As F. Brooks said, "there is no silver bullet", and Agile processes do not depart from this and cannot be applied for all kinds of project.
Moreover, Scrum, and agile processes, are more than a set of practices, there are underlying principles. If applying the practices can be easy, without those principles, it can lead to a disaster. And by inspecting and adapting the process continuously, the process will ends fitting one's needs.
It's obvious Scrum is suffering from projects [mis-]using Scrum and failing. It's unavoidable. But we saw Waterfall projects failing, we saw RAD projects failing, we saw RUP projects failing, what does it teach us about those processes ?
I personally think Agile processes have reached their maturity level, not sure it this means they started to decline.
