Tancredo: Clinton aids Obama’s ‘war on guns’

By WND Staff

Former U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., says Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is just aiding and abetting President Obama’s war on guns with her new suggestion that the U.S. is at fault in the Mexico drug cartel war.

“She’s part of Obama’s plan to conduct a war on guns,” he said. “He’s opposed to private ownership of guns, opposed to concealed carry laws. He doesn’t believe we should be able to carry guns as individuals.”

Tancredo was interviewed by Greg Corombos of Radio America on the issue of the violence along the Mexico-U.S. border, blamed on battles among the various drug cartels in Mexico.

The audio interview is embedded here:



In an interview with Fox News, Clinton said the drug gangs have moved into the United States to feed the addiction of “American young people.” And she added that the border between the nations is “unstable, insecure.”

Then she continued, “It would inaccurate to absolve ourselves of responsibility or to absolve the Mexicans of responsibility. This is a shared responsibility. We share the border. And as you rightly said, the demand for illegal drugs is what keeps these guys in business. And it’s a, you know, multi-billion-dollar, $25-plus billion industry.

“The guns that are sold in the United States, which are illegal in Mexico, get smuggled and shipped across our border and arm these terrible drug-dealing criminals so that they can outgun these poor police officers along the border and elsewhere in Mexico,” she said.

“So we’ve got to help out here. We can’t stand by and say, Well, you know, you guys just do the best you can, when we, unfortunately, are the market for drugs, when a lot of the money is laundered in the United States back into the hands of the drug kingpins, and when the weapons have come from our country. So I think recognizing the co-responsibility is just stating the obvious,” Clinton said.

Tancredo said that’s just wrong, and Clinton knows it.

“The heavy weaponry is not coming from the U.S.,” he said, citing the Mexican military as a source for drug cartels for automatic weapons, as well as gun dealers throughout South and Central America.

He said the Mexican army has sustained 110,000 desertions in the last few years alone, and those soldiers often have taken their weapons with them to sell them later on.

Tancredo said the solution is to militarize the border, a move that would stop the drugs going north.