Mexican Drug Cartels: Problem of the Past or Indication of the Future?

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The Mexican drug war began in the 1960s, with America’s love for illegal drugs fueling the fire. Narco-violence has claimed the lives of thousands of citizens in recent years. Drug cartels have become comparable to Mafia figures, and have resorted to Mafia-style violence to prove to the Mexican government that they remain in control. The violence caused by drug cartels is rumored to lead Mexico to become a failed state. George W. Grayson, regular lecturer at the United States Department of State, has made more than one-hundred and twenty-five research trips to Mexico, and is considered an expert on U.S.-Mexican relations. A recent book by Grayson, Mexico: Narco-Violence and a Failed State, describes the depressing situation provoked by drug cartels, and debates the controversial argument of whether Mexico will become a failed state. Narco-violence in Mexico will be analyzed by the severity of the drug problem and the executives’ influence on the drug war, to determine if Mexico will reach the status of a failed state. First, narco-violence from overpowered drug cartels has become a major issue in Mexican politics. The severity of the problem is intensified by violent crime, kidnappings, and corruption. Although cartel violence is occurring throughout Mexico, border states have become exceptional hotspots. According to Grayson, the murder rate has more than tripled from 732 in 2006 to 2,648 in 2008, in Chihuahua, Baja California, Sonora, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, and Tamaulipas. A particular horror spot is Chihuahua’s largest city Ciudad Juarez, especially for young women. Tijuana competes with Ciudad Juarez as Mexico’s most dangerous city. Thus, Calderon’s administration is focusing on restoring safety to the border states. As w... ... middle of paper ... ...Imagining the U.S.-Mexico Border: Policies Toward a More Competitive and Sustainable Transborder Region.” Global Economy Journal 10, no. 4 (January). Pansters, W.G. 2012. Violence, Coercion, and State-Making in Twentieth-Century Mexico. Stanford University Press. Bunker, Robert J. 2011. Narcos Over the Border: Gangs, Cartels and Mercenaries. Routledge Publishing. Schack, Todd. 2011. “Twenty-first Century Drug Warriors: the Press, Privateers and the For-Profit Waging of the War on Drugs.” Media, War and Conflict 4, no.2 (August): 142:61. Weintraub, Sidney and Duncan Wood. 2010. Cooperative Mexican-U.S. Antinarcotics Efforts. Center for Strategic and International Studies. Turbiville, Graham. 2010. “Firefights, Raids, and Assassinations: Tactical Forms of Cartel Violence and their Underpinnings.” Small Wars and Insurgencies 21, no.1 (January): 123-44.

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