Maybe it's time for the United States to be something akin to a world cop, at least in Mexico, working as actively as needed with the government of President Felipe Calderon to defeat drug cartels that torture cops to death, assassinate journalists, will slaughter 15 teens partying at someone's house and even enter funeral homes and kill the mourners.
Americans aren't immune. Two of them recently attended a get-together for children at the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez and were making their way home to El Paso across the Rio Grande. Imagine their fright as assailants caught up with them and their one year-old baby riding in the back of the Toyota SUV. The child was spared. Her mother, four months pregnant, was shot in the head and died. The father, it is reported, was shot in the arm and neck. He died, too.
A Mexican citizen who worked in the consulate was also killed and two of his children wounded after the event, and we are reminded by all of this horror that something is going on in Mexico so terrible as to portend the collapse of Mexican society and government and that there is no reasonable calculation by which the United States escapes involvement.
An indication of the peril is that Juarez just may be the murder capital of the world right now. There were 2,657 homicides there last year, and very few were solved, it has been noted. The killers are drug dealers in marijuana, heroin, methamphetamines and cocaine, selling mostly to Americans. One account says the drug dealers can buy a kilo of coke from Columbia for $3,500 and sell it for $25,000 or much more in the United States and that one cartel alone was making something like $18 million a month.
These killers buy as many of the police and politicians as they can and do their best to kill any of the rest that give them trouble. They've been holding their own against Mexican troops sent out to fight this war by Calderon; a think tank analyst reports the arsenals of the criminals include ".50-caliber machine guns, anti-tank rockets, grenade launchers, fragmentation grenades and mortars."
Our interest in all of this begins with 2,000 shared miles of border and includes facts summed up well by one article I encountered: A half million people cross that border every day; we get a third of our oil from Mexico; most of our immigrants, legal and illegal, come from there, and we sell more exports to Mexico than to any country except Canada.