Pubdate: Fri, 19 Nov 2010
Source: Austin American-Statesman (TX)
Copyright: 2010 Austin American-Statesman
Contact:  http://www.statesman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/32
Author: Harmish McKenzie
Note: McKenzie is an Austin-based journalist from New Zealand with an 
interest in drug policy and border issues.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

HOW TO WAGE A SUCCESSFUL WAR ON DRUGS

As he demonstrated when he visited Austin recently, the U.S. 
ambassador to Mexico has a deft understanding of Mexico's complicated 
challenges but he continues to overlook what would be a killer blow 
to the wrenching violence in the country.

In a recent speech at the LBJ Library, Carlos Pascual identified drug 
cartels as Mexico's chief source of insecurity. While presenting 
suggestions for limiting their power -- including a reduction in U.S. 
demand for illegal drugs -- he failed to mention the best way of 
combating the cartels: take their business away.

After his speech, I asked Pascual a question: How seriously are the 
Obama administration and the Calderon administration in Mexico taking 
former Mexican President Vicente Fox's idea for more discussion of 
drug legalization? Legalization would take the massive drug industry 
out of the hands of the cartels and allow governments to control, 
regulate and tax the production, distribution and use of drugs.

Pascual's response was simultaneously weak-willed and encouraging. 
There are some important advocates in both countries for 
legalization, he said, but Presidents Barack Obama and Felipe 
Calderon have voiced opposition. Nonetheless, Pascual urged debate. 
Let's get serious policy discussion on the table and explore possible 
consequences, he said.

However, the issue at hand is the violence in Mexico, which threatens 
to spill across U.S. borders and is fueled by drug consumption here.

Mexico, as Pascual noted, is experiencing a surge of violence 
perpetrated by the cartels and Calderon's crackdown against drug 
criminals. In the last four years, more than 28,000 people have lost 
their lives. Some commentators have compared the unrest to an 
insurgency, but that's not correct -- it is, Pascual rightly pointed 
out, more akin to the violence seen in the U.S. in the 1920s.

Though he didn't elaborate, he was presumably referring to the days 
of Prohbition when organized gangsters fought to control trafficking 
in alcohol. As a Cato Institute paper put it, "Alcohol became more 
dangerous to consume; crime increased and became 'organized'; the 
court and prison systems were stretched to the breaking point; and 
corruption of public officials was rampant." The murder rate also 
spiked. Sound familiar?

In his presentation, Pascual listed three drivers of violence. The 
first was youth -- cartels in Mexico recruit a lot of young drug 
addicts, who can be paid in drugs. Sadly, many have proven willing to 
kill to protect these businesses.

A second driver, Pascual said, was a change in the routes and control 
for drug trafficking. While many Colombian drug kingpins languish in 
U.S. jails, Mexican drug lords have stepped into the vacuum. To 
assert their authority in various regions, they kill.

Third, drug violence is escalating because of increasing pressures on 
the drug market. For various reasons, there is reduced demand for 
cocaine in the U.S.; Calderon has confronted the cartels with force; 
and there has been an increased crackdown on cartels as a result of 
U.S. interdiction and the Merida Initiative. None of this, so far, 
has done anything except increase conflict, especially on the 
U.S.-Mexico border, where Mexican media face cartel threats to censor 
their reporting on drug violence. The cost of disobedience? You already know.

The Obama and Calderon administrations can choose to continue their 
militaristic approach against the cartels, but it will only mean more 
deaths, more insecurity and more immigration and economic problems. 
At the same time, their goal to reduce demand for drugs is laudable 
but futile. As with alcohol, tobacco and sex, there will always be a 
market for drugs. The only way to neuter the cartels and mitigate 
Mexico's security troubles is to hit them where it really hurts: the 
wallet. Without the highly profitable black market for drugs, the 
cartels have no power. They can't recruit the young; they can't 
finance their wars; and they can't hold two entire nations to ransom.

Pascual is right: Mexico is not experiencing an insurgency; it is 
merely experiencing the predictable effects of prohibition. Now is 
the time to end that folly.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom