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Calderon's dead-end war
- By Jorge
Castaņeda
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March 25,
2010
In
Ciudad Juarez
this month, Mexican President Felipe Calderon insisted
that appearances notwithstanding, drug violence had
begun to recede thanks to the yearlong presence of
10,000 Mexican troops in the border city.
Yet
according to his own government's figures, there have
been 536 executions in Juarez
since Jan. 1, which is 100 more than during the same
period last year.
And the violence is not
localized to a few border towns like
Juarez. Over a holiday weekend in Acapulco
this month, 34 people were assassinated in drug-related
incidents; nearly 20 suffered the same fate in the
drug-producing state of Sinaloa; and perhaps most
poignant, two graduate students from Mexico's premier
private university, Monterrey Tech, lost their lives
March 19, victims of crossfire as the Mexican military
pursued drug cartel members at the entrance to the
campus.
All in all, Calderon's war on drugs --
unleashed in December 2006, barely 10 days after he took
office -- has been not only ineffective but damaging to Mexico.
Since Calderon took office, overall levels of violence
have increased, and the state's territorial control is,
at best, about what it was in 2006.
No area of
the country has been truly recovered by the state, and
those few examples of partial success (Tijuana
is perhaps the most notable one) last only as long as
federal troops remain.
But the Mexican army is
clearly overextended: Of its 100,000 combat and patrol
troops, 96,000 are on constant duty, and desertions are
increasing.
So what else can
Mexico
do? And, because this is increasingly as much President
Obama's war as Calderon's, what can
Washington
do?
There are at least three options, none of
which is perfect but all of which are certainly
preferable to a deplorable and unsustainable status quo.
The first, and most minimalist, would be to continue
employing the same strategy and policy, but more
quietly.
Calderon on occasion gives the
impression that he is as interested in trumpeting the
war as in waging or winning it (remember President
George W. Bush's "Mission
Accomplished"?). Simply by toning down the rhetoric,
lowering the priority assigned to the war and
emphasizing other pressing issues such as economic
growth, political reform and social policy, he might
reassure the country and lessen the politicization of
his confrontation with the cartels.
A second
option would be to reset the entire affair and start
over.
This would require creating a single
national police force, a longtime goal on which scant
progress has been made during this administration or the
two previous ones. Creating such a force would allow the
military to be brought back to the barracks where it
belongs.
Such an overhaul also would facilitate
a greater emphasis on intelligence and a greater focus
on individual communities, along with a shift away from
focusing primarily on the most high-profile targets. All
of this might not make that much of a difference, but it
would be a start.
A third, much more ambitious
alternative would involve Mexico lobbying for decriminalization of at least
marijuana in the
United States.
There is a certain urgency to this. If, come November,
California were to vote on -- and pass -- a popular
initiative on cannabis legalization (and polls show this
is possible), this could leave Mexico in an untenable
and absurd situation in which troops and civilians were
dying in Tijuana to stop Mexican marijuana from entering
the U.S. -- where, once it entered, it could be
consumed, transported and sold legally.
On
Mexico's part, this would imply an about-face -- pulling
the army out of the towns and off the highways and, up
to a point, letting the cartels bleed themselves to
death, while over a couple of years the above-mentioned
national police force would be created and deployed.
It would, most controversially, require some sort of
a tacit deal with some cartels, and "the full force of
the law" against others. This is less scandalous than it
may appear. It would be similar to the approach the
Obama administration is taking with poppy growers and
heroin producers in Afghanistan.
Most important, though, it would demand a totally
different, "de-narcotized" U.S.-Mexican agenda. This
would mean placing Mexican development at the top of the
agenda, along with immigration, energy and
infrastructure and social cohesion funds.
This
last approach would make drug policy for both nations
once again a law enforcement issue rather than one of
national security.
Jorge Castaņeda is a former
Mexican foreign minister, a professor at New York University and a fellow at the New
America Foundation. His latest book is "Narco: The
Failed War," which he coauthored.
Los
Angeles Times
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-castaneda25-2010mar25,0,5691358.story
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