Last spring, I travelled to Monterrey Mexico to speak to the city's (and therefore Mexico's) top business leaders. Of course, my talk's focus was on how the rise of global guerrillas -- enabled by open source warfare, systems disruption, and transnational criminal networks -- and how this rise would eventually reach Monterrey.
I'm not sure they believed me, although they were much too polite and refined to say so directly. I don't blame them for thinking that, since for nearly a decade Monterrey was on the rise, a hub for global business with solid growth and a low crime rate. So, the scenario I presented must have seemed remote at the time. How different a year makes. As Manuel Roig-Franzia writes for the Washinton Post, the Mexican state's war against global guerrillas is now bleeding into Monterrey.