They want a shooting war on drugs with one of our closest allies
By
Among
the Republican candidates, there’s a continuing, growing favorite cause
spreading – to bomb or otherwise invade Mexico to wipe out drug and smuggling
cartels.
Donald
Trump says he is committed to declare war and defeat the
cartels, including a “full naval embargo” on them. Florida Gov.
Ron DeSantis promised to deploy the U.S. military against cartels in Mexico and
has suggested executing migrants who carry drugs. Sen. Tim Scott, R, S.C, says he wants
to use “the world’s greatest military” to solve the problem.
In
the House, Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, and Mike Waltz, R-Fla., have bills
seeking authorization for the use of military force to “put us at war with the cartels.”
Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., says he is open to sending U.S.
troops into Mexico to target drug lords even without that nation’s
permission. There are bills to label cartels as terrorist organizations.
A recent poll found
strong support for military action among self-identified GOP primary voters.
Whether
it is to solve fentanyl or interfere with human smuggling, the bomb Mexico
refrain—once an idea limited to the extreme fringe — is taking hold in Republican
leadership opinions that remain a lot more about hot air than
executable proposal.
Mexico Resists
The Mexican president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, openly opposes U.S. military involvement in his country, as does Democrat Joe Biden, who basically says law enforcement agencies have been given a go-ahead to target cartels without use of U.S. troops.
For the military, figures like Gen. Mark A. Milley, outgoing
Joint Chiefs chairman, have said it is an inappropriate idea for the military
to enter what is a law enforcement issue.
Fentanyl has been blamed for more than 71,000 U.S. deaths a year, and the Drug Enforcement Agency has assessed repeatedly that most fentanyl is being distributed by two Mexican cartels who produce it at secret labs with chemicals sourced from China.
According to former Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, Trump considered He using missiles to take out drug labs, but backed away because of the legal complications and fears that bombing Mexico could lead to increased asylum claims at the southern border.
Now Trump has rekindled war on cartels talk, promising in a video that,
if reelected, he would “order the Department of Defense to make appropriate use
of special forces, cyber warfare, and other overt and covert actions to inflict
maximum damage on cartel leadership, infrastructure and operations.”
Hmm.
The very people who find that the war in Europe is overly taxing on American
resources want to tackle multiple underground criminal syndicates with missiles
and troops in violation of international law and unclear objectives. What could
go wrong?
Consider the Problems
The
more non-political mind suggests there are several issues raised by these
belligerent campaign promises, captured in a Washington Post column by
Fareed Zakaria, who calls the whole idea “delusional.”
First,
he notes, sending in troops would be an act of war against Mexico. Won’t there
be a military response and a rise in public anti-Americanism? Do Republicans
think that Mexico just invites missile attacks? Would it be too much to ask
candidates at least to acknowledge there may be a legal problem or two here?
Second,
an invasion or military attack is not likely to work. The U.S. Northern Command
assesses that 30 to 35 percent of Mexican
territory is ungoverned, giving space for the drug cartels to roam
free with their massive militias. And in Afghanistan, over 20 years the U.S.
military was unable to stop the drug trade.
Third,
large-scale action against the cartels likely would unleash instability across
the region and in the United States, with cartels shifting production across
borders. In addition, such action in southern Mexico would prompt civilians to
flee in mass – towards the United States.
“You
would think that we would have some understanding of the unintended
consequences of military interventions after Iraq and Afghanistan. Millions of migrants have
been trying to enter the United States; imagine what the numbers would look
like if there were a bombing campaign in southern Mexico. Armed gangs would
disperse and try to find ways to hide in smaller numbers, including by crossing
the border. Instead of exporting the violence to Mexico, we would bring the war
to America,” says Zakaria.
Lastly,
of course, is that all this is about supply – not the insatiable and continuing
demand in the United States for serious drugs, including fentanyl. Despite
government programs and deaths, we see increasing usage numbers, a huge volume
of drug-related arrests and imprisonments, and endless street crimes and
corruption related to drugs.
It
is easier to ballyhoo about waging war on cartels than to deal with building
stable societies that deal sensibly with drugs on every level.
Terry H. Schwadron retired as a senior editor at The
New York Times, Deputy Managing Editor at The Los Angeles Times and leadership
jobs at The Providence (RI) Journal-Bulletin. He was part of a Pulitzer Gold
Medal team in Los Angeles, and his team part of several Pulitzers in New York.
As an editor, Terry created new approaches in newsrooms, built technological
tools and digital media. He pursued efforts to recruit and train minority
journalists and in scholarship programs. A resident of Harlem, he volunteers in
community storytelling, arts in education programs, tutoring and is an active
freelance trombone player.