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7 Large Tunnels Beneath U.S.-Mexican Border Raising Security Concerns
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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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 More options Jan 31 2007, 9:07 pm
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Wed, 31 Jan 2007 18:07:25 -0800
Local: Wed, Jan 31 2007 9:07 pm
Subject: 7 Large Tunnels Beneath U.S.-Mexican Border Raising Security Concerns
*Perilous Times

7 Large Tunnels Beneath U.S.-Mexican Border Raising Security Concerns*

January 31, 2007

SAN DIEGO — While key entrance and exit points have been plugged in some
of the biggest tunnels used to ferry people and drugs across the
U.S.-Mexico border, the passageways remain largely intact raising
concerns smugglers reuse them, according to a published report.

In recent years, dozens of tunnels have been discovered running under
the border. The smaller, more crudely constructed passages are easily
destroyed, authorities say. But the larger, more elaborate tunnels
require enormous amounts of material and expertise to fill.

The task to jam up an entire route also is costly and sometimes
complicated if the tunnels run under private property, authorities say.

According to a report in Tuesday's Los Angeles Times, seven of the
largest tunnels discovered under the U.S.-Mexico border have yet to be
filled in, including the so-called Grande Tunnel found in January 2006
that extends nearly half a mile from San Diego to Tijuana.

Filling those tunnels would cost about $2.7 million, according to U.S.
Customs and Border Protection officials, the newspaper said.

Michael Friel, an agency spokesman, said the department is trying to
find money in its budget to complete the work. But critics say the
unfilled tunnels pose an unnecessary national security risk.

"The department should move, find money, and do it," said U.S. Sen.
Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. "This is a huge department with a huge
budget. And if they don't have the money, they should tell us, and we
will seek to get it in the emergency supplemental."

The responsibility for filling tunnels was assigned to Customs and
Border Protection in 2003, after the Department of Homeland Security was
created. The 2007 budget for the border agency is $7.8 billion.

A concern with leaving the tunnels open is the reuse of them by
smugglers, who dig around the plugged entrance points.

In Nogales, Ariz., traffickers have used one tunnel three times over a
four-year span, said Agent Michael Cano, a U.S. Border Patrol spokesman.
Smugglers also have used the concrete that plugs tunnel exits and
entrances to make support walls and ceilings for new tunnels, he said.

U.S. authorities have teamed with structural and civil engineers and
geologists to devise ways to close tunnels. They've experimented with a
type of concrete that will cave in if smugglers use it for support.

But addressing the problem in the U.S. is only one part of the issue.
Many of the tunnels extend into Mexico, where U.S. authorities have no
control.

Mexican authorities have told their U.S. counterparts they've filled
their end of the tunnels, but U.S. officials express doubt citing the
high costs and examples of tunnels being compromised.

Special Agent in Charge Frank Marwood, who heads the U.S. Tunnel Task
Force, said the situation should be handled "by a binational effort."

"If they're not filled in, (smugglers) just branch out at one end or
another," he said.

The Mexican attorney general's office, which handles organized crime,
did not respond to numerous requests from the Times for interviews.


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