The sudden increase in crime and violence in some Mexican cities and
regions has raised security concerns not only in Mexico, where President
Felipe Calderon categorized these crimes as a threat to Mexican
society, but also in the United States, where Department of Homeland
Secretary head Janet Napolitano referred to stemming the violence as
‘vital to core U.S. national interests.’ Mexico is concerned with the
latent threat of violence spreading all over the nation, while the U.S.
is trying to guard against spillover. Both governments are concerned by
the increased violence and its impact on communities along the
U.S.--Mexican border. Because of its geopolitical location along the
southern U.S. border, Mexico is susceptible to possible undesired
effects of U.S. strategies. These unintended, second-degree consequences
are known as ‘balloon effects,’ after the airflow inside a balloon when
constriction applied to one area sends pressure to another area in the
balloon, thinning and weakening its wall. Since 2006, Mexico’s strategy
for countering transnational organized crime and related activities has
sent the balloon effect in two directions: first, inside Mexico, where
government actions have unbalanced the criminal structure, creating
balloon effects inside Mexican territory; and second, within the U.S.
while asking to escalate the Mexican effort to improve its anti-crime
strategy with U.S. assistance has escalated conflict and led to a
holistic strategy against transnational organized crime and related
activities in the Americas.
https://www.mipt.org/DesktopModules/MIPT_eDocuments/handlers/GetDocBinary.ashx?d=10006
https://www.mipt.org/DesktopModules/MIPT_eDocuments/handlers/GetDocBinary.ashx?d=10006
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