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When the War on Drugs in Mexico Comes Back Home to the U.S.

neversickanymore

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When the War on Drugs in Mexico Comes Back Home to the U.S.
BY REBECCA GORDON
MARCH 23, 2015


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Like the Islamic State, the Mexican drug cartels’ power has increased as the result of disastrous U.S. policies.

They behead people by the hundreds. They heap headless, handless bodies along roadsides as warnings to those who would resist their power. They have penetrated the local, state, and national governments and control entire sections of the country. They provide employment and services to an impoverished public, which distrusts their actual government with its bitter record of corruption, repression, and torture. They seduce young people from several countries, including the United States, into their murderous activities.

Is this a description of the heinous practices of the Islamic State (IS) in Iraq and Syria? It could be, but as a matter of fact it’s not. These particular thugs exist a lot closer to home. They are part of the multi-billion-dollar industry known as the drug cartels of Mexico. Like the Islamic State, the cartels' power has increased as the result of disastrous policies born in the U.S.A.

There are other parallels between IS and groups like Mexico's Zetas and its Sinaloa cartel. Just as the U.S. wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya fertilized the field for IS, another U.S. war, the so-called War on Drugs, opened new horizons for the drug cartels. Just as Washington has worked hand-in-hand with and also behind the backs of corrupt rulers in Central Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa, so it has done with the Mexican government. Both kinds of war have resulted in blowback—violent consequences felt in our own cities, whether at the finish line of the Boston Marathon or in communities of color across the country.

In Mexico, the U.S. military is directly involved in the War on Drugs. In this country, that “war” has provided the pretext for the militarization of local police forces and increased routine surveillance of ordinary people going about their ordinary lives.

And just as both the national security state and the right wing have used the specter of IS to create an atmosphere of panic and hysteria in this country, so both have used the drug cartels' grotesque theater of violence to justify their demonization of immigrants from Latin America and the massive militarization of America’s borderlands.

The War in Mexico

If there was an official beginning to Mexico's war on drugs, it would have to be considered the election of Felipe Calderón as the country’s president in 2006. The candidate of the right-wing Partido Acción Nacional, the National Action Party (PAN), Calderón was only the second Mexican president in 70 years who did not come from the Partido Revolucionario Institucional, the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). His predecessor, Vicente Fox, had been the first.

It was Calderón who, with encouragement and assistance from the United States, changed Mexico's war on drugs from a metaphor into the real thing, in which guns and grenades would fuel the deaths of more than 60,000 Mexicans through 2012.

The current president, Enrique Peña Nieto of the PRI, admits that another 27,000 Mexicans were murdered in the first year of his presidency. At least another 25,000 have been disappeared since 2007. It was Calderón who brought the Mexican military fully into the fight against drugs, transforming an ineffective policing policy into a full-scale shooting war with the cartels. At least 50,000 military personnel have been deployed.

In addition to ordinary citizens, journalists and politicians have been particular targets in this war. The Committee to Protect Journalists reports that murders of Mexican reporters have increased dramatically since 2006. Among those whose killers have been positively identified, 69% died at the hands of the drug cartels, and at least 22% were killed by government or military personnel.

Wikipedia lists over 100 politicians who have lost their lives in Mexico's war on drugs. That list does not include a woman named Aide Nava González, whose headless body was dumped this month on a road in Guerrero state. Nava was contending for the Partido Revolución Democrática, the Democratic Revolution Party, slot on the ballot in the town of Ahuacuotzingo. Her husband, the former mayor, had been murdered there last year. A note from Los Rojos, a local drug gang, was left with Nava's body. “This is what will happen,” it read, “to anyone who does not fall in line, fucking turncoats.”

Guerrero is the home of Ayotzinapa, a town where 43 teachers-in-training once attended a rural teachers college. All 43 “disappeared” last September during a demonstration in the neighboring town of Iguala. Their arrest by police, and apparent subsequent murder at the hands of a local drug gang, Guerreros Unidos, was one of the few stories of Mexican suffering to break into the U.S. mainstream media last year. The mayor of Iguala has since admitted that he instructed the police to hand the students over to the gang and has been arrested, along with his wife. The town’s police chief is still on the run.

Like the “war on terror” globally, Mexico’s war on drugs has created endless new pretexts for government repression, which has its own lengthy history in that country. That history includes the long-remembered police murders of some 300 students, among the thousands protesting in Mexico City's Plaza de las Tres Culturas a couple of weeks before the Summer Olympics began in 1968. Juan Méndez, the U.N.'s Special Rapporteur on Torture, wrote in his 2014 mission report on Mexico:

“The National Human Rights Commission recorded an increase in the number of complaints of torture and ill-treatment since 2007 and reported a peak of 2,020 complaints in 2011 and 2,113 in 2012, compared with an annual average of 320 in the six years prior to 2007. Between December 2012 and July 2014, the Commission received 1,148 complaints of violations attributable to the armed forces alone.”

According to Méndez, it’s difficult to pinpoint the exact number of torture cases in the country in any year, because there is no national registry that records such complaints. Nor is everyone who was tortured by representatives of the government likely to report their suffering to that same government.

What is not difficult to pinpoint is the nature of the torture. Méndez notes the “disturbing similarities” in the complaints of those tortured. The police and the military are regularly reported to use a combination of “punches, kicks, and beatings with sticks; electric shocks through the application of electrical devices such as cattle prods to their bodies, usually their genitals; asphyxiation with plastic bags; waterboarding; forced nudity; suspension by their limbs; [and] threats and insults.”

The purpose of such torture is clear as well. As Mendez reports, it’s “to punish and to extract confessions or incriminating information.” A 2008 change to the Mexican constitution makes it easier to do this: under this policy of pre-trial detention (arraigo in Spanish), suspected drug traffickers can be held for up to 80 days without charge. According to the Mexican Commission for the Defense and Promotion of Human Rights, “Supposedly,arraigo is used as a means to investigate suspected criminals, but in practice, it is used as a kind of public scrutiny that allows more time for the authorities to determine whether the detained is guilty or innocent.” It's much easier to extract a confession when you have electric cattle prods and waterboarding at your disposal.

Washington Fights a “War” in Mexico

Who pays for Mexico's war on drugs? You won’t perhaps be too surprised to learn that the United States foots a major part of the bill. Between 2008 and 2014, Congress has appropriated $2.4 billion dollars to fight the cartels, as part of the Mérida Initiative, a “security cooperation agreement” between the U.S. and Mexican governments. That money supports a failed war in which tens of thousands have been killed and thousands more tortured.

U.S. involvement, however, goes far beyond money. Along with the publicly acknowledged Mérida Initiative, the Justice Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) signed secret agreements with the Fox and Calderón administrations without the knowledge or consent of the Mexican congress. These openly violated the Mexican constitution, which reserves to that congress the right to approve agreements with foreign governments, as well as the U.N. Convention Against Transnational Crime, which requires that activities carried out by one country inside another be approved by the appropriate agency in the country where those activities take place.

Under these secret agreements, U.S. DEA agents met repeatedly with high-level members of particular drug cartels, especially the Sinaloa group, to obtain information about rival organizations. Informants served as go-betweens in contacts between the DEA and “El Chapo” Guzmán, the head of that cartel. Guzmán was arrested in 2014 by the Mexican government. The newspaper El Universal conducted a year-long investigation in which its reporters documented the extent and effects of this illegal cooperation. The DEA arranged to dismiss drug trafficking charges that were pending in the United States against some of their Sinoloa Cartel informants. In other words, it allowed the cartels with which it worked to continue business—and murder—as usual.

In at least one case, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) issued multiple re-entry visas to informants, allowing them to bring significant quantities of drugs into the United States with impunity. In fact, it appears that, in order to maintain the flow of information, U.S. officials took sides in the drug war that devastated the Mexican city of Ciudad Juárez, killing an estimated 10,500 people. With tacit U.S. permission, the Sinaloa Cartel was able to defeat the rival Juárez Cartel.

Seventy percent of the guns used in Mexico's drug wars also come from this country. Most are purchased at one or another of the 6,700 licensed firearms sales outlets along the U.S.-Mexico border. The University of San Diego's Trans-Border Institute estimates that, between 2010 and 2012, about 253,000 firearms were bought each year for transfer to Mexico. And most of them made it across the border. The Institute reports that “Mexican authorities have seized roughly 12.7% of the total annual trade” in weapons. U.S. interdiction efforts account for a measly 2% of those seized.

Continued and heavily linked here http://inthesetimes.com/article/17782/when-the-war-on-drugs-in-mexico-comes-back-home-to-the-u.s
 
very intersting article... like always... but IS has 20-30k memebers, just the sinola cartel has 150k... theres no comparison between the two, if the cartels wanted to go live in the middle of BFE (or BFI/S to be more accurate) those guys wouldnt stand a chance...

i was just reading about how IS is running out of money and can barley fund their own state, every cartel makes so much more money then those jokers.... and as far as body count... that one might be a little closer, but still prob the cartels...
 
Forty years ago I used to travel in Mexico and Central America a lot. Now, when I go back, the changes to those countries because of the drug war is almost too devastating to deal with. Seeing the cartels move into northern Guatemala and watching the peaceful Mayans once again pay the price with their lives (caught between the cartels and the government) is heartbreaking. The torture, environmental devastation, abuse and killings that are carried out in order to get those drugs to the US, Canada and Europe is real. Grow your own, produce your own whenever you can. Share with friends. If you can't do that at least inform yourself as to where your drugs come from and think about what you want to align your life with, what you are willing to support with your money. I know vegans that won't touch animal products because of the way the animals were raised but they have no clue about their complicity when it comes to pot, coke, meth or heroin that is coming up here from south of the border. The photo of the heads of a family of five stuck on sticks outside their mud shack because one of the members was suspected of informing to the government (during an arrest for nothing more than to get that information so torture is implied) was one of the first photos I saw in the paper in Guatemala when I returned in 2010. Its always the poorest that pay the worst price. I want no part in that.
 
Forty years ago I used to travel in Mexico and Central America a lot. Now, when I go back, the changes to those countries because of the drug war is almost too devastating to deal with. Seeing the cartels move into northern Guatemala and watching the peaceful Mayans once again pay the price with their lives (caught between the cartels and the government) is heartbreaking. The torture, environmental devastation, abuse and killings that are carried out in order to get those drugs to the US, Canada and Europe is real. Grow your own, produce your own whenever you can. Share with friends. If you can't do that at least inform yourself as to where your drugs come from and think about what you want to align your life with, what you are willing to support with your money. I know vegans that won't touch animal products because of the way the animals were raised but they have no clue about their complicity when it comes to pot, coke, meth or heroin that is coming up here from south of the border. The photo of the heads of a family of five stuck on sticks outside their mud shack because one of the members was suspected of informing to the government (during an arrest for nothing more than to get that information so torture is implied) was one of the first photos I saw in the paper in Guatemala when I returned in 2010. Its always the poorest that pay the worst price. I want no part in that.

I am a heroin addict and I actually think about this all the time.. A few years ago I bought heroin from a drug trafficking ring that was also involved in human trafficking. I actually just posted this in another article.. I felt really guilty that day.... I am trying to do the right thing but I have had some missteps here and there...
 
^ what else can you do though?? You should not be put in this position in the first place. There would be no guilt if the government would legally supply for it's people to freely do what THEY ARE GOING TO DO EITHER WAY. The drug war causes all of these horrible situations not people that use drugs.
 
The problem is not the cartels, the problem is us. The U.S. government is the worlds largest cartel. Our military is the worlds largest gang. We torture and kill, smuggle, and lie. There are numerous countries on every continent that have seen the bloody, corrupted side of our war on drugs. "We have met the enemy, and he is us."
 
Forty years ago I used to travel in Mexico and Central America a lot. Now, when I go back, the changes to those countries because of the drug war is almost too devastating to deal with. Seeing the cartels move into northern Guatemala and watching the peaceful Mayans once again pay the price with their lives (caught between the cartels and the government) is heartbreaking. The torture, environmental devastation, abuse and killings that are carried out in order to get those drugs to the US, Canada and Europe is real. Grow your own, produce your own whenever you can. Share with friends. If you can't do that at least inform yourself as to where your drugs come from and think about what you want to align your life with, what you are willing to support with your money. I know vegans that won't touch animal products because of the way the animals were raised but they have no clue about their complicity when it comes to pot, coke, meth or heroin that is coming up here from south of the border. The photo of the heads of a family of five stuck on sticks outside their mud shack because one of the members was suspected of informing to the government (during an arrest for nothing more than to get that information so torture is implied) was one of the first photos I saw in the paper in Guatemala when I returned in 2010. Its always the poorest that pay the worst price. I want no part in that.

I kinda feel like this applies to everything from electronics to jewellery to tuna to quinoa, though? Capitalism and global exchange is riddled with human misery.

Drugs are definitely a luxury item that are easier to opt out of (for many people) than food and electronics, but I don't think many people are going to significantly affect their "consumption of exploitative things" footprint just by getting sober.
 
Absolutely. I was thinking about that while I was writing what I wrote before work this morning but didn't have the time to go that far. You can only do what you can do--as first world consumers we are all a part of a vast number of terrible systems. But I still will try to do what I can (vote with my wallet/consumer choices) when I do have knowledge of some horror that I was unwittingly supporting. I do it with my diet, why not with drugs?

I'm not naive enough to think that my small choices will change much if anything in the entrenched systems of greed and exploitation but on the other hand I am also not jaded or cynical enough to use that as a reason to merely throw up my hands and refuse to think about it.
 
My first statement still stands..... Heroin is illegal and until it is not than I am a microcosm of a much larger problem... I take responsibility... Just as I did when I was a mid level heroin dealer over ten yrs ago and my girlfriend overdosed and died in my apartment... Got slapped in the face by her mother at the funeral and was told "Mataste a mi nina(you killed my little girl by her mom). It was one of the worst days of my life and I will never forget it. I don't think legalizing heroin will make the problems of the drug go away... Maybe the supply side problems but I believe it could have lots of other unforeseen consequences...
 
My first statement still stands..... Heroin is illegal and until it is not than I am a microcosm of a much larger problem... I take responsibility... Just as I did when I was a mid level heroin dealer over ten yrs ago and my girlfriend overdosed and died in my apartment... Got slapped in the face by her mother at the funeral and was told "Mataste a mi nina(you killed my little girl by her mom). It was one of the worst days of my life and I will never forget it. I don't think legalizing heroin will make the problems of the drug go away... Maybe the supply side problems but I believe it could have lots of other unforeseen consequences...

I'm really sorry that happened. How awful. :(

I'm not pretending to know what the deal was with that terrible situation, but the data tells us that most heroin ODs involve either poly drug use, or people not adjusting dose for modified tolerance (such as when they come out of prison or rehab). I feel that both of these scenarios would happen a lot less often if we were able to do the kind of health promotion and awareness campaigns we just can't do while these substances are illegal.

And that's not even touching the people who OD on drugs other than heroin because they thought they were heroin.
 
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