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Fast
and Furious Was Not Botched
by Katie Pavlich
Nov 10, 2011
“Allowing
loads of weapons that we
knew to be destined for criminals, this was the plan. It was so
mandated.”
–Special Agent John Dodson ATF Phoenix Field Division.
As
allegations surrounding Operation
Fast and Furious continue to heat up, many major media outlets continue
to call
the fatal program “botched,” which is a factually incorrect
characterization.
The
Merriam-Webster dictionary defines
botched as: to foul up hopelessly, to put together in a makeshift way.
The
only thing botched about Operation
Fast and Furious is that the American public found out about it. Fast
and
Furious was carried out exactly as planned: allow straw purchasers to
transfer
guns to cartels, let those guns get trafficked back to Mexico and see
where
they end up. There was no plan to trace these guns and no plan to
inform the
Mexican Government of the operation, either.
Tactics
used during Fast and Furious
seem like mistakes, but in fact were just part of the strategy and
process of
Fast and Furious. Calling the program botched implies the Obama Justice
Department didn’t intentionally allow 2000 high powered guns, including
AK-47s
and .50-caliber sniper rifles, to walk into the hands of ruthless drug
cartels
without proper tracing mechanisms. The opposite is true. This was the
intention
of the program, not an operational mistake in the process.
To
prove the operation wasn’t
“botched,” let’s take a look at some testimony from ATF whistleblowers
about
the operation.
On
June 15, 2011 ATF Field Agent John
Dodson, one of the first whistleblowers to go public about the scandal,
testified under oath before the House Oversight Committee about Fast
and
Furious.
“I
was involved in this operation, we
monitored as they purchased hand guns, AK-47 variants, and .50 caliber
rifles
almost daily. Rather than contradict any enforcement actions, we took
notes, we
recorded observations, we tracked movements of these individuals for a
short time
after their purchases, but nothing more. Knowing all the while, just
days after
these purchases, the guns that we saw these individuals buy would begin
turning
up at crime scenes in the United States and Mexico, we still did
nothing,”
Dodson said. “Allowing loads of weapons that we knew to be destined for
criminals, this was the plan. It was so mandated.”
On
July 26, 2011 ATF Senior Special
Agent Jose Wall, who is based in Tijuana, Mexico also verified Fast and
Furious
was intended from the beginning to provide guns to cartels.
“I
could not believe that someone in
ATF would so callously let firearms wind up in the hands of criminals.
And that
this activity has seemingly been approved by our own Justice Department
and ATF
management in the misguided hope of catching the “big fish,” Wall said.
“These
firearms that are now in the hands of people who have no regard for
human life
pose a threat to all of us, a threat to which none of us is immune.”
ATF
field agents knew Fast and Furious
had the potential to get people killed, including federal agents. Vince
Cefalu
was one of those concerned agents and, although he knew he would face
retaliation for exposing Fast and Furious to the public, he did it
anyway. When
Cefalu started speaking out against his superiors within ATF about the
way
Operation Fast and Furious was being conducted, he was approached
within 24
hours and told to stop. He was also threatened and told if he didn’t
shut his
mouth, he would be relocated to North Dakota, a long way from where he
had been
working along the southern border with Mexico. Despite threats from his
superiors, Cefalu blew the whistle about Operation Fast and Furious
anyway,
which has landed him under review for what he describes as “a proposal
for
removal for telling the truth.“
In
September, Cefalu explained his
concerns during a Fast and Furious town hall meeting in Tucson.
“To
think that they could do this sort
of operation knowing there could be a dead ATF agent at the ends of
those guns
made me nauseous,” Cefalu said.
Cefalu
also described the skyrocketing
murder rate in Mexico as “people getting killed wholesale,” and the
federal
government gave cartels the guns they need to do it.
To
further prove Fast and Furious
wasn’t botched in its implementation, ATF Phoenix Field Division
Supervisor at
the time, William Newell, described in emails that guns showing up at
crime
scenes in Mexico was proof the operation was working.
The
only people who have been
trustworthy and credible throughout the investigation into Fast and
Furious
have been ATF whistleblowers. ATF management officials and Department
of
Justice officials have done nothing but lie, stonewall and cover-up the
lethal
program.
The
Obama Administration botched the
cover-up of Fast and Furious. Lies perpetuated by the Holder Justice
Department
continue to be shredded by a handful of media outlets, Sen. Charles
Grassley,
Sen. John Cornyn, Rep. Darrell Issa and members of the House Oversight
Committee, but in no way was allowing Mexican cartels to get their
hands on high
powered weapons a “mistake.”
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