
Adler outlined a plan to eliminate insecurity in Buenos Aires province
The security specialist denounced the chaos and lack of control in Buenos Aires and proposed creating a National Guard, new prisons, and retraining the forces
Daniel Adler, a specialist in security, urban counterterrorism, and asymmetric operations, described the security situation in the province of Buenos Aires as "dramatic" and directly targeted Axel Kicillof.
In his statement against the governor, he asserted that behind the phenomenon there is "an ideological component against security and in favor of criminality" and accused him of maintaining "a province where the worse, the better," because "the more chaos, the more lack of control, the more problematic the city, the province, the better it is electorally for him because people become more dependent."
"The security situation is dramatic. What is happening is desperate," Adler emphasized, who recalled that this is a province that has 40% of all the Argentine Republic, 17.5 million people, where a criminal act is reported every 30 seconds.

However, he warned that "80% of the victims feed the dark figures of insecurity, that is, 8 out of 10 victims never file a report." He stressed: "Four murders a day that do not appear in the media, that the Police section has been eliminated from all provincial digital portals, is already an ideological issue."
Meanwhile, Adler stated that the solution, first, is political will, and detailed that out of the 125,000 police officers there are, 40% are on medical and psychiatric leave, and there is a record of suicide within the forces. Faced with this situation, he proposed creating a comprehensive plan from the Ministry of Security, which includes assigning police duties to 10% of the armed forces and retraining them in:
- Disruptive techniques such as suspect detection
- Clothing psychology
- Evasive driving
- Vehicle shooting
- Krav Maga techniques
- Civil counter-interrogation techniques

He also considered it necessary to train citizens to begin generating civil or neighborhood counterintelligence and to move forward with the creation of a new private prison, similar to CECOT in El Salvador, or as he describes it: "a center for the confinement of terrorism, narcoterrorism, and where we can isolate the most dangerous people from society."
Adler also reported that in the province of Buenos Aires there are 43,000 inmates who have at least one cell phone, which represents 73% of the total prison population. He also pointed out that 65% of crimes are planned inside prisons, within penitentiaries, through communications that can be made with mobile devices. As a positive example to reverse the situation, he highlighted the case of Rosario, where the zero cell phones policy was implemented and it was a success.

Finally, he maintained that "all of this is possible, it is feasible, with training, with preparation" and concluded: "We are in a position to state that in 90 days the situation can be reversed, but the fight is ideological, it is against Kicillof's indoctrination and the province."
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