Revelan documentos del Pentágono tensión entre FA de México
Las tensiones entre las Fuerzas Armadas de México se han exacerbado y pueden empeorar las operaciones conjuntas, señalan documentos secretos filtrados del Pentágono. Foto: Sergio Ricardo Orozco Nuño
Grupo REFORMA
Washington DC, Estados Unidos(15 abril 2023).- Las tensiones entre las Fuerzas Armadas de México se han exacerbado y pueden empeorar las operaciones conjuntas en un futuro, según revelan los documentos secretos del Pentágono filtrados a internet.
De acuerdo con un reportaje del The Washington Post que cita dichos documentos, el Secretario de la Marina mexicano "instruyó a los oficiales de la Marina para limitar la cooperación con Sedena".
Esa instrucción se habría dado después de que el Ejército mexicano tomó el control de todo el espacio aéreo mexicano.
Asimismo, la nota del diario estadounidense señala que los documentos aseguran que el Presidente Andrés Manuel López Obrador continuará dando más tareas al Ejército mexicano.
The Washington Post afirmó que un funcionario de la Embajada de México en Washington se negó a comentar y que los documentos no señalan si la información fue tomada por intercepciones telefónicas o de las autoridades del País.
Espionaje al Cártel del Golfo
Estados Unidos espió a miembros del Cártel del Golfo después de que los cuatro estadounidenses en Matamoros, Tamaulipas, fueran secuestrados y dos de ellos asesinados.
Según los documentos del Pentágono, los narcotraficantes habrían plagiado a los extranjeros por un atropellamiento por el que se dieron a la fuga.
Los miembros del Cártel se prepararon para defenderse de cualquier operación del Ejército mexicano.
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THE DISCORD LEAKS
U.S. wiretaps tracked Gulf Cartel after Americans abducted, leak shows/By Nick Miroff
The Washington Post, April 15, 2023
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/04/15/leak-mexico-intel-documents/
In the days after the March 3 shootings, the criminal organization braced for retaliation from Mexican security forces, and its attorneys urged cartel members to delete information about the Americans from their phones, according to the U.S. intercepts.
The files, labeled top secret, are among the handful of Mexico-related U.S. intelligence documents leaked with dozens of military files more than a month ago on Discord, a chat service popular with online gamers.
On Thursday, the Justice Department announced the arrest of Jack Douglas Teixeira, a member of the Air National Guard in Massachusetts, for the “alleged unauthorized removal, retention, and transmission of classified national defense information.”
Suspected leaker of top-secret Pentagon documents is identified
The Post has reviewed approximately 300 photos of classified documents, most of which have not been made public, that were leaked to a small group of Discord users. The majority of the files relate to the Russian war in Ukraine, but the documents also contain intelligence briefings on a range of nations including U.S. allies and neighbors.
The briefing on Gulf Cartel operations said the group’s members were “preparing to defend against possible Mexican military arrests after the group’s abduction of four U.S. citizens last week, which could further increase violence around Matamoros, where the U.S. maintains a consulate.”
The Discord Leaks
Dozens of highly classified documents have been leaked online, revealing sensitive information intended for senior military and intelligence leaders. In an exclusive investigation, The Post also reviewed scores of additional secret documents, most of which have not been made public.
Who leaked the documents? Jack Teixeira, a young member of the Massachusetts Air National Guard, was arrested Thursday in the investigation into leaks of hundreds of pages of classified military intelligence. The Post reported that the individual who leaked the information shared documents with a small circle of online friends on the Discord chat platform.
What do the leaked documents reveal about Ukraine? The documents reveal profound concerns about the war’s trajectory and Kyiv’s capacity to wage a successful offensive against Russian forces. According to a Defense Intelligence Agency assessment among the leaked documents, “Negotiations to end the conflict are unlikely during 2023.”
What else do they show? The files include summaries of human intelligence on high-level conversations between world leaders, as well as information about advanced satellite technology the United States uses to spy. They also include intelligence on both allies and adversaries, including Iran and North Korea, as well as Britain, Canada, South Korea and Israel.
What happens now? The leak has far-reaching implications for the United States and its allies. In addition to the Justice Department investigation, officials in several countries said they were assessing the damage from the leaks.
Citing information obtained through “FISA-derived signals intelligence” — which include court-authorized wiretaps — the briefing says the four Americans were attacked “in retaliation for an alleged hit-and-run incident.” Matamoros is the headquarters of the Gulf Cartel, one of Mexico’s most powerful drug trafficking groups, and lies across the Rio Grande from Brownsville, Tex.
U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies have been eavesdropping on the communications of drug gangs for decades, and the intercepts are routinely used to build federal criminal cases against traffickers extradited to the United States.
According to the leaked files, intercepted communications among Gulf Cartel members indicated that the group had turned the four Americans — two of whom were dead — over to Mexican authorities. The deceased, Shaeed Woodard and Zindell Brown, were taken alive on March 3 when cartel gunmen opened fire on their vehicle, but died later of their wounds.
In an interview posted Tuesday evening, the two survivors, Latavia “Tay” McGee and Eric James Williams, told CNN’s Anderson Cooper that the gunmen began honking at them and brandishing weapons soon after they crossed into Mexico. The Americans had traveled from South Carolina so that McGee could get an abdominoplasty — a tummy tuck — according to family members.
McGee and Williams, who are siblings, did not mention any vehicle collision. Williams told CNN that the shooting started as their vehicle turned onto a main street in Matamoros. The assailants shot Brown and Woodard after they got out of the vehicle.
Another armed man tapped on McGee’s window, and Williams said he was shot in both legs when he got out of the car. The attackers robbed the Americans and loaded them into the back of a truck, a scene recorded in footage that later circulated widely on social media.
McGee and Williams told Cooper that one of their abductors acknowledged that the cartel attack on the group had been a mistake by gunmen who were “high and drunk.” The captor, who told the siblings he was a U.S. citizen, drove them March 6 to a shack outside Matamoros and left them for Mexican authorities to collect them.
The leaked files indicate that U.S. authorities were monitoring those developments using “separate FISA-derived signals intelligence,” a possible reference to additional wiretaps.
In a third document pertaining to Mexico that also was leaked to the Discord chat, U.S. military officials assessed the implications of the Mexican military’s assuming oversight and control of civilian aviation.
Mexico has deployed its armed forces to battle the country’s drug traffickers and criminal groups, and under President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, military officials have taken on a widening portfolio of civilian roles.
The top-secret briefing predicts that López Obrador is likely to continue assigning more responsibilities and oversight roles to the country’s armed forces — especially the Mexican army — but “without commensurate increases in resources.” Such an imbalance is typically viewed as a recipe for corruption.
According to the U.S. military assessment, the secretary of Mexico’s navy was so frustrated by the possibility that the Mexican army would take control of all Mexican airspace that he “instructed navy officials to limit cooperation with SEDENA [Mexico’s army] in response.”
The briefing notes the potential for worsening tensions among Mexico’s armed forces, “a dispute that will likely exacerbate their existing rivalry and further detract from their ability to conduct joint operations.”
There was no indication that the briefing item was derived from U.S. wiretaps or intercepts of Mexican authorities.
An official at Mexico’s embassy in Washington declined to comment.
In exclusive interviews with a member of the Discord group where U.S. intelligence documents were shared, The Washington Post learned details of the alleged leaker, “OG.” The Post also obtained a number of previously unreported documents from a trove of images of classified files posted on a private server on the chat app Discord.
How the leak happened: The Washington Post reported that the individual who leaked the information shared documents with a small circle of online friends on the Discord chat platform. This is a timeline of how the documents leaked.
The suspected document leaker: Jack Teixeira, a young member of the Massachusetts Air National Guard, was charged Friday in the investigation into leaks of hundreds of pages of classified military intelligence. Teixeira told members of the online group that he worked as a technology support staffer at a base on Cape Cod and that this was how he was able to access classified documents, one member of the Discord server told The Post. Here’s what we learned about the alleged document leaker.
What we learned from the leaked documents: The massive document leak has exposed a range of U.S. government secrets, including spying on allies, the grim prospects for Ukraine’s war with Russia and the precariousness of Taiwan’s air defenses. It also has ignited diplomatic fires for the White House. Here’s what we’ve learned from the documents.
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