Mexican Drug Trafficking Organizations

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Drug trafficking organizations need to instill fear in people to be able to manipulate them. The Mexican drug cartels are not an exception to this; they work extensively to threaten peace and security. As previously mentioned President Calderon had instated a plan to diminish the drug trafficking organizations, and “the price of making a progress in the “war on illegal drugs” is apparently an increase in other forms of criminal activity” (McCarthy, 126). The increase of other forms of activity is extensive. There have been “repeated instances of mass killings (in some cases numbering more than 100), decapitation and other forms of vicious mutilation and dismemberment, systematic and gruesome torture, rape and other forms of sexual abuse, immolation …show more content…
It seems like drug trafficking organizations will go to any length to instill widespread terror among people to benefit greatly from it. “The use of unconventional terror tactics, such as car bombs, mass kidnappings, grenade attacks, blockades of major avenues and highways, and the executions of public officials, has marked the emergence of local drug markets as crime organizations intensify their struggle to control lucrative territory” (Correa- Cabrera, 67). Mexican drug trafficking organizations seem to be profit driven and will use any tactic to accomplish their number one task to prosper financially just like any other global …show more content…
The crimes committed by drug trafficking organizations affect the wellbeing of individuals and families across the board implicitly and explicitly. It is understood that “Criminals earn respect and credibility with creative killing methods. Your status is based on your capacity to commit the most sadistic acts. Burning corpses, using acid, beheading victims. . . . This generation is setting a new standard for savagery” (Chalk, 42). Like any organized crime group, the Mexican drug trafficking organizations prey off of instilling fear among society in order to get away with their crimes and be able to manipulate individuals as well as the government. “According to Guillermo Valdés Castellanos, director of the National Security and Intelligence Center (Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional, or CISEN), more than 28,000 drug-related murders have occurred since Felipe Calderón launched an all-out offensive on the country’s cartels in 2006” (Chalk, 41). Evidently, what the media is telling us is only partially true in which they make it seems to the ordinary person that all of Mexico is plagued by crime due to the drug trafficking organizations. Robert Bonner, former director of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and chief of US Customs and Border Protection states that “most of the drug-related homicides have occurred in just six of Mexico's 32 states, and the