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News (Media Awareness Project) - US DC: Editorial: Murder on the Border
Title:US DC: Editorial: Murder on the Border
Published On:2010-12-29
Source:Washington Times (DC)
Fetched On:2011-03-09 17:47:19
MURDER ON THE BORDER

Americans Are Dying Because of White House Inaction

Brian Terry died for President Obama's sins. Mr. Terry, a U.S. Border
Patrol agent, was killed during operations against bandits near the
southern Arizona town of Rio Rico, approximately 15 miles inside the
U.S. border.

Here and along other infiltration routes, gangsters prey on illegal
aliens and drug smugglers or serve as private security forces for
gangs engaged in illegal activities. Agent Terry was part of a
four-man Border Patrol Tactical Unit sent to engage the bandits, and
he was shot down in the resulting firefight.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano offered condolences to
Mr. Terry's family but met a sharp rejoinder from his father, Kent,
who said, "You gotta wake your man up in the White House." Ms.
Napolitano countered that Mr. Obama has "done more in the last two
years than any other president," and when pressed by reporters on the
matter said she did not "think it appropriate for the media to try to
pick this as a fight." The border-security issue, however, was not
invented by the press, and government functionaries are poor judges of
what kind of media coverage is appropriate, especially when it deals
with their own questionable performance.

The Terry family called Ms. Napolitano's claim that Mr. Obama has done
more than any other president to deal with border security "empty
words," and the notion is easily proved false.

Whatever accomplishments the Obama administration may claim, they pale
against the aggressive and successful border-security policies
President Eisenhower pursued in the 1950s. Woodrow Wilson's response
to cross-border activity by Mexican gangs was to send 4,800 troops
over the border.

Mr. Obama's most notable actions have been to unleash the Justice
Department on Arizona for taking small steps to try to deal with the
problem of illegals and to push the Dream Act, a backdoor amnesty
nightmare that thankfully ended when the Senate woke up and defeated
it.

Worsening conditions in the United States reflect the situation in
northern Mexico, which resembles a full-scale insurgency. There, the
"war on drugs" is not just a slogan; it's a daily struggle fought with
guns and machetes.

More than 30,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence in
Mexico since 2006. In 2010, narco killings were up 73 percent over
2009. Mexico tied this year with Pakistan for the greatest number of
journalists killed during the year (14). The northern state of Sonora
is under a literal state of siege as drug cartels struggle over access
to the most lucrative smuggling routes into America. In Juarez,
Mexico, across the Rio Grande from El Paso, Texas, almost nine people
are killed on average per day, making it proportionately the most
violent city in the world.

Conditions there are so dangerous that college football players from
Notre Dame and Miami in El Paso for the Sun Bowl have surrendered
their passports to their coaches and been briefed by the FBI on the
perils of crossing the border.

Northern Mexico is descending into drug-fueled chaos and soon will
join the list of the world's ungovernable spaces.

It's a growing threat that reaches across the U.S. border through
smuggling, illegal immigration, secondary crime and potential
terrorist infiltration. If Mr. Obama had done more than any other
president to address the issue, it wouldn't be making more headlines.

Ms. Napolitano says the press should not pick this issue as a fight,
but we hope Mr. Obama will, when he gets back from his vacation.
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