A massacre in the northern Mexican state of Coahuila was unleashed by the Zetas cartel. 300 people were murdered or kidnapped in 2011 by the mercenary drug army, but if it hadn't been for the DEA, the tragedy might have never happened.
The global drug trafficking network, which built America, the rise to power of George H.W. Bush, architect of the modern day "war on drugs", and the engineered economic crisis, that took Mexico to the brink of collapse.
Part III begins with the collapse of the Somoza regime and creation of the world's biggest illegal drug market. Policies and strategies employed by the military-industrial complex are revealed, as both the DoD and U.S. multinational firms impose hegemony on Latin America.
Borderline concludes with the aftermath of the DEA's bungled operation in Coahuila, a look at the dubious motivations of federal police agencies in the drug war and the true purpose of America's long-standing drug war policies in Latin America.