(Second and final part of an article on the identification problem in Mexico's drug war crisis.)
The U.S.
government has traditionally referred to Mexican and other Latin American drug
cartels as drug trafficking organizations (DTOs). But the Obama administration
has altered the nomenclature of the drug trade, and the DTOs are now routinely
categorized as transnational criminal organizations (TCOs).
By newly
designating the Mexican DTOs as transnational criminal organizations, the Obama
administration has opened new political room for foreign policy hawks and
anti-drug hardliners like Connie Mack to credibly argue that the U.S. needs to
respond differently and more aggressively to the evolving drug trade scenario
in the hemisphere.
Obama
counternarcotics officials have dropped the term “war on drugs.” Instead, the
four-decade war has been superseded by the newly organized “combat against
transnational crime” and transnational organized criminal organizations – as
spelled out this year by the White House in the Strategy to Combat Transnational Organized Crime.
The
shift in the terminology to describe the U.S. national and international
enforcement of its drug control laws – shedding an embarrassing military
metaphor and adopting a more appropriate law-enforcement one – was long
overdue.
Wars,
after all, are fought to win not to flounder -- with nary a sign of victory
after four decades of drug war-fighting. In contrast, crime-fighting is
accepted as a constant slog where no final victory is ever expected.
President
Obama, however, insists, that the combat against the drug-trafficking TCOs is a
matter of urgent national security, promising to prioritize the targeting of
TCOs that represent a “high national security risk.”
In keeping
with new parlance of the administration, Connie Mack, who chairs the Western
Hemisphere Subcommittee, contends that the U.S. and Mexican governments no
longer simply confront drug trafficking organizations but now face powerful
transnational criminal organizations that threaten not only the region’s
security but also U.S. national security.
In contrast
to Mack, other critics, apart from those of the right wing, lambast the Merida
Initiative for contributing to widespread human rights violations by the
Mexican military and for continuing drug war strategies that are based on
failed drug prohibition policies.
Counting on Connie
Mack
During his seven years in Congress, Mack has won strong support from his
conservative constituency for his hardline positions on U.S. Latin America
policy, particularly with his shrill anti-communist critiques of Castro in
Cuba, Chávez in Venezuela, and Zelaya (removed by military-backed coup) in
Honduras.
As chairman of the Western Hemisphere subcommittee, Mack has won a
larger megaphone for a view of hemispheric relations in which U.S. hegemony
persists. In language reminiscent of the imperial era politics in Latin
America, Mack states: “You can count on me to challenge these tyrants wherever
they are and always stand on the side of freedom, security and prosperity.”
Mack’s hawkish views on Mexico represent an ideological continuity in
that he regards the TCOs as insurgents who challenge the established order. Yet
his new focus on Mexico and the border security also have more immediate
political origins – including an opportunity to bash the Obama administration
and an attempt to assuage anti-immigrant constituents outraged over Mack’s criticisms of the repressive Arizona
immigration law as threat to “freedom-loving conservatives.”
Mack may see his hawkish stances on border security and on the Mexico
drug war as restoring the trust of his conservative constituents and helping
him in his likely bid to to unseat Democratic Senator Bill Nelson.
In a Sept. 16 letter to the State Department
complaining about the failures of the Merida Initiative, Mack wrote that “the transformation of drug cartels into TCOs and their
attempts to undermine the Mexican government through tactics labeled as
characteristics of an insurgency” required an overhaul of the Merida Initiative
to address the new security environment.
Mack told the State Department:
The failure
of this Administration to set performance measures, target dates or tangible
goals to measure the success of U.S. programs has made it impossible to claim
‘success’ on the initiative itself. Meanwhile, the Mexican drug cartels have
capitalized on the United States’ sluggish assistance to actively undermine the
Mexican state through insurgent activities such as violence, corruption, and
propaganda.
Both the
Calderón and Obama administrations insist that the battle against the cartels –
called drug war in Mexico and combat against transnational crime in the U .S. –
is making steady progress toward the goal of reducing the threat of the
drug-trafficking organizations.
Responding to Mack’s letter, the State
Department wrote:
We believe the
[Merida] Initiative is already having a positive impact. Through its bold
efforts, with U.S. support, the Mexican government has successfully dismantled
drug smuggling routes, seized major amounts of illicit drugs and jailed drug
kingpins.
Critiquing
the Merida Initiative, Mack says, “If we are unable or unwilling to identify the problem
correctly, then we are unable to properly put a policy forward to combat the
issue at hand. The security and safety of the American people depend on
it.”
That’s
exactly right. But it is not a problem that began with the Merida Initiative or
with the Obama administration. Mack only
compounds the problem of incorrectly identifying the issue at hand in Mexico
and at the border by introducing new identifiers such as “terrorist insurgency”
and “criminal insurgency.” Such terms confuse tactics and methods with
objectives and goals, while leading both countries down the path of increased
militarization.
The
Obama administration also confiscates the drug-related crisis in Mexico by
raising the specter of transnational crime as a national security threat and by
identifying the Mexican drug trafficking organizations as the cause of the
crisis rather than as largely a product of America’s own drug war and drug
prohibition policies.
1 comment:
The Mexico crime situation needs to be seen in context of a larger global historical movement that is moving away from state power towards a kind of science-fiction version of neo-feudalism.
Organized crime has, in the past two decades spread it's power and influence as states have lost their moral legitimacy. Nothing illustrates this better than the state's reaction to what should be seen as an existential crisis--the 2008 financial crisis which put the icing on the cake to the decline of the American state as a legitimate state--I don't think this was intentional--the state had no choice but to admit that it was powerless to the forces of organized "soft" crime namely the NY financial industry. This I think is going on in many states--we seen state structures on the surface and local lords and oligarchs on the "local" level which is no longer geographical. An industry like health-care can indefinitely control policy without any chance of reform--they produce half the service for twice the price and it will not change--there is no agency that can reform any major industry in the U.S. or can any new policy be instituted.
This is why the Executive branch has been trying to gain the extra-judicial power for itself and succeeded. It has given itself a reason for being--as the police and military service for the international corporate oligarchs.
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