Invading Mexico Will Not Solve the Cartel Problem
Proposals for the use of military force in our
southern neighbor’s territory neglect the lessons of the wars on terror and
drugs.
Dec 17, 2024
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/invading-mexico-will-not-solve-the-cartel-problem/
In an era of seemingly never-ending foreign and
domestic crises, the incoming Trump administration has signaled openness to an
idea to tackle an issue that straddles both spheres: the use of military action
against Mexican drug cartels. Republican rhetoric on this issue is not new,
from the thinly defined plan of “shock and awe” offered by then-presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy
to the targeted airstrikes and special operations raids, used “selectively and
thoughtfully,” as proposed by the senator-elect from Pennsylvania, David
McCormick.
Muddying the conceptual waters and adding to the
overheated rhetoric was Tom Homan, the “border czar” for the incoming Trump
administration. During a recent appearance on Fox News, Homan declared that the incoming president “will use [the] full might of the United States
special operations to take ’em out.” Such rhetoric presents varying military
force levels, often without clear strategic goals or a plausible account of
Mexican involvement.
In a seemingly milder form, in 2023, Rep. Dan Crenshaw
of Texas proposed a Mexican reboot of “Plan Colombia,” using U.S. military forces partnered with their
Mexican counterparts. Yet even Crenshaw, who has denied that his plan for military action in Mexico
would constitute an invasion and ridiculed such charges, has agreed that the
U.S. government should not take unilateral military force off the table.
Crenshaw, along with Rep. Michael Waltz (R-FL), the prospective national
security advisor, drafted a vaguely worded
and open-ended Authorization
for the Use of Military Force against the cartels, which belies the Texan’s
denials.
While economic and legal
arguments stand
arrayed against the idea, it also poses political costs, strategic
considerations, and possible tactical dangers. These combined drawbacks should
give pause to anyone, including Trump-aligned conservatives.
The further militarization of the war on drugs,
especially unilateral military action within Mexico, would jeopardize two of
the Trump administration’s big-ticket agenda items: controlling illegal
immigration and countering a rising China. Regarding the former, Mexico, like
the United States, is straining
under mass migration from
Central and South America. As political scientist Sarah Zukerman Daly has observed, Mexico and the United States “face increasingly
aligned interests on migration,” with the public in each country clamoring for
further immigration enforcement. While Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum has
struck a rhetorically neutral tone on migration and her relationship with the
United States, she has signaled a willingness to work with the
future Trump administration on
migration issues. A military incursion into Mexico would jeopardize the Trump
administration’s most crucial bilateral relationship for pursuing his number
one domestic agenda item. If history is any guide, a prolonged war on (narco)
terror would worsen the migration crisis.
Military incursions into Mexico would similarly risk
undermining another agenda item of the forthcoming Trump administration,
countering China. In recent years, the Mexican government, like Trump and his
supporters, has come to view its economic dependency upon China as a net
negative. A combination of trade deficits and the prominence of Chinese-owned
businesses in Mexico have caused members of the Sheinbaum administration to
look to its northern
neighbor to diversify Mexican trade. Military incursions into Mexico would risk slamming
shut this opening door and weaken America's geostrategic position in its
backyard. Such a foray could likely have ripple effects throughout Latin
America, a region with similar histories of American invasions, and further
hand China a compelling narrative that it could use to pitch its growing
ambitions in the Western Hemisphere.
Such tradeoffs could perhaps be excused if the use of
American military force against the cartels came with a high probability of
success. Yet a cursory look at the strategic picture suggests otherwise.
Supporters of this idea, some of whom are themselves Special Operations
veterans, nevertheless neglect strategic considerations that would render
unilateral or partnered military operations against the cartels untenable.
Primary among them is the notion that U.S. military action against the Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) constitutes an operational model that the
U.S. government can implement in Mexico. The idea neglects to mention a glaring
fact: The U.S. Special Operations was not the only entity arrayed against ISIS,
with the (now defunct) Assad regime, the Russian military, Iranian
paramilitaries, and Kurdish
militias all involved.
What comparable force would fill this function if the
U.S. military successfully and sufficiently degraded the cartel networks? If
the central Mexican government is unwilling or unable to do so, there is
no countervailing power to stop said networks from rebuilding. One does not
have to look very far for an example of this phenomenon in action. Indeed,
Mexico’s recent history proves that degrading and splintering cartel networks
is easy; eliminating them is seemingly impossible. Over the last 20 years, Mexico’s
cartels have fractured due to Mexican military action as well as infighting,
but the northward flow of drugs continues. If anything, the fracturing of the cartels has accelerated the accompanying violence of the drug trade, a
toll in blood that has spilled over the border. Given this recent history,
McCormick’s “selective and thoughtful” raids would be strategically
insignificant and come at a considerable political cost.
Second, those who trumpet such schemes take it for
granted that throughout the Global War on Terror (GWOT), Special Operations
Forces (SOF) operated in theatres where the conventional military was dominant
or where the host governments lent support. Whether it was Afghanistan,
Iraq, Syria, or West Africa, throughout the GWOT, SOF units benefited from large
conventional forces that supplied a measure of operational security and, more
importantly, copious air assets that provided an edge in actions against
hostile units of comparable size. Without such enablers and support from the
host country (successive Mexican governments have roundly
rejected the idea of
American military action within their borders) the unilateral and surreptitious
use of SOF units would become a strategic liability.
Tactical considerations compound strategic liabilities
and have gone unremarked by supporters of military action in Mexico. Mexico's
obvious proximity to the United States obscures the country's size, rugged
terrain, and the expanse of the cartel issue. Mexico is three times the size of
Afghanistan but hosts similarly punishing terrain populated by people who possess a traditional
resistance to outside governance. And, like the Taliban, the cartels enjoy,
either through coercion or acquiescence, varying levels
of local support.
Local political dynamics would make generating actionable intelligence
difficult and highly improbable without the partnership of the Mexican
government. While supporters of military action may boast about the ease with which SOF operators could “destroy” the cartels, they neglect the
more difficult task of “finding and fixing” them.
Additionally, even a cursory look at a map of
cartel activity reveals
that their presence is not merely a cross-border problem but a nationwide issue
fueled by an insatiable American appetite for drugs. Precision raids, even if
successful, are unlikely to affect an outcome any different from that of Felipe
Calderón’s government, which killed
or captured 25
of the nation’s 37 top drug lords. Mexico’s own war on the cartels has shown
that stacking up tactical wins does not always add up to strategic
victory.
Lastly, supporters of the idea of sending SOF into
Mexico ignore that the cartels possess the equipment, size, and training of a competent asymmetric force. While the Mexican
military has achieved operational success against the cartels in the past, such
(fleeting) victories resulted from sizable and overmatched formations measuring in
the thousands.
Conversely, SOF units instead operate in teams as small as a squad (12+) and,
at most, a platoon (30+). Given such a light footprint, SOF units could very
well find themselves arrayed against comparably armed cartel elements that
possess crew-served
weapons,
man-portable heavy weapons
systems, and other
enablers such as weaponized
drones and improvised explosive devices. The unilateral use of SOF risks putting them into
the field under conditions that could leave them overexposed. A single Eagle Claw-type incident or a repeat of the Battle of
Culiacán, where the
Sinaloa Cartel amassed 800 gunmen against a Mexican security force of 350 and
forced their surrender, would prove politically disastrous. The combination of
these likely tactical issues, be they terrain, poor intelligence, or the risk
of overexposure, poses significant hurdles to the notion that selective SOF
raids upon the cartels could assuage the problems they create.
While it is undoubtedly true that the cartels are
vicious and depraved organizations chiefly responsible for producing the
fentanyl that has killed thousands of Americans, proposals to use military
force inside Mexico would run significant risks while doing little to solve the
issue. Unilateral military action inside Mexico would almost assuredly shatter
bilateral relations at a time when the forthcoming Trump administration tries
to address the migrant crisis and the rise of China's involvement in the Western
Hemisphere. Meanwhile, there is little guarantee of strategic success in
directing SOF units to attack and degrade cartel networks. Proponents of such
plans take it for granted that such operations during the GWOT took place
within the footprint of large conventional forces, enablers that would be
absent in unilateral military action.
Additionally, the cartels have proven themselves
highly resilient to network degradation. Supporters of American military action
have not articulated how they envision achieving strategic success where the
Mexican government has struggled. Lastly, sending small SOF units into Mexico
would present significant tactical risk. Intelligence gathering difficulties,
vast and brutal terrain, and competently armed and trained cartel forces add up
to a considerable risk of overexposure. There are no easy solutions to
America’s fentanyl crisis and the criminal violence that accompanies it. But,
policymakers must consider their proposed solutions against their potential
costs lest they be worse than the scourge they are meant to cure.
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