by Michael A. Walsh
This just might be the smoking gun we’ve been waiting for to break
the festering “Fast and Furious” gun-running scandal wide open: the
Department of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives apparently
ordered one of its own agents to purchase firearms with taxpayer money,
and sell them directly to a Mexican drug cartel.
Let that sink in:
After months of pretending that “Fast and Furious” was a botched
surveillance operation of illegal gun-running spearheaded by the ATF and
the US attorney’s office in Phoenix, it turns out that the government
itself was selling guns to the bad guys.
Agent John Dodson was ordered to buy four Draco pistols for cash and
even got a letter from his supervisor, David Voth, authorizing a
federally licensed gun dealer to sell him the guns without bothering
about the necessary paperwork.
“Please accept this letter in lieu
of completing an ATF Form 4473 for the purchase of four (4) CAI, Model
Draco, 7.62x39 mm pistols, by Special Agent John Dodson,” read the June
1, 2010, letter. “These aforementioned pistols will be used by Special
Agent Dodson in furtherance of performance of his official duties.”
On
orders, Dodson then sold the guns to known criminals, who first stashed
them away and then -- deliberately unhindered by the ATF or any other
agency -- whisked them off to Mexico.
People were killed with Fast
and Furious weapons, including at least two American agents and
hundreds of Mexicans. And the taxpayers picked up the bill.
So where’s the outrage?
There’s
none from the feds. Attorney General
Eric Holder has consistently stonewalled Rep. Darrell Issa, Sen.
Chuck Grassley and other congressional investigators.
In
a constantly evolving set of lies, Holder has denied knowing anything
about Fast and Furious while at the same time withholding documents from
the House and
Senate committees looking into the mess while muzzling some witnesses and transferring others.
Justice
calls the allegations about Dodson’s operation “false.” But Grassley
says that’s “a lie,” as he told Greta van Susteren the other day. “The
ATF ordered this ATF agent to purchase these guns and in turn sell them,
and supposedly track them,” he said. “But he was a lone wolf in the
operation -- they wouldn’t give him any help for 24-hour surveillance.”
So
now the wheels have come off the official explanation for Fast and
Furious. Of course, that explanation never made much sense in the first
place.
For one thing, the ATF had no authority to track the guns
once they were in Mexico; for another, nobody bothered to inform the
Mexicans of this intrusion on their national sovereignty.
Further, we now know that a host of federal agencies (including the ATF, the
FBI and IRS, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the
Drug Enforcement Administration and,
very probably, top officials at the Department of Homeland Security)
were all in the loop at various levels, as was the White House.
So calling “Fast and Furious” a cockamamie operation gone wrong just isn’t going to cut it anymore.
There
are two possible explanations. The first is that the anti-gun Obama
administration deliberately wanted American guns planted in Mexico in
order to demonize American firearms dealers and gun owners. The
operation was manufacturing “evidence” for the president’s false claim
that we’re to blame for the appalling levels of Mexican drug-war
violence.
If this is true, then Holder & Co. have got to go --
and the trail needs to be followed no matter where it leads. For the
federal government to seek to frame its own citizens is unconscionable.
A
second notion is that the CIA was behind the whole thing, which
accounts for all the desperate wagon-circling. Under this theory, the
Agency feared the
los Zetas drug
cartel was becoming too powerful and might even mount a coup against
the Mexican government. So some 2,000 weapons costing more than $1.25
million were deliberately channeled to the rival Sinaloa cartel, which
operates along the American border, to keep the Zetas in check.
Of
course, there’s a third explanation -- that both scenarios are true,
and that those in charge of Fast and Furious saw an opportunity to shoot
two birds with one Romanian-made AK Draco pistol.
Time for a special prosecutor, who’s both fast and furious.
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/furious_revelation_OhK6TBqPlEpRglHjsSbiBI
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