Mexico's constitutional liberty was in jeopardy.
He wasn't president then - Eisenhower was. Eisenhower did intervene.
Mexico and Germany
oh yeah
As commander in chief of the armed forces, the President can use the military to intervene or offer assistance in crisis situations at home and around the world.
The president of Mexico is the head of Mexico's government.
A President. Felipe Calderon, is the current President of Mexico.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared the right of the United States to intervene in Latin America in his 1904 corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. This corollary, known as the Roosevelt Corollary, expanded on the original Monroe Doctrine and asserted the US's authority to intervene in Latin American countries to preserve stability and protect its interests.
If you mean by sending troops into Mexico, no. The United States hasn't intervened militarily in Mexico since the Pershing Punitive Expedition in 1917.
Being president of Mexico does not require this specifically, and going to college in Mexico does not guarantee your eligibility for president of Mexico. Further, if you go to college in Mexico, this would probably not restrict you from becoming the president of another country.
It was busy with its own American Civil War (1861-1865).
As commander in chief of the armed forces, the President can use the military to intervene or offer assistance in crisis situations at home and around the world.