Daniel DePetris: Bombing Mexico to stop drug cartels from supplying US with fentanyl is a terrible idea
Chicago Tribune
Jul 04, 2023
The early stretch of the 2024 presidential campaign is
underway — and with it a boatload of bad ideas and policy initiatives. One of
the worst but increasingly popular proposals, uttered by several politicians
aspiring for the highest office in the land, is to use the military to combat
the drug cartels that have smuggled gargantuan amounts of fentanyl into the
United States and turned swaths of neighboring Mexico into a war zone.
Former President Donald Trump, the front-runner for
the GOP presidential nomination, has vowed to unleash the full weight and power
of the U.S. military to hit criminal organizations such as the Sinaloa and New
Jalisco New Generation cartels hard. This would entail deploying U.S. military
assets in full cooperation with
the Mexican government to take out the infrastructure those cartels rely on to
manufacture, transport and smuggle the drug across the U.S.-Mexico border.
Trump is apparently so serious about his hard-line
approach that his advisers briefed him on
possible military options, including airstrikes against cartel locations and
the deployment of U.S. special operations forces — without the consent of the
Mexican government if necessary. This wouldn’t be a new idea for Trump;
according to his former defense secretary, Mark Esper, Trump mused about sending missiles into
Mexico-based drug labs.
Trump isn’t the only one advocating for a hard-nosed
approach to the problem. In the first policy blueprint of his campaign, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wrote that
“if the Mexican Government doesn’t do something about stopping the precursor
chemicals for drugs going through Mexican ports into cartel hands, we’ll send
in the Coast Guard and the Navy.” U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, another presidential
candidate, told supporters that he
would “let the world’s greatest military fight these terrorists,” referring to
the cartels, “because that’s exactly what they are.”
Even some lawmakers are getting into the action: U.S.
Reps. Dan Crenshaw and Michael Waltz introduced legislation that
would authorize the use of military force against nine Mexican drug
organizations responsible for feeding the fentanyl crisis in America.
The only problem? The idea itself is so poorly thought
out that it shouldn’t be considered as a legitimate option. There is no
evidence that further militarizing an already overmilitarized war on drugs will
give us different results.
First, we should be abundantly clear what we’re
talking about here. Taking out fentanyl labs on Mexican territory is merely a
short-term fix — and a poor one at that. Destroying the buildings, equipment
and staff the cartels use could disrupt operations for a time, but the cartels
would inevitably rebuild the labs somewhere else, recruit more cooks and pick
up where they left off. This isn’t a simple assumption but rather an
indisputable fact.
Indeed, it’s not like the U.S. hasn’t pursued a
similar strategy before; in Afghanistan, the U.S. spent nearly $10 billion trying
to eradicate the country’s poppy fields, often through airstrikes, in order to
deprive the Taliban of a revenue source for their insurgency. The result,
according to the U.S. special inspector general for Afghanistan
reconstruction, was dismal: “Our
analysis reveals that no counternarcotics program led to lasting reductions in
poppy cultivation or opium production.”
Second, U.S. military force is highly likely to create
a bigger humanitarian crisis on the U.S.-Mexico border — one that makes the
current situation, in which tens of thousands of refugees from South and
Central America are seeking to get into the country, look like a minor
incident. Wars — and let there be no doubt that striking foreign soil is indeed
an act of war — are often hardest on the civilian population. Livelihoods are
lost, homes are demolished, society is disrupted and casualties are a given.
U.S. operations in Mexico wouldn’t be any different.
The Mexican cartels would respond with retaliation of their own; people
suspected of passing information to the U.S. are liable to be tortured or
killed. This, in turn, would create even more mass displacement, something U.S.
Customs and Border Protection doesn’t have the resources to handle.
Third, U.S. military action, whether it’s in the air
or on the ground, targets only the supply side of the equation. The other half
of the problem, demand for the drugs, will be left unaddressed. Data from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that nearly 110,000
people died of drug overdoses last year in
the U.S. Synthetic opioids, of which fentanyl is by the far most dangerous,
contributed to about 68% of those deaths. The large customer base north of the
border, combined with the cheap manufacturing costs and the huge profit margin,
are all reasons for the established cartels and smaller criminal groups in
Mexico to continue pushing pills into the U.S. At present, the monetary
incentives are simply too large to ignore.
Finally, U.S. military action against the cartels will
sever whatever cooperation the Mexican government provides to U.S. law
enforcement and counternarcotics agents on the fentanyl issue. While it’s true
that Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s administration hasn’t exactly
been an ideal security partner for
Washington — having shut down an
elite Mexican counternarcotics unit last
year, limiting information-sharing with the Drug Enforcement Administration and
basking in delusions about Mexico not being a source of fentanyl — it’s also
true that U.S.-Mexico relations would get a whole lot worse if U.S. bombs
started dropping on Mexican soil. López Obrador is a highly nationalistic
president who wouldn’t deal with a violation of Mexican sovereignty lightly. No
Mexican president would.
Politicians talking tough on the trail is nothing new,
and we’re bound to hear more of it. Let’s just hope common sense prevails over
jingoism.
Daniel DePetris is a fellow at Defense Priorities
and a foreign affairs columnist for the Chicago Tribune.
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