mexican border, it gets
western.'' Those days need to end. We need to put the National Guard on
the border and secure the border. It will protect the United States and
Mexico. And that's just the way it is.
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