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  1. #1
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    U.S. Warns Against Rising Costs Of Doing Business In Mexico Due To Criminal Activity

    Mexican gangs have made Mexico a failed Narco state.

    U.S. Warns Against Rising Costs Of Doing Business In Mexico Due To Criminal Activity
    Dolia EstevezContributo
    r06/05/2015

    As Mexico continues to wage a bloody war against powerful criminal groups, which have made whole regions ungovernable, Washington’s top diplomat warned that aside from being a problem of safety and security for ordinary citizens, organized crime also threatens the nation’s economic interests.

    “The price of doing business in countries affected by organized crime is rising as companies budget for additional security costs, adversely impacting foreign investment,” U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Anthony Wayne said at the opening of the International Anti-Gang Training Conference in Mexico City Tuesday.

    Foreign direct investment in Mexico dropped 49 %, from $44.6 billion in 2013 to $22.8 billion in 2014. The drastic drop, however, cannot be attributed solely to security concerns since 2013 was an atypically high year due to the buyout of Grupo Modelo, Mexico’s leading brewer and owner of the Corona brand, by Anheuser-Busch InBev for $13.2 billion. In addition, AT&T Inc.’s sale of its 8.3% stake in Carlos Slim’s America Movil telecom giant in 2014 also contributed to a bigger than typical drop in FDI by about $5.5 billion. Even without those two big deals, FDI was down over $3 billion in a year.

    Ambassador Wayne at the opening of the International Anti-Gang Training Conference in Mexico City , June 2, 2015 (Photo credit: U.S. Embassy )

    Due to violence in parts of Mexico, companies are indeeed, as the top diplomat said, increasingly factoring in security to the cost of doing business. While Wayne did not reveal figures, it is estimated security-related costs generally account for around 3%-5% of revenue. Geokinetics, a Houston-based provider of seismic data services to the oil and gas industry, has budgeted some $2.5 million, or about 5% of its contract with Mexican oil company Pemex, to security, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    When the risk is higher than the cost, some companies simply take a break. Coca-Cola recently suspended its operations in Chilpancingo, the capital of Guerrero,the Southern Pacific state with highest homicide rate in 2014, due to attacks and kidnappings of employees, the AP reported.

    More than 18,000 U.S. companies have operations in Mexico, including most of the Fortune 500.
    Wayne said that Mexican criminal investigations have revealed that gangs are aligned with transnational criminal organizations, which use them “as their enforcement arm to target and eliminate rivals.”

    According to a transcript of his speech, Wayne explained that drug organizations have expanded their criminal activities into human smuggling and trafficking, weapons smuggling, bulk cash smuggling, extortion, theft of gasoline from pipelines, and kidnapping for ransom.

    Some 100,000 Mexicans have been killed in drug-related homicides in the past 10 years, and an additional 22,000 have gone missing. While drug-related homicides appear to have declined in the past two years, other crimes such as extortion and kidnapping have risen.

    The outgoing Ambassador (this week President Obama nominated Assistant Secretary of State Roberta Jacobson to replace him) called on Mexico and Central America to share intelligence and gang-related investigative leads “to defeat transnational crime.”

    Echoing the Ambassador’s concerns, the Overseas Security Advisory Council (OSAC), created to promote security cooperation between American private sector interests worldwide and the U.S. Department of State, issued its Mexico 2015 Crime and Safety Report for Guadalajara, the capital of Jalisco state which has recently experience a crime spike as the powerful Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel expands its territorial reach.

    The report, which was released last month by the U.S. Consulate in Guadalajara, home to 120 American business and thousands of American retirees, gave Mexico’s second largest city a “high” crime rating. In describing specific threats, the report warns that “nearly every major Mexican cartel maintains some presence in Guadalajara, and it is widely rumored that cartel leaders keep their families and legitimate business interests in the city.”

    On a positive note, OSAC reported that in 2014 there were no incidents against U.S. private sector interests in Jalisco and neighboring states.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/doliaest...al-activity/2/


  2. #2
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Has Mexico ever been a good neighbor?

    Border War (1910–19)

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


    1910–1919
    Mexican-American border states

    Mexican Carrancista/American Victory


    • Permanent border wall established along the border of Nogales, Sonora, and Nogales, Arizona, after theBattle of Ambos Nogales[1]
    • Battles between Mexican and American forces ceased in 1919 after the American/Carrancista victory in the Battle of Ciudad Juárez[2]
    • Pancho Villa's troops no longer an effective fighting force[3]
    • Pancho Villa obtains pardon from the Mexican government.



    Mexican Carrancistas
    *Maderistas
    supported by:
    German Empire

    Villista rebels
    supported by:
    German Empire

    United States

    The Border War,[4] or the Border Campaign,[5] refers to the military engagements which took place in the
    Mexico-United States border region of North America during the Mexican Revolution. The Bandit War[6] in Texas was part of the Border War. From the beginning of the Mexican Revolution in 1910, the United States Army was stationed in force along the border and on several occasions fought with Mexican rebels or federals. The height of the conflict came in 1916 when revolutionary Pancho Villa attacked the American border town o fColumbus, New Mexico. In response, the United States Army, under the direction of General John J. Pershing, launched an expedition into northern Mexico, to find and capture Villa. Though the operation was successful in finding and engaging the Villista rebels, the revolutionary himself escaped and the American army returned to the United States in January 1917. Conflict was not only subject to Villistas and Americans; Maderistas,Carrancistas, Constitutionalistas and Germans also engaged in battle with American forces during this period.



    1910[edit]


    • Revolutionary activity breaks out in Mexico.
    • United States Army deploys to several border towns to protect American lives and property and to ensure that fighting between rebel and federal forces remains on the Mexican side of the border.
    • In late 1910, Francisco Madero issues the Plan of San Luis Potosí, a proclamation which called for Mexican citizens to rise up against the federal government of Porfirio Díaz, in San Antonio, Texas.
    • On 20 November, Madero planned to attack the border town of Ciudad Porfirio Diaz, Coahuila, across the border from Eagle Pass, Texas. Due to the lack of reinforcements, Madero canceled the operation and left to New Orleans, Louisiana, to prepare another plan.


    1911[edit]



    • Pofirio Díaz pressured the United States government into issuing orders for Madero's arrest. Madero escapes across the border back into Mexico on 14 February.
    • Magonistas began campaigning in northern Baja California in February. They captured the Mexican border town of Mexicali on 11 February and then marched to Tijuana where they defeated the federal garrison. The Mexican government retaliated and attacked Tijuana in June, forcing the rebels to cross the border and surrender to the United States Army at San Ysidro, California.
    • In March, Francisco Madero led 130 men at the Battle of Casas Grandes in Chihuahua. The rebels lost the battle, but later the federals retreated which left Madero's army in control. Madero then began smuggling arms and ammunition on a large scale from across the border.
    • On 16 March, rebel saboteurs in Ciudad Juárez bombed the barracks and homes of the Mexican Army garrison. A large nitroglycerin explosion was seen on the American side of the border. Two days later, a large cannon which sat in the town square of El Paso, Texas, disappeared and was presumably taken to Ciudad Juárez.
    • Maderista rebels fought federal troops loyal to Porfirio Díaz at Agua Prieta, Sonora, in April. United States troops across the border in Douglas, Arizona, were attacked by Mexican forces and in response the Americans intervened which left the rebels in control of the town.
    • Madero's rebels under Pancho Villa and Pascual Orozco attacked federal forces at the major Second Battle of Ciudad Juarez from 7 April-10 May. The American garrison of El Paso, Texas, exchanged fire with rebels resulting in minor casualties on both sides.
    • Porfirio Díaz exiled. Francisco Madero becomes President of Mexico and calls for an end to warfare in the country. He offered to pay rebels of different factions but only if they would lay down their arms or join his new federal Army.
    • Fighting breaks out between rebel factions.


    1912[edit]



    • United States Army continues garrisoning American border towns.
    • General Pasqual Orozco rebels against President Madero and begins a campaign in the border state of Chihuahua. Madero responds by sending an army which defeated Orozco's troops in thee major battles. Villa rebels against the Madero government soon after.
    • Federal forces of President Francisco Madero establish Fort Tijuana along the international border with California in response to the Magonista campaign.


    1913[edit]



    • Nogales, Sonora, was attacked by General Obregón's army of over 2,000 Constitutionalistas in 1913. Defending federal forces under General Emilio Kosterlitzky collapsed and surrendered to the United States Army garrison of Nogales, Arizona.
    • The Battle of Naco is fought. Álvaro Obregón's rebel army defeated the federal Mexican border town garrison of Naco, Sonora. United States troops watched the battle from across the border.
    • U.S. troops in Naco, Arizona, begin construction of Fort Naco, one of 12 forts built by the United States Army along the border for protection against warring Mexican forces.
    • General John Pershing and Pancho Villa meet at Fort Bliss, Texas, and would meet again later in 1914 atOjinaga, Chihuahua.


    1914[edit]



    • On 9 April, the Tampico Affair, an incident in Tampico, Tamaulipas, between United States Navy sailors and Mexican troops, occurred. It resulted in the severing of diplomatic relations between Mexico and the United States.
    • In response to the Tampico Affair, President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to approve an armed invasion of Mexico.
    • Congress approves the invasion. The United States Navy's Atlantic fleet under Admiral Frank Fletcherwas sent to the port of Veracruz and occupied the city after an amphibious assault and a street battle with Mexican defenders.
    • The longest battle of the Mexican Revolution was fought at Naco, Sonora, across the border from Fort Naco and Naco, Arizona. Pancho Villa's men attacked General Obregón's garrison on 17 October. During the 119 following days of siege warfare Villa was defeated. Also during the battle several United States Army Buffalo Soldiers stationed in Naco, Arizona, were wounded by rebels shooting into their camp. Eight men were wounded but they did not return fire and were later recognized for their good discipline.
    • Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata capture Mexico City but soon after are forced to retreat by Álvaro Obregón's army.


    1915[edit]



    • Carrancistas draft the Plan de San Diego, an operation to overthrow the state governments of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California by starting a race war. The plan was discovered by the Americans after a Carrancista leader was arrested in Texas though some fighting did occur in the form of raids, launched by rebels into Texas territory.
    • Pancho Villa attacks General Obregón's Constitutionalist garrison at Nogales, Sonora. Villa initiates a siege but over time is defeated due to the lack of artillery and insufficient supplies. During the siege the United States 12th Infantry garrison of Nogales, Arizona was attacked by Villistas and in turn skirmished for a half hour. Only one American was killed along with several of Villa's rebels.
    • Villistas and Constitutionalists fought again at Agua Prieta in November. Later, Villa attributed his defeat to large searchlights used during the battle by the United States Army garrison of Douglas, Arizona. The battle ended in defeat for Villa and led to the more disastrous Battle of Hermosillo on 15 November. At this time, Villa's forces pillaged the city instead of fighting the garrison, resulting in a repulse. Also at this time Constitutionalist forces were allowed access to American railways for troop movement.


    1916[edit]



    • The January 1916 San Isabel Massacre occurred. Villistas stopped a train near Santa Isabel, Chihuahua, and killed eighteen American passengers from the ASARCO company of Tucson, Arizona.
    • Now losing the war, Pancho Villa decided to raid Columbus, New Mexico, for supplies on 9 March 1916. The raid did not go as planned and Villa's 500 cavalrymen were defeated by over 300 United States infantry and cavalry who were stationed in a border fort outside of town. Columbus was heavily damaged by the Villistas who burned several of the town's buildings. Sixty to eighty Villistas were killed along with over a dozen American troops and civilians.
    • In response to the attack on Columbus, President Wilson ordered General John J. Pershing to proceed into Mexico with over 5,000 men to capture or kill Pancho Villa, thus beginning the Pancho Villa Expedition.
    • On 5 May, Villa's rebels attacked two more American border towns, Glenn Springs, Texas, and Boquillas, Texas. Over 200 men under Rodriguez Ramirez and Natividad Álvarez crossed the Texas border with the intention of capturing supplies. At Glenn Springs, a United States Army squad of nine men resisted theVillista attack for several hours but eventually the raiders set fire to the adobe building the Americans were held up in and forced the 14th Infantry men to retreat. Three of the United States troops were killed and four others were wounded. One young American boy was also killed by the Mexicans. At Boquillas, 12 mi (19 km) from Glenn Springs, the Americans there captured Alvarez and discovered he was aLieutenant Colonel in Pancho Villa's División del Norte and was a veteran of the Battle of Celaya.
    • The raiders of Glenn Springs and Boquillas took two captives with them when they withdrew across the border. Jesse Deemer and Monroe Payne who were later rescued by American Army forces during a small cavalry expedition into Mexico. The expedition of eighty men, two wagons and a car began on 8 May from Marathon, Texas, and was under the command of Colonel Frederick W. Sibley and ColonelGeorge T. Langhorne. The rebels were held up at El Pino, Chihuahua, and at first Colonel Langhorne negotiated for the release of the two Americans and when this failed he ordered his men to embark his personal car and head for El Pino. Upon their arrival the Villistas fled and Deemer and Payne were freed. During the operation which ended on 21 May, five Mexicans were killed in skirmishes with no American losses.
    • President Wilson orders the National Guard to reinforce the United States Army garrisons at the border line. By August, an estimated 117,000 guardsmen were stationed along the border in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California.
    • On 12 April, American forces and Carrancistas fight the Battle of Parral in Chihuahua. When United States troops under Major Frank Tompkins attempted to leave the city of Parral, they were attacked byCarrancista riflemen. The Americans returned fire, and over the course of several hours 45 Mexicans lay dead along with two Americans. The engagement marked the furthest penetration into northern Mexico by American forces, Parral is over 500 miles from the border.
    • In June, Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th Cavalry suffered a defeat at the Battle of Carrizal. Federal Mexican troops attacked 100 cavalrymen when they attempted to enter the town of Carrizal. The most famous battle of the Border war was fought and ended with the deaths of 45 Mexicans and 16 Americans. Forty-four other Mexicans and Americans were wounded.
    • Raids on American border towns continued during and for years after the Pancho Villa Expedition. On 15 June, raiders killed four American soldiers at San Ygnacio, Texas. On 31 July, another soldier and a United States customs inspector were killed in a second raid. During both engagements, Mexicans were killed or wounded but their casualties are not known.
    • Future General George S. Patton of the 8th Cavalry conducted America's first assault with armored vehicles at a ranch near San Miguelito. Three Mexicans were killed including the Villista General Julio Cárdenas. Patton is said to have carved notches into the pistols he carried, representing the men he killed with them.


    1917[edit]



    • Due to the defeat at Carrizal, President Wilson ordered General Pershing to withdraw from Mexico and end the expedition. By January, most of the American expeditionary troops had left Mexican territory and were back at garrison duty along the border.
    • The Zimmermann Telegram was intercepted by the British in 1917. In the telegram the German government formally requested that Mexico join World War I on the side of the Central Powers. The Germans asked the Mexicans to attack the southwestern United States and promised to return land to Mexico that was lost to the United States during the Mexican-American War and the Gadsden Purchase. Mexico ignored the request, but the United States did not and used the affair as a reason to declare war on Germany. So began the American entry into World War I.


    1918[edit]



    • United States Army Intelligence stationed at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, detected a German military presence in Sonora and ordered troops to begin surveillance operations to prepare for war with Mexico. Mexican railways, train stations, and other related enterprises were inspected as possible routes for a large-scale American invasion.
    • Revolutionary Yaqui native Americans established a base in Bear Valley, Arizona, to store weapons intended to be smuggled into Mexico. When the base was discovered by the United States Army, Blondy Ryder of the 10th Cavalry was ordered to evict the rebel Yaquis. On 9 January, Ryder's patrol attacked the Yaquis in a small half-hour engagement. The camp was destroyed, one Yaqui was killed, and nine others were captured. The United States Cavalry suffered no casualties.
    • In mid-August, Lieutenant Colonel Frederick J. Herman received an anonymous message from a Mexican revolutionary about a possible attack on Nogales, Arizona, by Mexican federal soldiers and a group of German military advisers. On 27 August, a Mexican suspected of gun smuggling crossed the border into Nogales, Sonora, followed by a US Customs agent and two US Army troops. A Mexican soldier watched the incident and fired on the American agent. The shot was a miss but hit one of the soldiers, and the other two Americans returned fire and killed the Mexican soldier.


    From there, the incident escalated from a small dispute into the Battle of Ambos Nogales. Reinforcements from both sides rushed to the border to fight; men of the 35th Infantry Regiment called for aid, and a squadron of 10th Cavalry under Herman responded. When they arrived, they attacked the Mexican positions on top of hills along the other side of the border. The assault was successful and the Mexican troops with their German advisers were defeated. In all, 30-129 Mexicans, two Germans, and seven Americans died in the fighting. After the battle, German military activity in Sonora ceased. The Battle of Ambos Nogales was the last major engagement of the Border War.

    1919[edit]



    • American and Mexican forces skirmished near El Paso, Texas, on the border on 16 June in what was known as the Battle of Ciudad Juárez. This conflict is singular for the fact that the Mexican army and the American army joined forces to fight the Villistas led by Pancho Villa. It was the second-largest battle of the Mexican Revolution involving the United States, and is considered the last battle of the Border War.[7]




    Francisco Madero with his men in 1910


    American Magonistas after the First Battle of Tijuana in 1911


    General John J. Pershing, Pancho Villa and others atFort Bliss, Texas, in 1913


    Columbus, New Mexico, after Pancho Villa's attack on the border town


    The expanded United States Army fort at Columbus, New Mexico, a staging area for the Pancho Villa Expedition


    American troops of the 16th Infantry rest for the night on 27 May 1916


    American infantry in a skirmish line near Deming, New Mexico, in 1916


    The 1st Aero Squadron in 1916 which was deployed during the expedition


    United States Army troops returning to the U.S. in January 1917


    Yaqui prisoners and 10th Cavalry troops on 9 January 1918, after the skirmish in Bear Valley, Arizona


    Ambos Nogales in 1899. Battles occurred here several times during the revolution

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_...10%E2%80%9319)


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