05/30/10
From AP
Pirates threaten boats on US-Mexico border lake
Zapata County is in far South Texas. The town of Zapata is
located close to the border, near Falcon Lake
ZAPATA, Texas (AP) - The waters of Falcon Lake normally beckon boaters with
waterskiing and world-record bass fishing. But this holiday weekend, fishermen
on the waters that straddle the U.S.-Mexico border are on the lookout for
something more sinister: pirates.
Twice in recent weeks, fishermen have been robbed at gunpoint by marauders that
the local sheriff says are "spillover" from fighting between rival Mexican drug
gangs.
Boaters are concerned about their safety, and the president of the local Chamber
of Commerce is trying to assure people that everything's fine on the U.S. side
of the lake.
At the fishing camp his family has owned for 50 years, Jack Cox now sleeps with
a loaded shotgun at his feet and a handgun within reach.
In the American waters, Cox said, "you're safer, but you're not safe." Mexican
commercial fishermen regularly cross to set their nets illegally, why wouldn't
gunmen do the same? he asked.
Two weeks ago, the Texas Department of Public Safety warned boaters to avoid the
international boundary that zig-zags through the lake, which is 25 miles long
and 3 miles across at its widest point. Authorities also urged anyone on the
water to notify relatives of their boating plans to aid law enforcement in case
of trouble.
Since issuing the warning, most boats have stayed on the U.S. side.
"That's a good indication. It means they're getting the message," Texas Parks
and Wildlife Capt. Fernando Cervantes said Thursday as he patrolled with two
other game wardens. "They're still coming out, but they're not going across."
The border is marked by 14 partially submerged concrete towers that mark the Rio
Grande's path before the lake was created in 1954.
Game wardens and the U.S. Border Patrol watch over the lake but do not cross
into Mexican waters, and no Mexican law enforcement is visible.
Men armed with assault rifles robbed fishermen on the Mexican side of Falcon
Lake on April 30 and May 6. They traveled in the low-slung, underpowered
commercial Mexican fishing boats that are familiar here. They asked for money,
drugs and guns, and took what cash was available. No one was hurt.
A third incident happened a couple of days before the warning was issued, but
Cervantes said the fishermen were able to escape without the thieves boarding
their boat.
The attacks "were really unusual," Cervantes said. "We had never seen it, and
then they started up."
Violence on the Mexican side of the lake has been climbing for several months.
A fractured partnership between the region's dominant Gulf Cartel and its former
enforcers, the Zetas, plunged many of the area's Mexican border cities into
violence. Police stations were attacked, officers killed and rolling gun battles
between the gangs and with the Mexican military became commonplace.
"To me, this is spillover violence," Zapata County Sheriff Sigifredo Gonzalez
Jr. said. "I don't do the Chamber of Commerce talk. I talk reality."
Still, the sheriff says, boaters should safe provided they stay on the American
side.
Cox, 81, says it was only a matter of time before the violence from Mexico crept
onto the water. And the idea that gunmen looking to score easy cash from
fishermen would not cross the lake's imaginary boundary doesn't make sense, he
said.
That perspective is what worries Chamber of Commerce President Paco Mendoza.
"What's keeping our town alive is our lake," Mendoza said. In recent years,
drilling in the county's oilfields has virtually stopped, and the wells are no
longer producing like they once did. In those days, oilfield workers packed
Zapata's restaurants and hotels, he said.
So Zapata increasingly looks to the lake for economic growth. Five fishing
tournaments are scheduled between now and July, and a few big ones are set for
next year.
"As far as we know, all of our contracts are still in play," Mendoza said.
Falcon Lake landed on the national map of fishing destinations after the 2008
Bassmaster Elite Series tournament, where bass-fishing world records were
broken.
The pirate warning could hurt businesses that depend on the lake, "but anglers
will continue to come to Falcon because of the great fishing," Mendoza said.
Norma Amaya, who runs a tackle shop with her husband, insists there is plenty of
good fishing in U.S. waters. She points to a photo taken in December of a woman
holding a 13.2-pound bass and smiling broadly.
Amaya said her husband's guide service had had a couple cancellations since the
pirate warning, but they are still booked solid for next year's peak season,
which runs from December to March.
They've stopped selling Mexican fishing licenses because no one is fishing over
there now. Robert Amaya stopped taking clients into Mexican waters back in
March, when violence was peaking in Mexico.
"It is dangerous over there (in northern Mexico), I wouldn't advise anyone to
cross," she said.
Norma Amaya said the reports of pirates "have been blown out of proportion. It's
probably just some hoodlums. I don't think the cartels want the exposure."
As he helped launch his cousin's bass boat from Falcon Lake State Park, Ronnie
Guerra said he hadn't heard much about the pirates. But he knew enough to stay
on his side of the lake.
"We already know what's going on on the other side," he said. "It's been going
on for a long time."
* * * * *

In 1973, toward the end of the unpleasantness in Southeast Asia. The capitol of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, was pretty much cut off from reliable land re-supply by the Khmer Rouge guerillas. Some cargo was airlifted into Ponchentong airfield, but heavy and bulk cargo was carried by ship up the Mekong through Vietnam to Phnom Penh. These ships had to travel in convoys escorted by U.S. Navy gunboats, U.S. Army helicopter gunships and U.S. Air Force fighter-bombers and special operations gunships.
The escorts were required because the North Vietnamese Army (in the Vietnam part of the Mekong Delta) and the Khmer Rouge (upstream on the Mekong from the Cambodian border to near Phnom Penh) were pretty much anywhere under the jungle cover along the river banks. Armed with small arms, machine guns, rocket and grenade launchers and light artillery, they could mangle unarmed transport ships.
The Army, Navy and Air Force flying firepower that was escorting the convoy was controlled via a Forward Air Controller (FAC). The FAC was a qualified Air Force fighter pilot flying a light, highly maneuverable plane armed with marker rockets and radios that enabled him to talk with all parties involved. When enemy fire broke out, he would go to the location, mark it, determine who had the appropriate weapons to counter it and direct them onto it. The times that the bad guys launched a speed boat to make a run out at the convoy, we found that the most effective weapon was guns. A well aimed one second burst would generally turn an attack boat into splinters. The fighters all carried the 20 mm Vulcan gatling gun (6,000 rounds per minute). The AC-130 gunship at that time also carried a 40 mm gun and a 105 mm howitzer for killing trucks.
20 mm Vulcan demonstration
To make a long story short. They have a problem down there at Zapata/Canyon Lake and nobody is doing anything about it. Pirates have been around for 500 years or more. I think by international agreement (de jure or de facto) the penalty for piracy is death, rendered as soon as possible. Now, in the Southern United States there are based a large number of active and reserve Air Force Special Operations gunship units and I have no idea how many active and reserve Army Aviation gunship units. (I include National Guard units under the generic "reserve" category.) These guys need constant training to maintain their skills and their combat edge.
The solution is obvious. Operation Pirate Hunt. I ask for no credit or compensation for this idea; I offer it freely to the government as a retired patriot, and wish the aircrews "Godspeed and good hunting".