News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Editorial: US Not Exempt From Border Violence |
Title: | US FL: Editorial: US Not Exempt From Border Violence |
Published On: | 2009-01-13 |
Source: | Miami Herald (FL) |
Fetched On: | 2009-01-21 07:15:25 |
U.S. NOT EXEMPT FROM BORDER VIOLENCE
Mexican Drug Gangsters Pose Threat In This Country
Mexican President Felipe CalderA3n, who met with President-elect
Barack Obama on Monday, has vowed to put drug gangsters in his country
out of business -- and he has backed up his words with actions. Mr.
CalderA3n has no other choice if he wants to keep Mexico from turning
into a narco-state, but the decision has resulted in a frightening
increase in violence, particularly along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Body Count Rising Daily
Mexican border cities from Matamoros to Tijuana have become
battlegrounds for drug gangsters fighting each other and
law-enforcement authorities, with the body count rising by the day. In
Tijuana alone, the death toll from drug violence in 2008 reached a
reported 829. The total number of slayings because of the drug wars in
Mexico reached some 5,300 in 2008, more than double the 2,477 reported
in 2007.
Frankly, it doesn't take a lot of imagination to perceive that, as
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said last week, the
United States might eventually see a ''significant spillover'' of violence.
That's why Mr. Chertoff decided to create a ''contingency plan'' to
combat violence along this country's southern border. Once he has
become president, Mr. Obama must ensure that his designated Homeland
Security director, Gov. Janet Napolitano of Arizona, picks up where
Mr. Chertoff leaves off, not only in finalizing a plan to coordinate
with the Pentagon, but also working with Congress to see that the plan
is well funded.
Why, after all, should the United States be exempt from the violence
when our country represents the biggest market for drug consumption in
the world? For decades, the United States has been shielded from
significant security threats along its borders by virtue of enjoying
good relations with its neighbors. The relationship, as President
CalderA3n and Mr. Obama noted, remains strong. Still, the threat of
spillover violence is rising because of the battle to control access
to the U.S. drug market.
Challenge At Home
Last month, the Justice Department's National Drug Intelligence Center
reported that the same gangsters responsible for Mexico's violence are
taking root here. ''Mexican drug-trafficking organizations represent
the greatest organized crime threat to the United States,'' the report
said. ``The influence of Mexican drug-trafficking organizations over
domestic-drug trafficking is unrivaled.''
If anything, the U.S. government has been slow to recognize the
threat. Gov. Napolitano, fortunately, comes from a border state and is
well aware of the problems caused by drug trafficking. Mr. Obama's new
national-security team will have its hands full with challenges from
the Middle East to South Asia. Some of these challenges may take
priority, but none will be closer to home than the threat posed by
drug-trafficking violence in Mexico.
Mexican Drug Gangsters Pose Threat In This Country
Mexican President Felipe CalderA3n, who met with President-elect
Barack Obama on Monday, has vowed to put drug gangsters in his country
out of business -- and he has backed up his words with actions. Mr.
CalderA3n has no other choice if he wants to keep Mexico from turning
into a narco-state, but the decision has resulted in a frightening
increase in violence, particularly along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Body Count Rising Daily
Mexican border cities from Matamoros to Tijuana have become
battlegrounds for drug gangsters fighting each other and
law-enforcement authorities, with the body count rising by the day. In
Tijuana alone, the death toll from drug violence in 2008 reached a
reported 829. The total number of slayings because of the drug wars in
Mexico reached some 5,300 in 2008, more than double the 2,477 reported
in 2007.
Frankly, it doesn't take a lot of imagination to perceive that, as
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said last week, the
United States might eventually see a ''significant spillover'' of violence.
That's why Mr. Chertoff decided to create a ''contingency plan'' to
combat violence along this country's southern border. Once he has
become president, Mr. Obama must ensure that his designated Homeland
Security director, Gov. Janet Napolitano of Arizona, picks up where
Mr. Chertoff leaves off, not only in finalizing a plan to coordinate
with the Pentagon, but also working with Congress to see that the plan
is well funded.
Why, after all, should the United States be exempt from the violence
when our country represents the biggest market for drug consumption in
the world? For decades, the United States has been shielded from
significant security threats along its borders by virtue of enjoying
good relations with its neighbors. The relationship, as President
CalderA3n and Mr. Obama noted, remains strong. Still, the threat of
spillover violence is rising because of the battle to control access
to the U.S. drug market.
Challenge At Home
Last month, the Justice Department's National Drug Intelligence Center
reported that the same gangsters responsible for Mexico's violence are
taking root here. ''Mexican drug-trafficking organizations represent
the greatest organized crime threat to the United States,'' the report
said. ``The influence of Mexican drug-trafficking organizations over
domestic-drug trafficking is unrivaled.''
If anything, the U.S. government has been slow to recognize the
threat. Gov. Napolitano, fortunately, comes from a border state and is
well aware of the problems caused by drug trafficking. Mr. Obama's new
national-security team will have its hands full with challenges from
the Middle East to South Asia. Some of these challenges may take
priority, but none will be closer to home than the threat posed by
drug-trafficking violence in Mexico.
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