Friday, June 22, 2012

'Fast and Furious' Story Gets Legs

"Fast and Furious hasn’t been discussed a lot in the mainstream media, which is why the facts can seem so preposterous when you read them for the first time," writes Tim Stanley at the UK Telegraph. "But the story is slowly unraveling and the public is catching up with the madness" following a House Oversight & Government Reform Committee vote to hold Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt for withholding documents and President Obama's 11th hour decision to invoke Executive Privilege on them. Stanley does a masterful job of summarizing the story succinctly:
Here’s what Fast and Furious is all about — and for the uninitiated, be prepared for a shock.

In 2009, the US government instructed Arizona gun sellers illegally to sell arms to suspected criminals. Agents working for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) were then ordered not to stop the sales but to allow the arms to “walk” across the border into the arms of Mexican drug-traffickers.

According to the Oversight Committee’s report, “The purpose was to wait and watch, in hope that law enforcement could identify other members of a trafficking network and build a large, complex conspiracy case…. [The ATF] initially began using the new gun-walking tactics in one of its investigations to further the Department’s strategy. The case was soon renamed ‘Operation Fast and Furious.”

Tracing the arms became difficult, until they starting appearing at bloody crime scenes. Many Mexicans have died from being shot by ATF sanctioned guns, but the scandal only became public after a US federal agent, Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry, was killed by one of them in a fire fight. ATF whistle blowers started to come forward and the Department of Justice was implicated. It’s estimated that the US government effectively supplied 1,608 weapons to criminals, at a total value of over $1 million. Aside from putting American citizens in danger, the AFT also supplied what now amounts to a civil war within Mexico.

It’s important to note that the Bush administration oversaw something similar to Fast and Furious. Called Operation Wide Receiver, it used the common tactic of “controlled delivery,” whereby agents would allow an illegal transaction to take place, closely follow the movements of the arms, and then descend on the culprits. But Fast and Furious is different because it was “uncontrolled delivery,” whereby the criminals were essentially allowed to drop off the map. Perhaps more importantly, Wide Receiver was conducted with the cooperation of the Mexican government. Fast and Furious was not.
Stanley draws a parallel to another U.S. president's effort to shield sensitive material by invoking Executive Privilege, concluding,
...forty years later almost to the day, here we have Obama making the same mistake. Perhaps it's an act of chivalry to stand by Holder; perhaps it's an admission of guilt. Either way, it sinks the Oval Office ever further into the swamp that is Fast and Furious.

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