U.S. drug czar John Walters reassures, sounds alarm
on Mexico drug violence
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In Mexico City, he tells officials that aid to fight
drug gangs is coming and voices concern about violence spilling over the
border. Meanwhile, more than 20 die in the latest toll in Mexico's drug
war
MEXICO CITY -- Amid another round of violence that
claimed more than 20 lives, a top U.S. drug official Friday sounded an
alarm over the number of killings and kidnappings that spill into the
southern United States from Mexico.

Mexican authorities and reports from around the country said at least 23
people were killed late Thursday and on Friday, including three police
officers who died in a gun battle in the state of Jalisco. In the border
state of Chihuahua, six men were lined up against a wall at a gymnasium
and shot to death.
U.S. drug czar John P. Walters, in Mexico City to
reassure officials that aid to fight drug gangs is in the pipeline, said
traffickers resort to "fear and horror" in their campaign to take over
government institutions but will ultimately fail.
"It's not just
about drugs," Walters told a news conference. "It's about kidnapping and
murder. It's about extortion . . . and suborning government officials."
Although Mexican society suffers the brunt of the violence, Walters
said, drug gangs and their hit men cross the border with relative ease
to settle scores and carry out slayings in the U.S.
"These groups do not respect the border," said
Walters, who is head of the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy.
More than 3,500 people have been killed in Mexico in
warfare that has raged since President Felipe Calderon began deploying
40,000 army troops nearly two years ago to crack down on the most
powerful drug networks.
Despite the intensifying bloodshed,
Walters praised Calderon's efforts.
Ultimately, he said, the drug
lords will face a stark choice: "They surrender, or they die."
Walters reiterated Washington's intention to begin releasing parts of a
$400-million package of aid and training under the so-called Merida
Initiative approved by Congress in June. In addition to countering the
violence, the package targets money laundering and gun smuggling,
illicit activities sustaining the largest cartels