Sign on Arizona border ranch. Grassroots right and left find common ground in simplistic anti-free trade analysis of U.S.-Mexico relations/ Photo by Tom Barry |
On the left, Manuel Pérez-Rocha, an
analyst with the Institute for Policy Studies, rightly challenged the alarmism about
Mexico’s failed state prospects. “Labeling Mexico a potential ‘failed
state’ is a false and dangerous distraction from the country's real problems,”
he wrote in a Feb. 23, 2009 commentary for IPS’ Foreign Policy In Focus.
What are those real problems? In keeping
with dogma of the anti-economic globalization left, Mexico is not a failed
state but its central problems, including narco-violence, can be attributed to
the failed free trade model and NAFTA, according to Pérez-Rocha.
“While drug cartels have managed to
corrupt many officials at the state, local, and national levels of government,
as well as in the police departments and the military, there are no indications
that the Mexican state — or any individual Mexican state — is on the brink of
dissolution or disintegration,” Pérez-Rocha wrote in February 2009. “Mexico
still has strong institutions that millions of people work and struggle every
day to defend, including relatively well-functioning public services such as
health and education.”
Where the threat comes from is the
global economy and U.S. trade policy. “Today it's clearer than ever that
Mexico's unfettered opening-up to the global economy has made it exceptionally
vulnerable,” he asserts.
Pérez-Rocha faults President Calderón
for his “neoliberalism.” Since the creation of the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) in 1994, he contends that “conservatives have touted the country as a
successful example of ‘neoliberal’ reforms, including trade and investment
liberalization, deregulation, and privatization. NAFTA promoters heralded the
increase in trade and investment flows between the three North American
countries.”
“Mexico is in crisis, but the roots of
that crisis are the economic policies that have created such widespread
hopelessness and despair,” he wrote – repeating the same anti-free trade, anti-NAFTA
mantras that the left’s anti-economic globalization activists have relied on as
a substitute for analysis over the past two decades.
For Pérez-Rocha -- and many others on
the left -- the narco-violence in Mexico can be largely explained by the ravages
of free trade.
No doubt, as he observed, that NAFTA “failed to deliver
promised gains in poverty reduction or wage growth.” But as an explanation for
the increasing reach of ungoverned spaces in Mexico, the horrific drug-related
violence, the country’s systemic corruption, the absence of any commitment to
the rule of law, or Mexico’s social disintegration, it falls far short.
Connections can be made, but the neither
the roots of Mexico’s current narco-violence crisis nor the country’s other
long-simmering crises such as its out migration, endemic corruption, or
centralized political system can be found in the free trade model.
Left dogma often turns delusionary.
That’s the case in James Cockcroft’s new
essay, “Mexico: ‘Failed States,’ New Wars, Resistance,” in Monthly Review.
Mexico isn’t a failed state but merely a
pliable subaltern in the empire, according to Cockcroft. That’s been his analysis of Mexico and the
rest of Latin America over the past four decades.
“It is not a failed state because it
carries out well the tasks assigned to it in the empire’s design,” writes
Cockcroft in the socialist Monthly Review.
“All Washington’s propaganda backs up the militarization of Mexico in order to
protect the interests of transnational corporations and foreign banks.”
No need for any new analysis thinking
about Mexico. The shop=worn anti-imperialist, anti-monopoly capitalism analysis
will do just fine, in his view, for pressing questions about narctrafficking,
organized crime, and governance in Mexico.
Cockcroft sees conspiracy in U.S. aid for
President Calderón’s three-year drug war. “Sponsored by Washington and its
allies,” the drug war has nothing to do with ‘national security’ or ending the
drug traffic.” Rather, the drug war is a cover for a war against Mexico’s
nationalist, popular forces. In Mexico and elsewhere, according to Cockcroft,
the “’failures’ of the campaigns against the narcotraffic help to justify war,
state violence, and massive repression in whole societies.”
In the view of Cockcroft, what we are
seeing in Mexico is a “right-wing offensive, which, building on twenty-eight
years of neoliberal economic policies, has led to the country’s increasing
militarization.” The right-wing offensive unleashed by Calderón has taken the
form of “a reign of terror.” This veteran Mexico observer says that
“broad-based social movements are resisting” this offensive.
It’s all a transnational conspiracy.
According to Cockcroft:
“What are the real targets of these plans for the international
coordination and militarization of the struggle against supposed terrorists and
narcos? The plans are aimed at immigrants, original peoples, guerrilla
resistance, political dissidents, and social movements protesting transnational
corporations that take over water and cause mining pollution. These plans,
financed by billions of dollars, have made Mexico a security priority for the
U.S. ruling class… They do not know that this war
is an excuse for militarizing the nation.’
Dogma deludes. Cockcroft, like others in
the hard left (both here and in Mexico), is delusionary about the centrality of
the “empire” in determining Mexico’s political economy. Equally dogma-driven are
his assertions about the hidden counterrevolutionary agenda of the drug war.
He also lauds a popular resistance that
most other observers of Mexican politics haven’t detected.
Cockcroft finds hope in that “nationalist
forces are resisting” the “galloping privatization” that is “overrunning the
energy sector,” without any acknowledgment of the hopeless state of the state
energy company PEMEX.
“The new popular protests are mainly
defensive,” he admits, “however much spiced by calls for a ‘revolutionary
offensive,’ a ‘Constituent Assembly,’ and ‘national sovereignty.’ Right now,
the correlation of forces does not favor human liberation.”
“But you never know,” he says, apparently hopefully, “at what
moment the creation of fear in a society will turn into an expansion of rage
and rebellion—an explosion of ‘popular power’ organized from below.” Clearly, the governance and development strategy
in Mexico badly need an overhaul.
But would a raging “popular explosion” -- particularly along the
revolutionary offensive, nationalist, and socialist lines Cockcroft still
favors -- lead to improved governance and improved social welfare? What would
happen to Mexico’s still emerging system of representative democracy in Mexico?
Cockcroft writes off the system of multiparty, representative
democracy, noting that all the major political parties have become neoliberal and corrupt.” There are,
however, no words of criticism or caution about the armed “resistance.”
“There are a dozen guerrilla groups operating in Mexico but they
are small and divided,” writes Cockcroft, “During this period of popular
protests, they have done no shooting. All resistance is peaceful…for the
moment” – as if to say that another revolution is around the corner, and bienvenido.
Good analysis about
the stability and reach of the state in Mexico is hard to find anywhere. But
the lack of an attempt of serious analysis within the traditional left is
particularly shocking and dismaying.
Both in the United
States and in Mexico, the left’s dismissive assessments about the value of
representative democracy and its tendency to lay the blame for all problems on
free trade, U.S. imperialism, and transnational capital blind it to the real
security threats faced by the Mexican state and the Mexican people.
Although Mexico is
certainly not a failed state, organized crime’s control of increasingly large
swaths of national territory merits more serious analysis.
good points. pertinent review. i quite agree with your analysis, tom.
ReplyDeletemexico remains far from having a failed state or a suborned state. but it's painful to see so much of "mexico lindo y querido" being eaten alive by a resurgence of "mexico barbaro" -- if i may put it that way.
in my view, mexico is having a very diffficult time adapting to the market form of organization in all sectors of society, after decades of relying on the tribal/clan and hierarchical institutional forms. but that's another story.
much appreciation from here for your continued postings at this blog. onward.