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Mexican drug war 'alarming' U.S. officials

Posted: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 10:55 AM
Filed Under:

MEXICO CITY – Virtually every day now there are disturbing headlines here about the assassination of yet another Mexican official, gangland-style shootouts in broad daylight, the gruesome discoveries of kidnapped and tortured murder victims – many of them beheaded – and police chiefs quitting their jobs and fleeing the country in terror.

Since Mexican President Felipe Calderon vowed a year and a half ago to confront the drug cartels and take back vast areas of the country that these powerful criminals have controlled for years, more than 4,000 people have been killed. The murder victims include some 500 police officers, soldiers, mayors and other officials. 

As the government pushes into cartel territory, the traffickers fight back while at the same time killing each other in internal battles over the remaining turf and smuggling routes – most of this occurring just south of the U.S. border.

VIDEO: Mexico's drug war crosses the border

Borrowing a page from Colombian President Alvaro Uribe's playbook for fighting traffickers and guerrillas, Calderon has deployed 25,000 army troops and federal police forces around Mexico.   

Their primary mission is to regain control, establish peace, rebuild judicial institutions and try to reign in some of the endemic corruption infecting local police departments. 

The jury is still out on whether any of that has been accomplished yet. But the current Mexican government is certainly trying and is paying a horrible price in human lives. Even Mexico's National Police Chief Edgar Millan was murdered in a hail of bullets inside the protective walls of a Mexico City home.

 "We have no choice, there is no alternative here," Mexico's Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora said, defending the government's crackdown. "If we want to build a sound democracy, a country with a rule of law with liberties, we have to do this and we will."

American officials watch nervously
In the American Southwest particularly, the Mexican drug war is drawing the attention of senators, governors, federal law enforcement officials and sheriff's departments. The White House is also on alert and is urging Congress to approve a $1.4 billion law enforcement aid package for Mexico.

Former U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey, a retired U.S. Army general, insists the United States has a lot at stake and must help the Mexican government win this battle.

"The Mexican president, Calderon, is an honest man, a courageous patriot," McCaffrey said.  "If Mexican authorities don't re-establish control in the six [Mexican] border states along the 2,000 mile-long border, we will see this level of violence, corruption, kidnapping, drug organizations on this side of the frontier."

Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison agrees and argues the violence has already spread north. "It's just a pathetic and terrible situation," Hutchison said. "Our Border Patrol agents have seen hundreds of attacks from across the border. These drug cartels have put bounties on DEA agents' heads on our side."

Americans finance Mexican traffickers
In seeking more help from the United States, Mexican officials point out that most of the financing for the Mexican traffickers comes from the American users of cocaine, marijuana, methamphetamine and heroin smuggled across the border.

U.S. law enforcement officials estimate that $12 to 15 billion a year flows from the United States to the Mexican traffickers. And that is just the bulk currency amount, actual dollar bills, and doesn't include all the money sent by wire transfers.

"In that sense, the U.S. is already financing this war. It is just financing it on the wrong side," Attorney General Medina Mora said grimly.

Another problem is that most of the weapons used by the traffickers come from the United States. Typically, the drug smugglers have much more firepower than local police departments, and sometimes can even outgun the federal police and the Army with high-caliber machine-guns and grenade launchers.

"Most of the weapons, I would say around 95 percent of the weapons that we have seized, come from the U.S.," said Mora. "If the U.S. would stop the flow of weapons to Mexico the equation would change very rapidly here. We need the U.S. to stay committed in this war in reducing demand, in stopping the flow of weapons and stopping the flow of cash."

Mexican traffickers throughout the U.S. 
Another trend that is particularly disturbing to federal drug agents and local authorities is the widespread entrenchment of Mexican smuggling organizations within the United States, and not just along the border area.

In fact, agents say, Mexican smuggling groups have taken over drug distribution operations in U.S. cities from coast to coast. Atlanta is now considered a major Mexican drug-smuggling hub. In Chicago, Mexicans have pushed out local drug dealers and are handling the illicit business themselves. Even in rural Tennessee, sheriff's deputies are faced with more and more criminals speaking Spanish, a language most of the officers can't understand.

While declaring that the cooperation between U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials is at its "best level ever," Mora urged the U.S. Congress to pass the Merida Initiative, the Mexico law enforcement aid package. While the money is important, he argued, the critical component is the commitment it would represent in terms of U.S. assistance in the drug war.

"I have said to my American counterparts that this war cannot be won by neither one of us alone," Mora added.  "If we do not win it together, we will lose it together."

In that argument, the Mexican attorney general is finding U.S. supporters, despite the many detractors who condemn Mexico for its drug-related woes and blame past governments there for allowing the problem to grow out of control.

"We have to be helpful to them, this is not now a thousand miles away. It is right on the border of America and we have to stop it," said Sen. Hutchison.

The former U.S. drug czar, McCaffrey, agreed. "This is the most alarming situation I've seen in Mexico in 15 years," he warned. "Our own interests are at stake. We must stand with these people, they're literally fighting for their lives."

Read more of Mark Potter's reporting on U.S. concerns over the Mexican drug war: 
Border officials fear growing Mexican drug war
Why educate American kids from Mexico?

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Comments

Like the article states, if the U.S. wasn't buying the drugs we wouldn't have this problem. How pathetic that the Americans have lowered themselves to be involved with drugs and for that matter, the world. Greed.
Understand one thing, the average monthly wage in Mexico is $132.00 most of us pay that and more in taxes every week. The lure of easy money, big money running drugs is too great. Just like the booze runners during prohibition, they will stop at nothing to make a quick buck. We are faced with the same situation in Afganistan and the heroin traffickers. I commend President Calderon for his efforts, but it has to be a two pronged attack. Boost the economy to give the people incentive to work legitimate jobs, and stomp out the drug lords with force.
Grenade launchers and machine guns are HEAVILY REGULATED in this country. How are we the major supplier of these arms to the Mexican Drug Cartels? Do we have a problem with arms being stolen from the from the Military or what. That hole should be plugged immediately.
People in the US are not aware of this terrible battle for Mexico's sovernty and liberty.There is no connection in the minds of US drug users with the carnage that Mexicans are sufferring. When the Mexican drug cartels commit these attrocities against Mexican police and politicians, pictures of their bullet riddled bodies should be shown on US television. US drug users must be made aware of the price others are paying for their illegal drug use.
Legalize Marijuana in North America and this issue will be cut in half instantly. Marijuana doesn't cause the crime the laws against it do
What is the real basis of the power that drug traffickers wield? What pays for the traffickers weapons and underlies the corruption of officials? We all know the answer to that question, and yet most have not faced the obvious solution. Remove the drug traffickers economic, social, and political power and influence by removing the vast sums of drug money from their pockets. The only way to achieve that is to make the drugs legal. Period.
One word : LEGALIZE

one more word : TAX

Geez...if only there were some way to develop something....I don't know, maybe like a physical barrier along the border that could restrict the unchecked movemement of drugs, people and weapons. Maybe in the future our scientists can develop the technology required to do something like this, until then we'll just have to dream I guess.
/sarcasm

Wouldn't a barrier fence go a long ways towards slowing down the cross-border implications of the drug war? Isn't it both simple, low tech and elegant all at the same time?

But I guess it's just a lot simpler for the White House and Congress to say "let's throw $1.4 BILLION DOLLARS of YOUR MONEY to our (corrupt) Mexican law enforcement allies".
Then we can all stand around, smile, shake hands and pretend we've accomplished something.

How's that border fence coming along?

Oh I forgot....it's "virtual"...
The republicans scream bloody murder about the border, but their own NRA bribery laced gun policies are whats arming the enemies.
Prohibition was abandoned because of the chaos it created.  We have been able to export that chaos south.  I feel bad for the people in Mexico for having to live with the chaos our country creates.  It is so funny to watch people who are staunchly against decriminalization on one hand complain about immigration problems driven by the chaos of American drug policy.
Terrorist's, now if a drug lord isn't a terrorist I am not sure who is, and their in our back yards, street corners, border towns,  send in the troops. The Mexican people our paying a terrible price for our addiction. Isn't time we help these poeple and save ourselves.  
A lot of this problem could be stopped by legalizing Marijuana ONLY! in the U.S. This realy sucks even our drug production has been outsourced to thugs the world over! We americans can grow better marijuana than anyone! Lets keep this local people! Only buy pot that has the "Made in America" symbol!!
This story cannot be separated from the problem of illegal immigration stemming from south of the US border. The violence will rip apart border communities on the US side. Establishing true border security will no longer be debated on its merits but on the survival of entire cities. For individuals who could not forsee this situation arising the drug war will rage on claiming civility and hope. Part of the blame is at the feet of all businesses in the US who have campaigned for more open borders. Very naive and dangerous.
The problem lies in our failed prohibition policies and our profit driven rehab and prison industries.What would happen if we legalised and regulated marijuana?We would not have 2 million americans incarcerated and a big chunk of mexican drug money would be taken out of play.law enforcement resources would be free to go after the true criminals and americans would not have to break the law for ALCOHOL FREE relaxation.
After years of hearing how bad it is there and not wanting to even visit for fear of being thrown in jail or worse, it is very encouraging to see the leaders trying to make a difference.  The detractors who condemn the past governments in Mexico aren't getting the whole picture. You can't go back in time and say bad, bad Mexican leaders.  They have to move forward and do what they can now.  Hopefully Mexico will get the aid they need.  I can definitely see it crossing over the broders and getting much worse here in the US.
Take a clue from Arlington, Texas which has let drug trafficing go on for twenty five years with the police and local attorneys letting it happen with full knowledge. Why are we having these problems now ??  Duh.....
Good Luck Amigos! As you can see from our sucess at handling any of our drug wars, it's tougher than you think. The drugistas pay better and have better benefits.
Ending the war is easy...Americans just quit using drugs.
Maybe it's time to revisit the legalization of marijuana here in the US. Billions could be kept within our own economy...
Where is the fence that the US was suppose to install
to keep people & drugs from flowing to and from
Mexico.   The fence needs to be build NOW and our
goverment needs to stop "stalling" and get the job
done.  It is only going to get worse.
legalize drugs regulate it take the advatage out of the drug dealers hand and also the money that can be made on the taxes can help the trillion doller fedral and local budgets and even pay for a healthcare program for all americans
What would happen if these illegal drugs were to be legalized and federally regulated. It seems we did not learn any lessons from the failed attempt at prohibition in which people were killed in the streets.
The message here is clear.  LEGALIZE IT.  if there is a signifigant drop in the need for Mexican Marijuana the drug trafficers will be put out of business or have to compete with legitimate (american) outlets which equalls a win-win coalition.  They feed their families and the sick get the meds they need. WE ARE DRIVING OUR OWN "DRUG WAR" WITH MARIJUANA RESTRICTIONS.  Give the people what they want and give them the ability to supply it to themselves and this problem will disapear or be signifigantly reduced.  Unfortunately, the innoccent people of a deprived nation are paying the price for a resricted one and going to extremes to get their families fed.  I know I sound like a stoner advocate but the starving and dying kids are supposed to be the focus of reform.  You cant sit in your comfortable house and read the horrible stories of "alarming" drug cartels and ignore the fact that if the shoe was on the other foot you would do what it takes to feed your kids too.  LEGALIZE IT, end the madness.    
I would have to agree with a lot of the above. LEGALIZE marijuana! It is a stupid fight that we will never ever win! Tax the sale of this and use the profits to build and secure our borders!

We will never win in a fight where the average person in Mexico makes $25 a week and the drug smugglers will give them $200 a week! Their fight is feed my family or don't!

Take the power away from these drug dealers. Alchol is legal and it does not mean that I drink at work or while driving. Cigerettes are legal and I do not smoke. If crack was legal, I still would not do this! This prohibition mentality that our government has is just out dated and will not work! All we have got out of the war on drugs is more prisons, more officials and more dollars for Washington. Our streets are not safer. Our kids are not safer and we are not safer!
To the last 3 pot-headed imbeciles who responded to this. Pot has fried your brain!! Not only are YOU just as responsible for those 4,000 dead, You're too self-centered and self righteous to even accept the blame yourself. It is YOUR selfishness and YOUR indufference that has caused this situation but you're too hashed out to admit it. Maybe if it touches YOUR home with the the sting of DEATH as it has MINE, you won't be the oblivious apathetic little creeps you appear to be on line. It isn't the fault of the LAW it lies with three letters Y O U.
I think this issue will end up costing both countries dearly and requires immediate attention.  If we don't end it now, we will soon find out borders less efficient with lots of time delays which will cost Billions of dollars of trade each way.  That in the end will cost consumers more for products on both sides.  Either way, we will pay for it one one or the other!  Let's help our neighbor and one of our closest alley.  In the end we are all human, and how we can look away when people are getting murdered (example Mexican police) for doing the right thing is beyond my American idiology.
Problem can be solved by arresting the users, and putting them in work camps dedicated to building the Fence.  Stiffer Sentences and recoup the cost of Rehab from the users would go a long way too.
To the independant from Va, gun ownership requires no bribery. It is a constitutional RIGHT. It is people like you that caused that right to be part of our constitution since without it your kind could gain power.

I think you'll find those guns do not go directly south. They are legally traded to foreign countries where their corrupt owners sell them to black marketers who then send them into Mexico or South America. The arms trade is fueled by arms traders. There is not a concern if poppies fund the trade or cocaine.
Welcome to MexAmerica - it used to be that Mexicans took only jobs Americans didn't want not there taking jobs they do want. If your not bilingual in your current position you could be replaced by a Mexican. There taking over America at an alarming rate, multiplying like rabbits and don't kid yourself they really do hate Americans.They already have crossed our borders with drugs,crime you name- the worst is already living here!
We need enforcement of our laws. Remove illegals immediately. Build our fence! Deploy troops on our border. Help Mexico with business incentives to keep their people honestly employed. Hammer the druglords and anyone in those communities that support them.  Legalizing marajuana only increases the amount of other illegal and more dangerous drugs coming across our border. These terrorist criminals won't stop, they are in it for money and power.
Its a sad thing.
Our country is in dire straights...to legalize ANY drug is only going to add more CRAP to our communities. Weed makes people LAZY...we already have enough filth and laziness in the U.S.

To solve the drug problem, we need to remove illegals who help distribute. We need to disallow short trips in and out of Mexico. One to Two days of travel on either side can only mean one thing...TRACK these short timers.

Stop allowing the naturalization of citizens without jobs.

Stop allowing foriegners to hold "PERMANENT," permanent resident cards. (Those who are allowed to travel back and forth freely but NEVER apply for citiszenship.

Put tougher penalties on drug arrests so that users give up pushers and pushers give up distributors here in the U.S.

AMERICANS: STOP DOING DRUGS...if your for legalization, you are for MURDER because it all starts wtih you BUYING IT.

legalize and tax. It takes the business away from the bad guys and adds to state's revenue. In this free country, a place that sends it's children off to die for the advancement and protection of freedom, the government sure has a lot of laws about what we can not do.
I don't think the blame lays on American shoulders only.  Look at all the legal/illegal mexicans in our country that STILL have close ties to their families in their motherland.  We NEED to work in conjunction with Mexico on the legal and illegal side.. for the benefit of our nation.  I don't know if legalization is the answer, but the government would get their precious tax money.. and a maybe a little more control of the situation. And maybe both sides of the border could have some peace.  It's not an issue of drugs.. good or bad.  It's an issue of humanity being tormented by greed. The drug money is merely fueling the fire.
does anyone remember the "Fallstead Act" and what that did when it was removed.Makes you think.
The so called fence proposal is ludicrous.the fence would have to be 60 ft high and 60 ft underground.Our industrious amigos can dig tunnels by hand faster than we can with heavy equipment.Also.the N A F T A traffic crossing the border legaly every day carries more drugs into this country than immigrant mules.Our best hope is that are lawmakers repeal the marijuana prohibition laws.But seriously folks,that won"t happen as long as money can be made through profit prisons,forced rehab,and unconstitutional seisure of personal property
It's true that this problem cannot be solved without both countries working together. However a lot of it can be solved with heavier border control. It's very straight forward I know, but a lot of people seem to not realize how long 2000 miles are.

Also, 1.4 Billion dollars to the Mexican government is a good way to clear your concience, but it won't do anything for the situation. What needs to be done is the US needs to realize that this isn't just going on in its backyard, but in it own living room. Killing the rats in your backyard won't get rid of the ones under your bed.

So what do we plan on doing... hoping that 1.4 Bill will make the Mexican Army come and clean out the U.S. too... when they can't even clean out Mexico alone.
Didn't Ronald Reagan declare a "War on Drugs"? those republican presidents are really good at declaring war, they're just not to good at finishing them off.
Reminds me once again of the 250 marines Ronald Reagan put into harms way, got them killed while they slept, then he tucked tail and ran. What a great president, now they're naming everthing standing after him, probably do the same for W too, just goes to show where the money goes.
The main problem here, as with every other problem, is that we have gotten to lax and week willed on just flat out killing criminals.  We've turned into a country of panty waist cry babies that that are afraid to admit we've caused our own problems and don't want to fix them. As much as I absolutely HATE to say it, the middle eastern countries are doing to criminals what we should be doing.
thanks to BRIAN DARGITZ for your emotional view.it was guys like you who kept AL CAPONE in buisness.if you remove the profits you remove the violence,I'll stop smoking if you stop drinking!
If the problem is two pronged, with our guns and money flowing into Mexico and the drugs flowing out. I can't believe so many of our politicians are against a border fence that will allow us to effect flow BOTH directions. Also, if we were to crack down on illegal imigration, we wouldn't have to worry about the Mexican drug cartels setting up shop in Chicago and Tennesee. It seems so obvious!
Let's see if I have this right: The same US officials who have failed to seal our borders with Mexico and have virtually shoved aside America's illegal immigration problem from center stage, are now "alarmed" over the growing Mexican drug war spilling over into the US. Congress should be alarmed allright-- at their own stupidity. Now the US will compound its idiocies by giving more tax dollars to Mexico to fight the drug war, which will do nothing to solve the problem so long as the borders between us and Mexico remain porous. Is that so difficult to understand?  Apparently so, because we continue to be beholden to the Open Borders, multiculturalist crowd that is marvelously adept at banishing reality in order to exist in a world that exists only in dreams.  It's enough to make an ordinary, law-abiding American vomit.
When will our government leaders wake up and look at the true solution!!  When alcohol was legalized, it basicly put the mobs out of business!!  
Most all gangs are funded by illegal drug sales!!  Look at the many benefits we would have if the government would legalize them!
1.  It would basicly cut off the money and power of the drug lords.
2.  The government could control the products put out.
3.  It would creat numerous jobs in the US.
4.  Not to mention the billions and billions of dollars this would bring into the governments hands.
5.  And all the money for taxing the drugs produced legally.
Heck, this could solve the United States financial issues and maybe even take us out of the red for a change!!
It would free up approx. 80 percent of our prisons and make room for the real criminals walking around free because the prisons are too full of little petty drug offenders which is also a waste of our tax dollars!!
The goverment needs to face the fact that they will never win the war on drugs the way they have been trying to win since before I was born 50 years ago!!!
**It's time to try a different way!!!!  Their way hasn't worked and never will!!!!
And, furthermore, just because a person chooses to use a drug does not make that person a bad person!!
The majority still hold jobs, have families, pay taxes, etc.  So get a clue!!!!!
I go to Laredo, Tx. often, and into Nuevo Laredo, Mx.
When I saw the federales patrolling the streets there with ak47 armed men it made the hair stand up on my arms.  This is right on our border, folks.  This is NOT new, it should have been addressed long ago.  Now members of the Mexican Army patrol there.  A fence?  Ha.  Ask your candidates what they are planning to do about the rampant gangs in our cities?  How did M-13 get so entrenched in our country?  I have no answer, just alot of apprehension- and disgust for the users that make this possible.
Poster Brian, I am sincerely sorry for your loss as you indicate in your post.  I would like to clarify that I am not a drug user but a very strong opponent of my money being spent on keeping people from getting what they want if they really want it.  Which is exactly the problem with the system of declaring drugs (especially Marijuana) a crime.  Your loss was at the hands of those who oppose free will and enforce oppression at the cost of human (not just american) rights.  You should look at the poeple you are protecting (ie big government) for the bloody hands not your fellow americans who were promised liberty and freedom for all.  LEGALIZE IT and our families can live.  
Funny how Americans scream about 4000 soldiers  being killed and billions being spent on this war in Iraq, but look at the war on drugs.  How much do you think has been spent since Nixon started this war on drugs?  How many people have been killed in this war on drugs?  The only way to “win” this war on drugs is to end this war on drugs and legalize them and treat the addicts.  Instead we will spend another 100 billion and thousands of lives while politicians sit at home and have a drink and pop another sleeping pill.
Legalize marijuana. This would solve so many of the problems in Mexico and the US. And lets face it, marijuana is not a drug, it's an herb and could be useful in so many other ways.
Legalizing drugs won't help the problem. They'll just find another way to illegally make money. I read poverty mentioned and that's on the money. Even if you legalized everything including meth and heroine, they are going to find some way of making money. Who knows what they'll do. Kidnap teens for the sex trade, or kidnap Americans or others to donate organs to dying people on the black market... they're very creative and will simply create havok some other way. The real issue is poverty, and access to guns, and the corruption that has weakened Mexico from the beginning. U.S. Aide will probably not be enough. We need to send some of our own soldiers, and quite likely even Special Forces to kick some cartel ass. That, or arm the Mexican soldiers and police with our weapons and send some advisors to help out. With the Iraq war and the fighting in Afghanistan going on, this is not likely to happen.
what good is a physical fence when they've got boats and planes? - leaglize drugs & stop the artillery leaks.
The marijuana users in previous posts are correct.  All be it they are probably crazy liberal hippies(I am a conservative.  They are absoluetly correct, Marijuana needs to be legalized and tax.  there are many more alcohol related deaths in this country as opposed to the number of marijunana deaths.  And to Mr. Dargitz, I have had Marijuana play parts in deaths of family members, however I dont blame marijuana for their deaths.  That is like blaming the gun maker for a someone shooting someone.


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