Risking Mexico and the Trump Presidency
MAGA doesn’t justify a second Mexican American War.
Dec 5, 2024
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/risking-mexico-and-the-trump-presidency/
As president, Donald Trump showed contempt for
America’s bipartisan war party. Nevertheless, he was still tempted by military
power, for instance suggesting that the U.S. target Mexican drug labs with
missiles. In January candidate
Trump proposed deploying
“all necessary military assets, including the U.S. Navy,” designating “the
major cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations,” and making “appropriate use
of special forces, cyber warfare and other overt and covert actions to inflict
maximum damage on cartel leadership, infrastructure and operations.”
Indeed, several members of his incoming
administration, including Vice President-elect J.D. Vance, the incoming
National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, currently a congressman for Florida, and
Tom Homan, set to become “border czar,” also have proposed that Washington
invade Mexico. A gaggle of other conservatives and Republicans, including most
of Trump’s primary opponents, have made similar arguments.
Most of the proposals are tough in tone but spare on
details. Last year Trump’s acting deputy secretary of the Department of
Homeland Security, Ken Cuccinelli, proposed conducting “specific military operations to
destroy the cartels” with special operations forces and airpower, and, if
necessary, “elements of the Marines, Army, Navy, Air Force and Coast Guard.”
He termed this “waging defensive war” and “defending the United
States.” Everyone sounds certain of success. The Fox News host Greg
Gutfeld contended: “It'll be over in minutes.”
Alas, reality suggests a very different result. The
primary drug problem is in America, not Mexico. Drugs cross the border
because Americans want to buy them. Most smuggling north involves Americans. The Mexican cartels are not creating demand for
fentanyl (as well as cocaine and marijuana). Last year Andres Manuel Lopez
Obrador, known as AMLO, snapped: “Unjustly, [Americans] are blaming us for problems
that in large measure have to do with their loss of values, their welfare
crisis.”
If dealers are waging war on anyone, it is on
Mexicans. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AK) observed that “Mexico has now deployed over 200,000
federal troops to fight the cartels, which have forced our neighbor into a
worsening civil war. Yet, even with this massive military presence, the
death-squad massacres, kidnappings, and decapitations continue.” That is all
occurring in Mexico. In the view of most Mexicans, their society is being ravaged because of America’s failings.
What would the U.S. military target? It would face
neither a state nor armed forces, but shadow institutions submerged in the
population. Criminal leaders undoubtedly would go underground. It would be
difficult to locate small fentanyl labs, which lack the identifying
characteristics of methanol production. Observed
Nathan Jones of
Sam Houston State University, “Fentanyl is a highly decentralized market, so at
this point, we've seen so many actors enter the fentanyl market, it's not like
that there’s just two cartels we could target.” As long as Americans want the
drugs, Mexicans will provide them.
This has been the problem with Washington’s other
drug-based military campaigns. Noted Reason’s Fiona
Harrigan: “The war on
drugs has helped turn Latin America into the most violent region in
the world. Criminalization has led to the proliferation of black market
activity, a boom in many countries' prison populations, and increased
corruption across Latin America. It's also contributed to a huge number of
homicides.”
Earlier U.S. efforts, including in Mexico and Colombia, did little to cut drug production. Gil Barndollar of
Defense Priorities wrote about his time in Afghanistan. His unit
engaged in erratic, futile attempts to interrupt
opium-poppy cultivation. Partnered with Afghanistan’s version of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Agency, my company wasted days fruitlessly searching motorcycles at
checkpoints on dusty village trails, finding no drugs. On one occasion, I was
ordered to confiscate farmers’ wooden poppy scorers, simple finger-mounted
tools used to harvest opium; at a cost of maybe a penny a piece, they were
immediately replaced. U.S. planes bombed 200 Afghan drug labs during the occupation.
Yet opium production skyrocketed—Afghanistan produced more than 80
percent of the global supply of the drug in the last years of the war.
Moreover, unlike these operations, invading Mexico
would limit local assistance. Ironically, treating dealers as terrorists, as
proposed by the president-elect and others, would misuse the law and limit American cooperation with Mexican citizens and
groups tied, however indirectly, to the organizations. Moreover, in recent
years the country has moved decidedly left and towards nationalism. AMLO,
president from 2018 to 2024, was no fan of intrusive U.S. demands. Last
March he declared: “We are not going to permit any foreign government
to intervene in our territory, much less that a government’s armed forces
intervene.” His protégé, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, took over on October 1. After
her recent conversation with Trump she rejected his
claim that she
agreed to his demands on migration and trade. Equally unlikely is support by
the Mexican military. Federico Estévez of Mexico’s Autonomous Technological
Institute warned “The Mexican military will not accept gringo
overlordship.”
Advocates of military action nevertheless imagine that
Washington’s threats would compel Mexican assistance. However, history hangs
heavily over the U.S.–Mexico relationship. In 1846 America’s land-grabbing
President James Knox Polk seized half of Mexico. Decades of imperious U.S.
treatment generated President Porfirio Díaz’s famous lament: “Poor Mexico—so far from God, and yet so close to
the United States.” American military forces operating against Mexicans in
Mexico could not help but offend. Former foreign minister Jorge Castañeda predicted: “Any Mexican president, whether it’s the current one
or any of his recent predecessors, would react by terminating bilateral
cooperation agreements.”
In the best case, the Mexican government would simply
cease working with Washington, whether to interdict drugs, discourage
migration, or achieve other American ends. Mexico City might boycott trade,
disrupting U.S. supply chains, and likely would lead an international
diplomatic offensive against the U.S. What then would Washington do? Occupy
Mexican territory and displace the established authorities? Track down gang
members and operations on its own? Overspread the country to confront a
constantly mutating commercial network? Target criminal leaders, already folk heroes to
some, turning them
into symbols of resistance? Run the equivalent of a counterinsurgency, amid a
hostile population and institutions? While many Mexicans would love to see the
cartels crippled, others benefit from the operations, whose leaders and
soldiers are members of the community with ties to politicians and security
officials. These organizations also spread the wealth—for instance, hiring college
chemistry students for
fentanyl production.
And it could be much worse. Although the national
government would not likely directly confront U.S. forces, there might be
organized, if unofficial, resistance. Groups of police, soldiers, and others
could attack roving American detachments. Indeed, the U.S. military estimates that upwards of a third of the country is
essentially ungoverned today. Worries Antonio De Loera-Brust, formerly at the State
Department and a congressional staffer: “In large parts of Mexico, local
Mexican police and government forces can’t maintain order. It is unclear why
this would lead anyone to expect the U.S. would be able to.” Mexicans mounted
irregular resistance to Washington’s invading army in 1846 and a major U.S.
incursion in 1916.
Nor should one underestimate the cartels. Today they
generally avoid targeting Americans, which would risk triggering a U.S.
response. In March one organization handed over five men blamed for abducting
four Americans and killing two of them, explaining
that the former
“at all times acted under their own decision-making and lack of discipline.”
However, if the U.S. attacks the gangs, they will have no reason to hold back.
They possess significant
military weapons. Many
of their personnel have received military training, as members of the Mexican
armed forces and beneficiaries of U.S. military programs, and perhaps even directly from former American personnel. They
have at times overmatched police forces and even the army.
America’s formal military superiority would not
guarantee an easy victory. Observed the Cato Institute’s Brandan Buck: “Man-portable
weapons systems and armed UAVs favor those who hold territory, thereby leveling
the scales between otherwise mismatched military forces.” And Washington would
lack the local allies who did most of the fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
Syria, and elsewhere. Russia and Iran could be expected to aid America’s
opponents as obvious payback for Ukraine and more.
Perhaps worse, with roughly $2
trillion in commerce,
1.6 million Americans living in Mexico, and extensive personal ties between
Mexicans and Americans, there would be ample soft targets for cartel
retaliation. The conflict might wreck an already fragile Mexican state with
potentially catastrophic consequences. The Global War on Terrorism caused
extraordinary destruction, chaos, and death, from which the U.S. remained
largely immune. In contrast, Mexico is next door. Barndollar observed: “Any
unilateral U.S. military action in Mexico would risk the collapse of a
neighboring country of 130 million people. It could unleash civil war and a
humanitarian crisis that would dwarf those in Iraq and Syria. This carnage
would not be confined to Mexico. Some of America’s largest and wealthiest
cities are a few hours’ drive from the border.” Imagine a human tsunami racing
toward the border.
In this endeavor the U.S. would be friendless
internationally. There would be little regional support. America would be
denounced by the Global South, which has disdained Western moralizing in
Ukraine. Adversaries would highlight American hypocrisy and violence. Even the
Europeans would find it difficult to back the U.S.
Finally, this abundant death and destruction might not
much reduce the fentanyl supply. The Cato Institute’s Ted Galen Carpenter and
Jeffrey A. Singer warned of the consequences of “the iron law of
prohibition.” Enhanced enforcement raises prices, drawing in new producers and
encouraging greater drug concentrations, which “is why fentanyl has replaced
heroin as the primary cause of overdose deaths in the U.S. It is why dealers
are now boosting fentanyl with the veterinary tranquilizer xylazine (“tranq”),
and might be in the process of replacing fentanyl with the more powerful
synthetic opioid isotonitazene (“iso”).”
War is no answer for the drug crisis. Even the
otherwise sensible Cuccinelli engages in
fantasy: “Waging war
against the cartels and confronting select cartel networks and affiliate
factions in a manner similar to existing [terrorist] designations is
the surest way [emphasis added] to bring an end to the chaos.” Such a
policy is far easier to pronounce with certainty than implement with success.
President Trump recognized the danger of overusing
military force. The president-elect should have no illusions about the
consequences of a war both within and against Mexico. He could end up wrecking
not only America’s southern neighbor, but also his nascent presidency.
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