The successful series of attacks on Mexico's energy infrastructure in early July that disrupted 1,200 business (including several very large Just-in-Time assembly facilities) and refinery infrastructure, was very sophisticated. Not only were the bombs well constructed, the selection of a the targets were excellent examples of
systempunkts.
Notes on Method
Instead of attacking guarded facilities, the attacks were made against sections in the pipeline infrastructure that were not guarded (survivability). Timing devices were used to spread the attacks out over a ten day period (repetition). Multiple points of attack on the same pipeline multiplied the scale of the damage and caused fires (one forced the evacuation of parts of a nearby city) that complicated/delayed recovery efforts. Finally, by focusing the attacks on a limited geography critical to three major pipelines, the attack maximized almost all of the
following dependencies while limiting the size of the team necessary for the attack:
- Input -- material delivered by one network is used by another.
- Mutual -- networks that serve as inputs for each other. Example: oil and power generation.
- Co-location -- different networks that are located in the same geography.
- Shared -- networks that share physical components, transport, or facilities.
- Exclusive -- a network that can only support one or few outputs, may be transient.
As a result, there were multiple
cascades of failure that swept through large sections of Mexico.
The Dilemma
The immediate impact of this attack, beside the significant economic damage, was to force Mexico to deploy the recently created United Forces for Federal Support to guard energy infrastructure. However, with only 5,000 troops, the force is unlikely to provide any serious opposition to the attackers. The bulk of Mexico's forces are now allocated to an increasingly militarized drug war in the north with narco-guerrillas.
The dilemma is that with Mexico's future as part of the global supply chain at risk, follow-on attacks could quickly put Mexico into a position similar to Turkey in WW1 -- when Lawrence's (of Arabia) guerrilla attacks on Turkish railway infrastructure forced a massive misallocation of forces from the front facing the Brits to infrastructure protection. This dilemma will be exacerbated by the fact that amount of infrastructure that needs to be protected is several orders of magnitude larger and more complex.
Like the US, Mexico is about to find out that
playing with war while embroiled in cut-throat global economic competition is increasingly difficult as offensive
4GW gains strength.
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