Can Mexicos Drug Terror Be Stopped?
Mexicans are accustomed to tales of crooked cops abetting drug-related killings. So this week’s announcement that a federal officer is among those charged with conspiracy in a drug-mafia hit on the nation’s acting police chief Edgar Millan caused little surprise south of the border. Mexican officials say the May 8 assassination was ordered by the Sinaloa drug cartel, and if convicted, the accused officer, Jose Montes, will join a long and infamous line of cops including one of Mexico’s former anti-drug czars who have moonlighted for the cartels. Still, last week’s murder of Millan, one of the the highest-ranking police officials ever to be gunned down in Mexico, set a new benchmark in the Colombia-style drug carnage that continues to rage from Tijuana to Cancun. Mexico has already logged almost 1,200 drug-related killings this year putting it well on track to break last year’s record of almost 2,500 as an increasingly chaotic array of drug gangs fight one another for trafficking turf,