Media Blog

The Big Story of 2009 Will Be. . .

. . .Mexico?

Outgoing CIA Director Michael Hayden

Reporting from Washington — Outgoing CIA Director Michael V. Hayden said Thursday that the most pressing issues facing his successor include Iran’s nuclear ambitions and surging violence in Mexico — but not the war in Iraq.

And Joel Kurtzman warns of a “failed state” in today’s WSJ:

Mexico is now in the midst of a vicious drug war. Police officers are being bribed and, especially near the United States border, gunned down. Kidnappings and extortion are common place. And, most alarming of all, a new Pentagon study concludes that Mexico is at risk of becoming a failed state. Defense planners liken the situation to that of Pakistan, where wholesale collapse of civil government is possible.

One center of the violence is Tijuana, where last year more than 600 people were killed in drug violence. Many were shot with assault rifles in the streets and left there to die. Some were killed in dance clubs in front of witnesses too scared to talk.

It may only be a matter of time before the drug war spills across the border and into the U.S. To meet that threat, Michael Chertoff, the outgoing secretary for Homeland Security, recently announced that the U.S. has a plan to “surge” civilian and possibly military law-enforcement personnel to the border should that be necessary.

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