Iranian Ships Taunt Navy in Persian Gulf

AN Iranian fast attack boat goaded the U.S.S. Typhoon into firing a flare to drive them off when the Iranian boat came within 200 yards of the Typhoon:

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Navy says one of its ships encountered a small Iranian high-speed boat in the central Persian Gulf. The Navy says the boat stayed away after the ship fired a flare.

Two other similar Iranian boats in the area did not approach as closely.

The USS Typhoon tried unsuccessfully to establish radio contact with the Iranian boat after it came within an estimated 200 yards of the Typhoon on Thursday, outside Iranian territorial waters. A Navy official says the ship then fired the flare and continued on its way northward without incident.

The official said Friday that the Iranian boats did not appear to have been armed.

It doesn’t matter that the small boat didn’t appear to carry armaments, 200 yards is close enough for the crew to have swept the deck with small arms fire. 200 yards is just on the outside range of effectiveness for an Ak-47, and certainly well inside the range of .308 rifles or the 30-06, the caliber America should never have abandoned.

A WWII vintage B.A.R. or a grenade launcher could have been pulled out by the Iranians caused untold damage to the Typhoon and her crew. That’s not to mention the very real possibility of the boat, packed with explosives, making a suicide run. The Iranians know that the Captain of the ship would be thinking all these things.

Iranian ships seem intent on provoking the Navy into firing on them, the question is why?

Argentina Notices England’s Lack of Backbone

With a country full of people willing to allow Islamists to take over their streets in a bloodless coup and a government full of peaceniks now would be a great time for a country that was once thrashed soundly by the English to make a move.

Enter Argentina:

BUENOS AIRES (AFP) – Argentina’s claim to the Falkland Islands, which remain in British hands after the 1982 war between the two countries, is “inalienable,” President Cristina Kirchner said Wednesday.

“The sovereign claim to the Malvinas Islands is inalienable,” she said in a speech marking the 26th anniversary of Argentina’s ill-fated invasion of the islands, located 480 kilometers (300 miles) off shore.

The April 2, 1982 invasion prompted then British prime minister Margaret Thatcher to deploy naval forces to retake the Falklands, known as the Malvinas in Spanish.

The short, bloody conflict led to Argentina’s surrender on June 14, 1982 after the death of 649 Argentines and 255 Britons.

Historians saw the invasion as an attempt by Argentina’s ruling military junta, which was then in power, to divert attention away from domestic problems.

In her speech Kirchner called for Argentina to strengthen its representation in international bodies to denounce “this shameful colonial enclave in the 21st century.”

And Vice President Julio Cobos said in the southern city of Rio Grande that “we must recover this territory that is ours, that belongs to us.”

The comments came as Kirchner faces her own woes, battling against farmers who have barricaded roads in a protest against a stiff tax hike on soybean exports.

I assume this time the war will end quite differently. What are the odds that England will fight for the Faulkland Islands this time if Argentina decides to throw down? I’m thinking slim to none.

I miss the Iron Lady.

How Illegal Immigration and City Planning Conspired to Turn a Quiet Suburb into Hell on Earth

The recent Glassell Park Shootout where L.A. S.W.A.T battled heavily armed gang members who had gone on a rampage killing a man playing with his two year old granddaughter and later participating in a Mad Max style gun battle with a rival gang on the lawless L.A. streets was the end result of decades of festering chaos that grew in the heart of a once quiet suburb.

It all began with one “undocumented worker” named Maria “Chata” Leon who found the perfect place to settle down, start a family and a business:

MORE THAN 100 YEARS AGO, Drew Street was a beautiful green spot named by pioneer Andrew Glassell after his son, Drew. For most of the 20th century, it was a tucked-away suburban enclave flanked by the Los Angeles River and Glendale’s Forest Lawn cemetery. Then, starting in the 1960s, the city built apartments on its dead-end streets and avenues — and a bad element moved in, seeing the isolated little neighborhood as the perfect lair.

Drew Street, with its long, straight rise, offered the perfect viewing base from which to espy approaching cop cars. It turned out to be just the thing for Maria “Chata” Leon, a young toughie from a rough, lawless Mexican village who settled there and gave birth to 13 children — a half-dozen of whom became criminals. With a new baby on her hip every year or two, Leon dealt drugs and staked her claim on Drew Street, in a Bleak House stocked with guns and explosives.

She regularly did stints in jail and prison, and her growing brood, the extended Leon crime family, which has close ties to the Avenues gang that controls the area, slowly turned Drew Street into a hellish microcommunity that L.A. cops, politicians and code enforcers could not turn around. But hope materialized last year, when the city announced it was shutting down the Leon home and banning most of the Leon brood from their longtime family compound.

Leon was already gone, moved to Victorville, and many of her violent and drug-dealing sons were in prison. Some Glassell Park neighbors, who tell stories of around-the-clock drug deals and rampant gang activity at the house — including a murder in Leon’s front yard — began to hope the nightmare might be over

It wasn’t however. The Leon family is just one part of a larger problem caused by liberal policies that facilitate illegal immigration, gang control of areas and generation upon generation dependent on the racist welfare state of California:

TELL-TALE TENNIS SHOES HANG from power lines above Drew Street, letting customers know that drug dealers are present and open for business. Tall, wrought-iron fences surround the mostly stucco single-family homes and dense apartment buildings, but they don’t keep the bad elements out — or in.

The area is isolated by the Glendale Freeway to the southeast, and by Forest Lawn cemetery to the north and west. A hillside runs perpendicular to Drew Street, upon which multistory apartments with signs desolately touting “luxury townhouses” provide local criminals with excellent high ground — lookouts from which they can easily spot incoming police cars. Two apartment buildings on Drew Street are known as “Twin Towers” — named after the two multistory buildings at the Los Angeles County Jail — because they harbor so many convicted felons and convicted and suspected drug dealers.

Drew Street is a testament to city planning gone bad, home to more than 8,000 residents who mostly live in more than 1,500 apartment units the city allowed developers to cram into the area during the 1970s, wiping out a quiet single-family enclave. The residents are a mix of illegal immigrants and second-generation Mexican immigrants, elderly Filipinos and a few white and black families. Housing is definitely “affordable”: a one-bedroom costs about $750 per month; a two bedroom, $950.

It’s a dumping ground for stolen vehicles, a well-known drug bazaar — and a tough place to try to be a good citizen. Graffiti covers the sidewalks, the curbs, the streets, the apartment buildings — even the neglected trees. “I had to paint the back of my building four times in the last year-and-a-half,” says apartment owner Eduardo Garcia — a rare resident willing to give his name. “I had to paint the front twice … I can’t have managers do it because [local thugs] will threaten him and tell him they will kill him.”

Twice, when the Los Angeles City Council tried to install surveillance cameras on Drew Street, they quickly were shot out and stolen — both times — so the city gave up. Yet normal, law-abiding families are trying to make a stand here. On nearby Weldon Street, you can see nice houses with Nissan Pathfinders or better parked in their driveways. These families create a thin layer of civil society in an area run by the Avenues gang, which takes its name from the numbered corridors that slice across Figueroa Street several miles away in Highland Park’s bustling yet economically poor shopping district.

The current illegal immigration crisis has compounded the problems of this community already under siege:

The Avenues operates in cliques, each of which claims a gang territory based on where the members live. Gang experts say that in recent years, longtime Avenues gangsters have begun to allow tough, illegal Mexican immigrants to join their ranks, with Drew Street drawing immigrants from a rough village in Mexico’s Guerrero State — an area that has a reputation for extreme lawlessness. This new mix spells disaster, says one law-enforcement official, because, “Here is one group of people who already had a tremendously lawless culture, on top of another, existing violent gang. And the synergy of the two produced what we saw the other day.”

But back to the Maria Leon, one illegal mother struggling to makes end meet in a country so bitter and spiteful that she lives in the shadows, in constant fear of deportation:

MARIA LEON MOVED FROM GUERRERO State to Drew Street around 1985. The once-petite 5-foot-2-inch toughie immediately got into a brush with cops, arrested in October of 1985 for assault with a deadly weapon. As her arrests piled up, so did her births — 13 kids by four or five men. Her sons — including Jose Leon, Danny Leon, Nicolas Real, Randy Martinez, Francisco Real and Jesus Martinez — all grew up on Drew Street, and most attended Fletcher Drive Elementary and Washington Irving Middle schools.

A law-enforcement official tells the Weekly that Leon’s arrests included theft in 1986; burglary in Riverside County in 1986; selling PCP and marijuana in 1992; and extortion and drug dealing in 1994.

She was finally convicted of drug felonies, in 1995 and again in 1997, and by 1998 she was one of the first Avenues gangsters supervised by the probation department under the CLEAR gang task force, which was inspired by the horrific September 1995 murder of 3-year-old Stephanie Kuhen after her parents made a wrong turn in their car and ended up in no-man’s land — an alley near Division Street in Glassell Park. That same year, Leon was convicted of petty theft.

Her longest stint in prison came after a Halloween bust in 2002, when the Glendale Police Department used a search warrant to enter the longtime Leon home on Drew Street. She was arrested for narcotics sales and child endangerment after officers found automatic weapons and explosives throughout the home — where she was also raising young children.

In 2003, while she was in prison, a local man was shot to death in her front yard — an apparent drug deal gone bad. Inside the house, the cops discovered a shrine to the patron saint of narco trafficking, Jesus Malverde, a folklore hero in crime-ridden Sinaloa. Danny Leon and his half-brother, Francisco Real, were convicted of accessory to murder in the killing.

Then Maria Leon was released from state prison in 2006. One resident says the Leons and the Avenues gang are constantly outsmarting the justice system. “It is so weird — they go to jail and after a day they’re out,” says a resident who grew up with the Leon boys. “How can it be so soon? How can they get out of jail so fast? People who work and have a good life — they get deported.”

Apartment owner Garcia echoes the sentiment, saying, “They can’t own the whole neighborhood like that. It shouldn’t be happening in this day and age.

There are two sides to the border issue and they myth of pitiful workers unjustly persecuted by nativists must be tempered by the reality of powerful Latin American crime groups importing their lawlessness to our streets.

Day of the Bomb

I feel like it’s 1999 and I’m a Y2K nut. But it seems like today we’re all moving a bit closer to a civil war in America and a World War as tensions rise in Latin America.

The Bombing in Times Square overshadowed the story of a U.C. Davis Student caught with two pipe bombs in his dorm room. No word yet on what his plans were for the bombs.

F.A.R.C. has blown up a oil pipeline in Columbia in retaliation for a Columbian military operation which killed one of their senior members and led to the capture of a laptop containing sensitive F.A.R.C. intelligence.

N.J. Authorities are reporting that they’ve disrupted a “military style” attack on a local high school. One adult is under arrest and up to nine other people are being questioned about the attack. The father of a 17 year old suspect was required to turn over his guns.

Tired of the constant barrage of rockets from Hamas, an Israeli civilian built his own Katusha rocket. Authorities stopped him from launching the missile into Gaza.

Denver city hall was evacuated after a bomb threat.

Just another day? Maybe, but chaos in Latin America is bound to have repercussions here, and as more and more of the fringe American movements begin to see that the way to push their agenda forward is with arson and bombs anarchy will reign. No society can survive long in a world where bombs and threats of bombing become an everyday occurrence. In Israel the inability of the government to stop rocket attacks is causing civil breakdown.

If the American government cannot prevent bombings, beatings and home invasions by political groups we may well see civil breakdown here.

Brazilian Arms Secretly Being Flown into Venezuela!

It looks like the leftist government of Brazil has chosen sides in the impending conflict in Latin America. Swimming Against the Red Tide is reporting that Brazil has secretly flown over 31 tons of firearms into Venezuela. His post links to a report by World Check which is questioning why a country with a very well equipped army and police would need another 50-70,000 firearms. Their answer is ominous:

In a country where the armed forces and the police are already well-equipped, these weapons can only have one intended use; to arm civilian supporters of the current regime, who will use it upon the opposition in an expected violent confrontation that could degenerate into a civil war.

Scary stuff.
h/t Babalu Blog