December 08, 2010 


The Third War on Terror


By  <http://www.americanthinker.com/russ_vaughn/> Russ Vaughn

In the same period during which almost 1,400 U.S. troops have been killed in
Iraq and Afghanistan, nearly 7,000 Mexican citizens have been killed by drug
violence.  And that Mexican toll goes up every week in far larger increments
than the one from the Middle East.  Recently, in a single event, drug
assassins in Ciudad Juárez, the cross-border, sister city to El Paso and one
of the largest cities in Texas, murdered a dozen young Mexican children
<http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/02/teens-among-14-killed-at-juarez-party
.html>  attending a party.  We don't know how these young people, most of
them younger than twenty, may have offended the drug dealers who slaughtered
them, but we do know how such lawlessness and disregard for human life
should offend us and all people of decency who respect the rule of law.

 

Let me put this murderous event in geographic perspective for those of you
unfamiliar with the proximity between several American border towns and
their Mexican counterparts.  The distances involved here are not those usual
between cities, but between boroughs or neighborhoods or suburban
communities.  In other words, for far too many Americans, such violence is
taking place just a few streets over from where they live.  You can kick a
football from places in El Paso into colonías of Juárez.  No surprise, then,
that bullets from shootouts in the streets of Juárez can, and have, impacted
in buildings in El Paso.  For you coastal denizens who see the breadth of
your nation only from the air, let me point out that El Paso is much closer
to Juárez than is Brooklyn to Manhattan or Hollywood to Malibu.

 

Many of us who live close to this murder and mayhem have long advocated for
our federal government to do more to protect our citizens and deal with this
growing threat.  But it increasingly appears that a stronger federal border
police presence is simply inadequate to deal with the burgeoning power of
the paramilitary <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Zetas>  Mexican
narco-terrorists.  Not only are we looking at the need for an impressive
American military presence, but the situation also most likely requires
actual American cross-border interventions, probably by battalion- to
brigade combat team-sized military units, to return the northern border of
our southern neighbor to a lawful state of peaceful coexistence.

 

I can imagine how most Americans will receive such a dire prognosis when we
are already engaged in two foreign wars in the Middle East.  However, as
great as the threats presented by Muslim terrorists are, they pale in
significance to the possibility of a narco-terrorist-controlled Mexican
state with which we share more than thirteen hundred miles of porous border.
If the narcos can seize control of a sovereign nation like Mexico or one of
its states like Chihuahua, what is to prevent their thinking they can do the
same with parts of the American Southwest?  We already have sufficient
cross-border incursions to warrant our ineffective government warning
Americans away from portions of Arizona and New Mexico via highway signs
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/aug/31/signs-in-arizona-warn-of-sm
uggler-dangers/>  because of uncontrolled Mexican drug and human
trafficking.

 

As so many of us in the Southwest have been trying to tell the rest of
America, there is a war going on down here.  Because too many of you are so
far removed from the battlefield, you remain unconvinced and unconcerned.
Poor Arizona, trying to defend herself from all this lawlessness, came in
for nothing but condemnation from a far-too-politicized federal Justice
Department and the Democrat-controlled media.  Believe me: the one political
group that has a dog in this fight is the Democrat Party, which counts every
warm body illegally crossing that border as a lifelong voting constituent
from the moment those sandals touch American soil. 

 

As another Vietnam vet friend recently reminded me, the United States has
23,000 active duty troops guarding the border between South Korea and North
Korea.  The 160-mile-long Demilitarized Zone is the most heavily defended
border in the world <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_Demilitarized_Zone>
.  Those American military forces have been there for fifty-plus years
waiting for an invasion from the north that has never happened.  Meanwhile,
in the southwest United States, we have only national guard non-combat units
protecting our border with Mexico, which is more than ten times as long
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexico_%E2%80%93_United_States_border>  as
that Korean frontier.  And on the Mexican border, the invasion is not just
anticipated, but real -- a constant, aggressive offensive from the south
that has been underway for more than four decades since Lyndon Johnson and
the Democrats created the Great Welfare Magnet
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Society> .

 

And what should be most frightening to all of us is that those who delivered
the terror of 9/11 are very much aware of this slack in American border
security.  Do any of you honestly believe that terror organizations
sophisticated enough to mount an attack such as 9/11 aren't aware that by
far the easiest way to bring nuclear and biological terror weapons into this
country is across that porous Mexican border?  The mission of the United
States military is to protect this nation from its enemies.  It's long past
time for them to do so on the Mexican border, where it has become crystal
clear that the Mexican and South American drug lords have shown themselves
to be America's mortal enemies.


Recently, Governor Rick Perry of Texas called for the use of American troops
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/18/rick-perry-military-mexico-drug-wa
r_n_785519.html>  inside Mexico: 

 

Texas Gov. Rick Perry, soon to be the leader of the Republican Governors
Association, continued his argument Thursday that the federal government
needed to halt their intervention in the private sector and refocus their
energy toward securing the border -- even if that means sending U.S. troops
into Mexico.

 

I guess if the governor of the state with the longest shared border with
Mexico is speculating as to the use of American troops inside Mexico, then
I'm not so far off in my concerns.  We have an active war zone on our
southern border; we just haven't admitted it yet.


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December 08, 2010 - 11:12:07 AM CST



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