NPR–Mexico's Drug War: A Rigged Fight?

The U.S. is giving $1.3 billion in military and judicial aid to Mexico to help Calderon’s battle against the drug mafias. Mexico’s drug cartels are the major foreign supplier of marijuana and methamphetamines to the United States, and Mexico is a main conduit for cocaine coming mainly from Colombia.

An NPR News investigation in Ciudad Juarez ”” ground zero of Calderon’s cartel war ”” finds strong evidence that Mexico’s drug fight is rigged, according to court testimony, current and former law enforcement officials, and an NPR analysis of cartel arrests.

In that border city, federal forces appear to be favoring one cartel, the Sinaloa (named after the coastal state in northwestern Mexico), which the U.S. Justice Department calls one of the largest organized crime syndicates in the world.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, * International News & Commentary, Defense, National Security, Military, Drugs/Drug Addiction, Mexico

One comment on “NPR–Mexico's Drug War: A Rigged Fight?

  1. AnglicanFirst says:

    In Colombia the admonitory ‘word’ from its drug lords in the 1980s was “silver or lead” and probably still is.

    That admonition is now being practiced just south of the Mexican border.

    Tomorrow, that admonition may well be in everyday practice throughout the United States.