Israel-Mexico: Military Cooperation to Crush Zapatistas Liberation Movement
Israel-Mexico: Military Cooperation to Crush
Zapatistas Liberation Movement
Global Research, May 24, 2013
Url of this article:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/israel-mexico-military-cooperation-to-crush-zapatistas-liberation-movement/5336250
http://www.globalresearch.ca/israel-mexico-military-cooperation-to-crush-zapatistas-liberation-movement/5336250
Mexico has gone public about military coordination with Israel in
Chiapas, home to the Zapatistas liberation movement. (Image: Omar
Torres / AFP/Newscom)
Earlier this month, Jorge Luis Llaven Abarca, Mexico’s newly-appointed
secretary of public security in Chiapas, announced that discussions had taken
place between his office and the Israeli defense ministry. The two countries
talked about security coordination at the level of police, prisons and effective
use of technology (“Israeli military
will train Chiapas police,” Excelsior, 8 May [Spanish]).
Chiapas is home to the Zapatistas (Ejército Zapatista de Liberación
Nacional), a mostly indigenous Maya liberation movement that has enjoyed global
grassroots support since it rose up against the Mexican government in 1994. The
Zapatistas took back large tracts of land on which they have since built
subsistence cooperatives, autonomous schools, collectivized clinics and other
democratic community structures.
In the twenty years since the uprising, the Mexican government has not ceased
its counterinsurgency programs in Chiapas. When Llaven Abarca was announced as
security head in December, human rights organizations voiced concerns that the
violence would escalate, pointing to his history of arbitrary detentions, use of
public force, criminal preventive detentions, death threats and torture (“Concern
about the appointment of Jorge Luis Llaven Abarca as Secretary of Public
Security in Chiapas,” Fray Bartolomé de Las Casas (Frayba) Center for
Human Rights,14 December 2012 [PDF, Spanish]).
Aptly, his recent contacts with Israeli personnel were “aimed at sharing
experiences,” Abarca has claimed. This may be the first time the Mexican
government has gone public about military coordination with Israelis in Chiapas.
Yet the agreement is only the latest in Israel’s longer history of military
exports to the region, an industry spawned from experiences in the conquest and
pacification of Palestine.
Weapons sales escalateThe first Zionist militias (Bar Giora and HaShomer) were formed to advance the settlement of Palestinian land. Another Zionist militia, the Haganah — the precursor to the Israeli army and the successor of HaShomer — began importing and producing arms in 1920.
Israeli firms began exporting weapons in the 1950s to Latin America,
including to Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic under the Somoza and Trujillo
dictatorships. Massive government investment in the arms industry followed
the 1967 War and the
ensuing French arms embargo. Israeli arms, police, military training and
equipment have now been sent to at least 140 countries, including to Guatemala
in the 1980s under Efraín Ríos Montt, the former dictator recently
convicted of genocide against the Maya.
Mexico began receiving Israeli weaponry in 1973 with the sale of five Arava
planes fromIsrael
Aerospace Industries. Throughout the 1970s and ’80s, infrequent exports
continued to the country in the form of small arms, mortars and electronic
fences. Sales escalated in the early 2000s, according to research that we have
undertaken.
In 2003, Mexico bought helicopters formerly belonging to the Israeli army and
Israel Aerospace Industries’ Gabriel missiles. Another Israeli security firm,
Magal Security Systems, received one of several contracts for surveillance
systems “to protect sensitive installations in Mexico” that same
year, The Jerusalem Post reported.
In 2004, Israel Shipyards sold missile boats, and later both Aeronautics
Defense Systems and Elbit Systems won
contracts from the federal police and armed forces for drones for border and
domestic surveillance (“UAV
maker Aeronautics to supply Mexican police,”Globes, 15 February
2009). Verint Systems, a technology firm founded by former Israeli army
personnel, has won several US-sponsored contracts since 2006 for the mass
wiretapping of Mexican telecommunications, according to Jane’s Defence
Weekly.
Trained by Israel
According to declassified
Defense Intelligence Agency documents [PDF] obtained via a freedom of
information request, Israeli personnel were discreetly sent into Chiapas in
response to the 1994 Zapatista uprising for the purpose of “providing training
to Mexican military and police forces.”
The Mexican government also made use of the Arava aircraft to deploy its
Airborne Special Forces Group (Grupo Aeromóvil de Fuerzas Especiales, or GAFE).
GAFE commandos were themselves trained
by Israel and the US. Several would later desert the GAFE and go on to
create “Los Zetas,” currently Mexico’s most powerful and violent drug cartel
(“Los
Zetas and Mexico’s Transnational Drug War,” World Politics
Review, 25 December 2009).
Mexico was surprised by the Zapatistas, who rose up the day the North
American Free Trade Agreement went into effect. The Mexican government found
itself needing to respond to the dictates of foreign investors, as a famously-leaked
Chase-Manhattan Bank memo revealed: “While Chiapas, in our opinion,
does not pose a fundamental threat to Mexican political stability, it is
perceived to be so by many in the investment community. The government will need
to eliminate the Zapatistas to demonstrate their effective control of the
national territory and of security policy.”
Marketing “stability”
Today, faced with a people in open rebellion against their own annihilation,
the perception of stability continues to be an important modus
operandi for the Mexican government. For Israel, the Oslo “peace
process” and the Palestinian
Authority’s neoliberal turn has similarly helped cultivate an illusory
perception of peace and stability while the colonization of Palestine
continues.
Indeed, “creating an atmosphere of stability” was the stated goal of the
recent Mexico-Israel contacts, and the desire for at least the perception of it
might help explain why an Israeli presence in Chiapas is now going public, or
rather, according
to journalist Naomi Klein, is being “marketed.”
Yet managing perceptions can only remain the short-term goal of governments
whose shared ambition is to annihilate. And just as Israel shares with Mexico
its military experiences against Palestinians, it is equally likely that Israel
could apply some of Mexico’s counterinsurgency tactics to its oppression of the
the Palestinian people.
The military relationship between Israel and Mexico is how the Zapatistas
themselves have long recognized their connection to the Palestinian
struggle.
This message was underscored by Zapatista spokesman Subcomandante Insurgente
Marcos when Israel was bombing Gaza in early 2009 (“Of
sowing and harvests,” My word is my weapon, 4 January 2009). Despite the
distance between Chiapas and Gaza, Marcos stressed that their experiences made
the people of the two territories feel close to each other.
It is worth recalling Marcos’ words: “Not far from here, in a place called
Gaza, in Palestine, in the Middle East, right here next to us, the Israeli
government’s heavily trained and armed military continues its march of death and
destruction.”Linda Quiquivix is a critical geographer. She can be reached at www.quiqui.org.
Jimmy Johnson is an organizer in Detroit. He can be reached at johnson [dot] jimmy [at] gmail [dot] com.
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C E N C O A L T
Centro de Comunicacion
Alternativa
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