Monday, March 30, 2009

Mexico Drug Violence "Out Of Hand": President Barack Obama

Mexico Drug Violence "Out Of Hand": President Barack Obama
(NSI News Source Info) WASHINGTON - March 30, 2009: Drug violence in Mexico has "gotten out of hand" and poses a serious threat to communities along the US-Mexico border, President Barack Obama said Sunday. But Obama, in an interview with CBS television, said his administration would wait to see the impact of stepped up US law enforcement efforts before deploying national guard troops to the border. "I don't think that it is what would be called an existential threat. But it's a serious threat to those border communities and it has gotten out of hand," he said. A Mexican Federal Police agent patrols the streets of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico during an anti-narcotic operation. Mexico's crackdown on drug cartels has triggered a spike in violence in Vancouver, where seven shootings have taken place in 48 hours, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police superintendent said Thursday. Echoing comments in Mexico last week by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Obama called the drug crisis in the south a "two-way street" fueled by US demand for drugs and availability of weapons. "We've got to reduce demand for drugs. We've got to do our part in reducing the flow of cash and guns south," he said. Administration officials announced plans last week to send 360 more federal agents and officers to the border area to target the movement of drugs and guns and to beef up security and intelligence along the border. Obama said the administration was considering calls for national guard troops in the border areas. "But we want to first see whether some of the steps that we've taken can help quell some of the violence," he said. "And we want to make sure that we are consulting as effectively as we can with the Mexican government in moving this strategy forward." Clinton delivered that message in Mexico City last week, vowing to stand with the government of President Felipe Calderon in the fight against powerful drug cartels. She also pledged to provide Mexico with 80 million dollars to buy Blackhawk helicopters to pursue the drug cartels. An estimated 6,300 have been killed in drug related violence in Mexico since 2008 in an intensifying war as Mexican troops go after drug cartels, and the gangs vie among themselves for lucrative smuggling routes into the United States. Obama said the drug cartels were "undermining and corrupting huge segments of Mexico society," but he praised Calderon for taking on the drug cartels "in the same way that Elliot Ness took on Al Capone back during prohibition." "Oftentimes that causes even more violence and we're seeing that flare up," Obama added. In a separate interview, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates told Fox television that Calderon had acted with "enormous courage" in sending in Mexican troops to try to control the situation. "I think that the chances of the Mexican government losing control of some part of their country or becoming a failed state are very low," he said.

1 comment:

usdoj said...

The problem in Mexico has been way way out of hand for to long.US armed forces should have been sent last year.230 towns in america are infested with these drug cartel creeps they are killers and must be stoped.The Goverment and Law Enforcement has got a lot of work to do to combat this terrible horrible problem.FACE IT we live in a sinful evil wicked world.SIN is the main problem that is why are world is such a mess.If you dont know the GOD of the BIBLE you better get to know him fast.This world is in the worst shape it has ever been and it will get worse.GET GOD NOW