Shmuel Rosner, Chief U.S. Correspondent for the prestigious Israeli newspaper Haaretz, listened to an anonymous Israeli expert on the fences the Jewish State has erected on the Gaza and West Bank borders offer advice to Americans on how to build and run a barrier on the Mexican border. The Israeli fences have been highly successful at cutting down on the number of suicide-bombers, who are (by definition) highly motivated.
"Israeli  advice on the Mexico fence: be ruthless."
... Money: It will probably cost more than you think. Why? Because that's always  the way it is with such projects. Americans, the Israeli says, tend to be very  structured in their work, in a way that has many benefits but also some  limitations. It means that they waste a lot of money on "process" and  "management" and "studies" before they really act. They make  no short-cuts, thus save no money. In the last issue of The National Journal,  the Israeli fence is mentioned as the example to use when calculating the cost  of such a fence (2000 mile fence = $6.4 billion dollars). The Israeli expert  thinks the Americans will end up paying more.
Efficiency: It can work, the expert says and other Israeli know-hows agree.  Don't buy the argument of liberal opponents who say "no fence can stop  people from coming." If done in a proper way, the fence can work. It can  achieve whatever goal the U.S. wants it to, "100 percent, 90 percent, 80  percent prevention. Just make the right commitment and you'?ll get  results."
Tactics: Don't just rely on sophisticated machinery and equipment. You need  people on the ground using the equipment to pursue the invaders. They need to  react fast, they need intelligence, and they need to be tireless. It will only  take a couple of months before the flow of immigrants will become much weaker.
Intelligence: Recruit people on the Mexican side to be your eyes and ears and to  tell you what the smugglers are up to. Make sure you can communicate fast, and  react even faster. Good intelligence can be the key factor for success.
Routine: The smugglers will be inventive and will look for ways around you. If  you stick to some regulated routine, you'll end up wasting your time and your  money. Surprise them where they don't expect you, make them understand that no  place is safe, no route out of reach. "Don't police them, fight them."
Ruthlessness: Is it really important for the Americans? If it is, they should be  prepared to show it. "Make the other side understand that this is no game -  that life can be in danger," says the expert. "I know this is the  toughest advice of all, but short of doing it the Americans will end up  pretending to stop illegal immigrants rather than really doing it. At the end of  the day, it is very simple: America is more powerful than the smugglers -  meaning, it can deter them from doing what they do." But there's one  condition necessary to keep this preponderance of power working: "It should  be as important for America to stop the illegal new comers as it is for them to  come."
Danger: You mean they have to shoot the smugglers? "No, they have to stop  them. But if they run away they have to chase them, and if they resist they need  to use force. Eventually, they'll end up doing things you don't want people to  watch on television. I'm not sure if they have the resolve and the stomach to do  it. Maybe it's not as important for them as they claim it is."
Conduct: Corruption can be a serious problem on the sealed border. As it gets  tougher to enter the U.S, people will be ready to pay a high price for it, and  the temptation to help those people in something one shouldn't underestimate.  Take it into account while devising the system.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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