Trump’s
Plan To Fight a Terror War Against the Cartels
by Ron Paul Posted on December 03, 2019 https://original.antiwar.com/paul/2019/12/02/trumps-plan-to-fight-a-terror-war-against-the-cartels/
The 50-year US war on drugs
has been a total failure, with hundreds of billions of dollars flushed down the
drain and our civil liberties whittled away fighting a war that cannot be won.
The 20-year “war on terror” has likewise been a gigantic US government
disaster: hundreds of billions wasted, civil liberties scorched, and a world
far more dangerous than when this war was launched after 9/11.
So what to do about two of
the greatest policy failures in US history? According to President Trump and
many in Washington, the answer is to combine them!
Last week Trump declared
that, in light of an attack last month on US tourists in Mexico, he would be
designating Mexican drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. Asked if
he would send in drones to attack targets in Mexico, he responded, “I don’t
want to say what I’m going to do, but they will be designated.” The Mexican
president was quick to pour cold water on the idea of US drones taking out
Mexican targets, responding to Trump’s threats saying “cooperation, yes;
interventionism, no.”
Trump is not alone in
drawing the wrong conclusions from the increasing violence coming from the drug
cartels south of the border. A group of US Senators sent a letter to Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo urging that the US slap sanctions on the drug cartels in
response to the killing of Americans.
Do these Senators really
believe that facing US sanctions these drug cartels will close down and move
into legitimate activities? Sanctions don’t work against countries and they
sure won’t work against drug cartels.
A recent editorial in the
conservative Federalist publication urges President Trump to launch
“unilateral, no-permission special forces raids” into Mexico like the US did
into Pakistan to fight ISIS and al-Qaeda!
I am sure the
military-industrial complex loves this idea! Another big war to keep Washington
rich at the expense of the rest of us. And the 2001 Authorization for the Use
of Military Force can even be trotted out to fight this brand new “terror war”!
Perhaps unintentionally,
however, this sudden push to look at the Mexican drug cartels as we did ISIS
and al-Qaeda do make sense. After all, the rise of the drug cartels and the
rise of the terror cartels have both been due to bad US policy. It was the US
invasion of Iraq based on neocon lies that led to the creation of ISIS and
expansion of al-Qaeda in the Middle East and it was the US war on drugs that
led to the rise of the drug cartels in Mexico.
Here’s another suggestion:
maybe instead of doing the same things that do not work, we might look at the
actual cause of the problems. The US war on drugs makes drugs enormously
profitable to Mexican suppliers eager to satisfy a ravenous US market. A study
last year by the CATO Institute found that with the steady decriminalization
and legalization of marijuana across the United States, the average US Border
Patrol agent seized 78 percent less marijuana in the fiscal year 2018 than in FY
2013.
Instead of declaring war on
Mexico, perhaps the answer to the drug cartel problem is to take away their
incentives by ending the war on drugs. Why not try something that actually
works?
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