Pubdate: Mon, 15 Mar 2010 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Nicholas Casey Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Mexico VIOLENCE IN MEXICO STRETCHES TO U.S. MEXICO CITY-Drug-related violence erupted this weekend in several parts of Mexico, claiming both American and Mexican lives and undermining the efforts of both countries' governments to quell an escalating war among the region's powerful drug cartels. On Saturday, three people associated with the U.S. Consulate General office in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas, were killed, prompting the evacuation of dependents of U.S. State Department personnel on Sunday. Among those killed were a couple driving in a car in broad daylight with their baby in the back seat. The baby was unharmed. In the tourist resort of Acapulco, at least 15 people were killed in gangland hits over the weekend, officials said, including six local policemen. Violence is on the rise at another key point of the U.S.-Mexico border-the city of Reynosa, across from McAllen, Texas. Officials say the drug war there is entering a dangerous new phase, in which two formerly aligned drug gangs have fallen into open warfare. The three Saturday killings shook the American expatriate community in Ciudad Juarez, where more than 400 people have been killed this year. The shootings took place within minutes of each other in two different locations. In one incident, a U.S. citizen employed by the Consulate and her husband, also American, were killed, White House National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said. In the other, the Mexican husband of a Mexican citizen who worked at the Consulate was killed. Mr. Hammer said President Barack Obama was "deeply saddened and outraged by the news." The attacks on employees working for the U.S. government in Ciudad Juarez take the violence there to a new level. Until now, killings have generally been between rival cartels or have targeted the Mexican government. President Felipe Calderon's strategy of using the military in place of police to deal with the country's powerful drug lords has come under increasing fire from critics who say it has ratcheted up the violence while failing to curb the power of the drug lords. Mr. Calderon has been especially criticized in Ciudad Juarez, where the violence has intensified in the past two years although Mr. Calderon has sent some 7,000 soldiers as well as 2,000 federal police to patrol. He is expected to announce details this week of a recent change of strategy that will focus on attemps to "re-stitch" the fabric of society in the border city, focusing more on creating jobs, building schools, opening parks, and providing counseling for drug addicts trying to kick the habit. Further down the Texas border, authorities say they are deeply worried about rising violence in the town of Reynosa, across from McAllen, Texas. Two gangs that were allies for years in the drug trade appear to have fallen into open fighting there, experts say. The recent violence involves the long-established Gulf Cartel and its former enforcers, a group called Los Zetas. The Zetas have over the past few years gotten into the trafficking business on their own-butting up against the business interests of their former allies. So far this year, more than 50 people have been killed in the firefights that break out almost daily along the border. "Both Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel are trying to push each other out," said Alberto Islas, a private security analyst in Mexico. The two cartels have been leaving cryptic public messages denouncing each other. Earlier this month, residents of Reynosa awoke to find what appeared to have been a bedsheet with a scrawled message, allegedly from the Gulf Cartel, accusing the Zetas of being "terrorists, robbers, rapists and traitors." As the conflict grows in Reynosa, human-rights groups say it also features another element common to the Mexican drug war: the intimidation of local media outlets. In the last two weeks, eight Mexican reporters from Reynosa had been kidnapped, according to the Inter-American Press Association, in deliberate attempts by drug traffickers to stifle coverage of the drug war by journalists. Local media coverage of drug violence was rare even before the kidnappings. Milenio, the Mexican national paper, said publicly last week that it had decided to suspend coverage of the conflict out of security concerns. "It's an incredible level of fear," said Carlos Lauria, the senior Americas coordinator at the Committee to Protect Journalists. "It's not only drug coverage that gets stifled, but any coverage of organized crime." Mexico has been engulfed by drug-related violence over the past few years, caused partly by a breakdown in old alliances between groups that erupted into open competition for lucrative smuggling routes to serve the world's largest drug-consuming nation, the U.S. In the 1990s, Osiel Cardenas, the then-leader of the Gulf Cartel, brought Los Zetas into existence after recruiting 30 members of the Airborne Special Forces Group, an elite Mexican army squadron that had been trained in the U.S. The defectors took on the name Los Zetas and became a feared enforcement wing of Mr. Cardenas's organization, known for assassinations and the use of army materiel such as bombs and AK-47 assault rifles. With the arrest of Mr. Cardenas in 2003, the two groups began to operate independently. Mr. Cardenas, who was extradited to the U.S. in 2007, was sentenced last month in a U.S. court in Texas to 25 years in prison on felony charges. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake