Invading Mexico in the Name of the Drug War Is a Really Bad Idea
04/10/2023
Weimin Chen
https://mises.org/wire/invading-mexico-name-drug-war-really-bad-idea
Following the violent attack on Americans in the
Mexican border city of Matamoros in early March, South Carolina Republican
senator Lindsey Graham stated that he was prepared to get tough and introduce
legislation to set the stage for US military intervention in Mexico. The move
would be a significant escalation in the long-running war on drugs that has
been raging under the auspices of the United States for many decades to the
dismay of many Latin American countries.
Graham continues to ignore the disastrous results of
the use of force in US foreign policy as he eyes adding Mexico to his growing bucket
list of interventionist missions. If previous
interventions serve as examples, a US military intervention in Mexico would be
just another excuse to expand national security interests and mire the country
in another costly conflict.
Matamoros Attack
Graham’s comments on using military force in Mexico
were sparked when four Americans were kidnapped in Matamoros on the Mexican
side of the border with Texas. The area is known for having a heavy drug cartel
presence due to its proximity to the US-Mexico border. The four Americans have
been identified as Latavia “Tay” McGee, Shaeed
Woodard, Zindell Brown, and Eric James Williams.
McGee’s mother told reporters that her daughter was
traveling to undergo a cosmetic surgical procedure with the other three. They
were fired on in downtown Matamoros and loaded into a pickup truck. A local
woman, Areli Pablo Servando, was also killed by a stray bullet in the attack.
Brown and Woodard were eventually found dead, while Williams and McGee
survived.
Later, a letter of apology along with five men found
with their hands tied were turned over to authorities of the Tamaulipas state
law enforcement purportedly by the Scorpion faction of the Gulf Cartel.
The organization extended its apology to the families of the victims and to the
people of Matamoros in general for the poor decision-making and discipline of
its affiliated associates.
This public relations move indicated that the cartel
was alarmed by the outcry following the attack and wanted to frame it as an
unusual incident outside of the ordinary rules under which it operates. Chances
are that the cartel wanted to do anything they could to avoid direct US
military confrontation.
Policymakers against the Cartels
Graham told Fox News that
he would introduce legislation “to make certain Mexican drug cartels foreign
terrorist organizations under US law and set the stage to use military force if
necessary to protect America from being poisoned by things coming out of
Mexico.” This highlights the concern surrounding the trafficking of fentanyl
into the US from Mexico and the deadly toll it has been having on the
population, and there is a growing sentiment, especially among Republican
leaders, for more to be done about it.
Former attorney general Bill Barr concurred with
the notion of US military action against
cartels and recommended declaring the groups as “foreign terrorist
organizations.” Texas representative Dan Crenshaw and Florida representative
Michael Waltz have expressed their desires to authorize the
president to use military force against “those
responsible for trafficking fentanyl or a fentanyl-related substance into the
United States or carrying out other related activities that cause regional
destabilization in the Western Hemisphere.” Seventeen Republicans have
cosponsored that resolution.
Georgia representative Marjorie Taylor Greene
wrote on Twitter that
the US “should strategically strike and take out the Mexican Cartels, not the
Mexican government or their people, but the Mexican Cartels which control them
all.” This common assurance that America’s execution of military plans will
simply target the right people and nobody else has been used in virtually every
instance of the US using force in foreign conflicts. It shows either the hubris
of US foreign policy or its indifference to the lives of its innocent victims
abroad.
Roots of Violence
These calls for military intervention would serve as
another layer of policies and actions already implemented by the US that have
had disastrous consequences. After all, the violence in Mexico is an extension
of the war on drugs started by American policy. In just the last decade, the US
Drug Enforcement Administration has been found laundering
millions of dollars in cash and delivering drugs
for Mexican traffickers, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
Explosives was found to have illegally
proliferated nearly two thousand firearms
with the intention of tracking criminal elements. These firearms were
subsequently lost and used in cartel violence on both sides of the border.
Meanwhile, US-trained Mexican troops and federal
police officers have committed widespread human rights
violations. If these are the policies that have
already been implemented, sending the military would be adding fuel to the
fire.
Graham followed up with his statements on military
force and clarified that
he did not mean sending the US Army to invade Mexico but to destroy drug labs.
This is reminiscent of the beginning of the US missions in the war on terror in
Afghanistan, when special forces under the Joint Special Operations Command
were implemented
in secret raids that were highly controversial
in their lack of accountability in causing collateral damage and civilian
casualties. Without any clear definition of success and with the dubious
effectiveness of using military force, this kind of endeavor would be
susceptible to mission creep and
expansions of the scope and spending, just as it did in the many interventions
of the war on terror.
Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador has
already responded
to the remarks by Republican lawmakers, saying
that any US military intervention in his country would represent an
unacceptable infringement of Mexican sovereignty. If the US military’s track
record provides any indication, the direct use of force in Mexico would likely
cause more pain and suffering in a country with a population already plagued by
violence.
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