Wind Zero Group Inc Will Prepare Soldiers, Law Enforcers to Cope with Mexican Civil War, Founder Says MUST READ...Need Opinion....
A small county board in southern California has just ushered in the
era of the paramilitarization of the U.S. border by approving plans for a
private, $100 million, 1,000-acre military and law enforcement
training camp spearheaded by a former Navy Seal sniper who also has
done work for the U.S. intelligence community.
The Imperial County Board of Supervisors earlier this week approved
the project, to be developed near the small rural border town of
Ocotillo, Calif., by a company called Wind Zero Group Inc. The
supervisors, at a meeting held Tuesday, Dec. 21, voted 4-1 in favor of
allowing the border garrison project to proceed toward construction,
despite stiff community opposition, according to news reports.
The vote came after several postponements that pushed the final
decision back to just days before the Christmas holiday, almost assuring
scant press coverage of what is likely to become, absent effective
organized opposition, the prototype for future private
paramilitary-style training “camps” along the U.S.-Mexican border.
The planned Wind Zero training center is not unlike a similar project
proposed several years ago in southern California by the private
paramilitary company Blackwater (since renamed Xe Services LLC — which
also was founded by former Navy SEALs). Blackwater pulled the plug on that controversial project in early 2008 due to community opposition.
Opponents of the camp proposed for Ocotillo have speculated that Xe
is somehow involved behind the scenes in the Wind Zero effort as well —
though no solid evidence of that theory has materialized to date and
Wind Zero officials contend that, in fact, they consider Xe to be a
competitor.
However, among the backers of the Wind Zero project is former Navy Captain and RAND Senior Management Systems Analyst John Birkler , who serves as a director of Wind Zero, according to SEC filings.
RAND bills itself as a nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank, but, in reality, it has a long history of close ties to the military and private-sector warfare complex.
RAND media spokesman Warren Robak told Narco News previously that
“John Birkler and his involvement with Wind Zero is a private matter —
it has nothing to do with RAND.”
But Birkler has at least one thing in common with Wind Zero beyond
the Navy background he shares with the company’s founder, the former
Navy SEAL sniper, U.S. intelligence agency operative and author Brandon Webb. Birkler, Webb and Wind Zero have expertise in the emerging arena of drone warfare.
At RAND, Birkler, among other responsibilities, oversees research for
the U.S. Navy as well as the U.S. Special Operations Command — under
which is the Navy SEAL program. And, according to Rand’s Web site, among
Birkler’s specific areas of expertise is “unmanned aerial vehicles.”
In the case of Wind Zero, it has secured past contract work from the
Naval Special Warfare Command to “assist the NSW Seals in tactical
training, deployment and field uses of unmanned aircraft system (UAS)
training,” according to a past press release.
The planned Wind Zero border camp seems particularly well suited for
the operation of drones — and, in fact, will provide instruction in
operating Unmanned Aerial Systems. The camp will feature a long airstrip
and multiple heliports; a control tower and operations center; a vast
amount of airspace, including a 25,000-foot above-ground-level (AGL)
air ceiling; and a location only 87 miles from a major border
population center (San Diego/Tijuana) that is ground zero on the West
Coast for the drug war.
“The drone efforts that I envision will be principally military-intel
led, although they do not have to fly from military reservations per
se,” explains one military technology expert who provided some
background insight to Narco News. “Entities such as Wind Zero do offer
an interesting plausible deniability that could prove useful.”
The source adds: “If we place advanced UAVs over the Afghan theater
airspace (which includes parts of Pakistan), we can put them over
Mexican airspace.”
Currently, under the oversight of the Department of Homeland Security’s Customs and Border Protection agency, about a half a dozen
Predator B (Reaper) drones are now operating along the southern U.S.
border and coastal regions of the U.S., from Florida through Eastern
California.
And it seems the Mexican government itself is operating UAVs, or
drones, over the U.S.-Mexican border. A recent news story revealed that a
Mexican drone dropped out of the sky earlier this month and crashed
onto an El Paso, Texas, street.
Diana Washington Valdez of the El Paso times reported:
In a statement, Jenny L. Burke, spokeswoman for the
[U.S.] Department of Homeland Security, said, “We responded to a
concerned citizen’s call and recovered a small Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
(UAV), which belonged to the Government of Mexico (GOM).
The U.S. and Mexican governments are already operating joint military
missions targeting so-called “kingpin” narco-traffickers. As evidence
of that reality, the Washington Post recently reported on a State Department cable made public through WikiLeaks that supports facts reported by Narco News in June 2010.
From that Narco News story:
The U.S. unit, dubbed Task Force 7, since early 2009,
according to the CIA operative, has … cooperated with the Mexican Navy
in hunting down a major narco-trafficker, Arturo Beltran Leyva — who
was killed by Mexican Navy special forces last December during a raid
on a luxury apartment complex in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
Would it be any surprise if the U.S. and Mexican governments, via
private contractors and/or government operations, also are coordinating
drone missions along the border?
Beyond its usefulness as a drone operations and training center, the
planned Wind zero camp also will offer plenty of other features
necessary for training special operations soldiers and/or paramilitary
forces.
The camp, which would be developed in three phases at a cost of up to
$100 million (some $15 million for Phase 1), also will include
numerous shooting ranges allowing for some 57,000 rounds of ammunition
to be fired off daily; a mock-up of an urban neighborhood for practices
assaults; a 6-mile dual-use race track for teaching defensive and
offensive driving (and for private-pay recreational use); and enough
housing and RV camper space (along with a 100-room hotel) to accommodate
a small battalion of warriors.
Who Decides?
A number of individuals in Ocotillo, home to some 300 souls, aided by activists from the Sierra Club, actively opposed the proposed Wind Zero development, arguing it poses a great risk to the health of the environment as
well as the safety of the surrounding community — in the event of a
flood or earthquake, both of which have plagued the area in the recent
past.
However, Wind Zero marshaled the support of numerous law enforcement
agencies in the region that would be able to make use of the facility
for training purposes. Wind Zero, and its founder, Webb, also appear to
have effectively hyped the project to local officials as a privately
operated, state-of-the-art training center that will eventually employ
up to 200 people and serve as economic boon to the small California
border town of Ocotillo, located in Imperial County less than a dozen miles north of the Mexican border.
Barring litigation to halt the Wind Zero camp, it appears the project is poised to proceed toward construction, according to area media reports.
Given that reality, it’s worth noting what Wind Zero’s Webb has said
previously in a YouTube video about the dynamics driving the escalation
of the paramilitary era now rising along the U.S.-Mexican border.
From Webb’s YouTube video:
Mexico is very close to civil war right now; it
doesn’t take much to buy off somebody and next thing you know, the
president is assassinated and then what? A civil war breaks out, and we
have a million Mexican citizens crossing the border into the U.S., and
it’s the same situation that you have in Afghanistan and Pakistan. You
have all these refugees coming across and Pakistan’s like, “What do we
do with this?”
It’s not outlandish for that scenario to happen. So
how do you prepare for that? You got to train these guys, and that’s
law enforcement and the military.
As dangerously delusional as those statements may sound to those who
understand the deeper dynamics at play along the border, and the
life-and-death stakes for millions of people, it’s worth remembering
that Webb, and those promoting the paramilitarization of the border,
don’t have to convince the majority of Americans of the saneness of
their methods.
In the case of Wind Zero, for example, the only people they had to
convince were four county supervisors in a recession-decimated rural
stretch of southern California.
Happy holidays and stay tuned for the New Year ahead …..























Anyone remember that private "prison" that was planned in Montana--the one the citizens drove out--that no one knew who or what owned?
And you can bet they're keeping track of the posters here.
private contractors and/or government operations, also are coordinating
drone missions along the border?"
Yes! it would. It would be shocking as Hell !
Americans have been shouting at the top of their lungs for years to stop the drug , thugs, guns and disease which oozes across that border in an never ending river of slime.
The response from our PRESIDENT ?
Sue the states that attempt to support federal law. Presidential encouragement for more countries to also sue in an effort to collapse state resources.
The response from the state department?
Go to the United Nations and accuse are own country of HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS for not letting drug dealers cross unmolested.
The response from homeland security?
In the words of Janet Napolitano ;
“And yes, when we find illegal workers, yes, appropriate action, some of which is criminal, most of that is civil, because crossing the border is not a crime per se. It is civil. But anyway, going after those as well.
The response from ICE ?
Top Official Says Feds May Not Process Illegals Referred From Arizona
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politi...
The response from the department of justice?
Department of Justice Files Lawsuit Challenging Arizona Immigration Law
Suit Says A...
private contractors and/or government operations, also are coordinating
drone missions along the border?"
Yes! it would. It would be shocking as Hell !
Americans have been shouting at the top of their lungs for years to stop the drug , thugs, guns and disease which oozes across that border in an never ending river of slime.
The response from our PRESIDENT ?
Sue the states that attempt to support federal law. Presidential encouragement for more countries to also sue in an effort to collapse state resources.
The response from the state department?
Go to the United Nations and accuse are own country of HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS for not letting drug dealers cross unmolested.
The response from homeland security?
In the words of Janet Napolitano ;
“And yes, when we find illegal workers, yes, appropriate action, some of which is criminal, most of that is civil, because crossing the border is not a crime per se. It is civil. But anyway, going after those as well.
The response from ICE ?
Top Official Says Feds May Not Process Illegals Referred From Arizona
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politi...
The response from the department of justice?
Department of Justice Files Lawsuit Challenging Arizona Immigration Law
Suit Says Arizona Law Treads on Federal Authority
The response from the Congress?
Harry Reid wants to grant keep all illegal border crossers
9. Sobre Harry Reid
... Reid es un fiel defensor del Proyecto de Ley DREAM o "DREAM Act," en inglés,
el cual legalizaría a aquellos niños inmigrantes que cualificarían ...
OR PRESS 1 FOR ENGLISH
5. FIGHTING FOR NEVADA'S LATINO COMMUNITY
... Reid is also a strong supporter and original cosponsor of the Development,
Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act), which would ...
The Federal Government has failed to secure the southern border on every level. Citizens and state militias are the only resort left.