Monday, October 16, 2023

HERE'S AN IDEA: U.S. HELPS MEXICO DEAL WITH THE CARTELS

By León Krauze
Washington Post
(León Krauze is an award-winning Mexican journalist, author and news anchor. He is currently national news anchor for Univision, based out of Miami.)

The idea of unilaterally intervening in Mexico to bolster U.S. security has been gaining traction within the Republican Party, both in Congress and on the campaign trail. This possibility has become so entrenched in the current Republican platform that a majority of the party’s voters now supports it.

During the second Republican presidential debate, Univision moderator Ilia Calderón asked Nikki Haley, arguably the most moderate foreign policy figure in the 2024 Republican field, about the possibility of employing U.S. armed forces in Mexico to combat the country’s drug cartels. Calderón wanted Haley to be specific.
“This means boots on the ground? Drone strikes?” she asked.

Haley replied that she supported “Special Operations” in Mexican territory. “It’s how we deal with our terrorists. We will take out the cartels, we’ll take out their operations.”

This kind of rhetoric is dangerous. It sows deep mistrust on both sides of the border. And worse, it’s a distraction from real problems that can be solved if only the two countries work together. Mexico needs the United States' help in dealing with its drug cartels.

Republican warmongering has stirred almost universal condemnation in Mexico. Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador criticized what he called “a kind of competition to see who dares to threaten Mexico, blame Mexico.” López Obrador also advised Mexican-American voters not to support Republican candidates advocating for intervention.

Mexican security experts agree that a punitive American strategy in Mexico would probably be counterproductive. 

“It wouldn’t improve the situation in the least,” analyst Julián Andrade told me. “Military operations could be precise and well-thought-out, but the drug business will not end by bombing fentanyl labs.” Furthermore, Andrade cautioned nothing guarantees that criminal organizations would not retaliate against the civilian population once hypothetical U.S. forces withdrew or drone operations ceased.

Still, a group of voices seems to be missing from the debate around U.S. military action in Mexico: thousands of Mexicans who have been victims of the cartels’ cruelty and violence.

After the last Republican debate, I spoke with Lucy Ramírez, the owner of a beauty salon in the Simi Valley area. Although she has lived in the United States for 20 years, most of her family still resides in Guanajuato, a state in central Mexico that has endured an alarming wave of violence in recent years.

When we met, Ramírez was living through a nightmare. Her brother had vanished without a trace in the streets of Guanajuato. “He went out with some friends for his birthday, and we haven’t heard from him since,” she told me, tears in her eyes. “They say he was kidnapped. But we don’t know.” Ramírez’s anguish is familiar to tens of thousands of Mexican families. In the past few years, more than 100,000 people in Mexico have remained unaccounted for, most of them victims of forced disappearances.

When I asked Ramírez for her reaction to the Republican strategy for dealing with the same criminal organizations that had apparently taken her brother, her response differed from the repudiation and skepticism I have heard among Mexican politicians and experts.

“Life has become very difficult over there. Everyone is afraid because no one is safe. The cartels are doing whatever they please, and the only thing they want is to destroy everything,” she told me. “I think everyone should join forces and support Mexico to stop this. If the United States supports Mexico, I think things will improve. It can be done.”

In our conversation, Ramírez did not advocate for an all-out American intervention in Mexican soil. Instead, she pleaded for support and cooperation. Mexican cartels continue the bloodshed in Mexico and fuel America’s opioid epidemic, which has cost tens of thousands of lives in the United States. Now is the time to discuss a way that the United States and Mexico can work together.

Is such a conversation possible? With Republican candidates demagoguing the deteriorating security situation to stir up their base, the possibility seems remote. But it is not impossible.

Democrats, for their part, need to do more than recoil from what their opponents are proposing. The United States needs a smart policy for tackling the cartels. That strategy needs to be binational and consensual, and, yes, it could include an increased American footprint in Mexico.

Vote-chasing bluster is not the way to build consensus. With both countries facing hard-fought presidential elections in 2024, the window is open for serious debate.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mexican Narcorepublic President AMLO tells Mexican Americans to vote against Republicans and then he is offended when Americans want to come after his puppet masters in his own country.

Anonymous said...

Let's face it and be honest. The Mexican government won't do a damn thing about the cartels, cause they are part of it. Trump, offered military help during his term and the Mexican President declind saying they would take care of their own problems. It's been years and the problem has just worsened.

So if the Mexican President does not want help, what is his solution?

Anonymous said...

DALE DURO.
CARTEL, AQUI TENGO TU BOMBA DE MUERTE PUTITAS VIEJAS NO PUEDEN PELEAR LIMPIO AQUI VENGO A CHINGAR TU PUTA MADRE.

Anonymous said...

Every time some stupid mamon politician wants more votes he starts with degrading meskins and the border, racist republicans are better at this. Cocos are right behind.

Cocos mamones y lamben a los gringos, YOU AIN'T GRINGO GUEYES YOU ARE MESKINS AND THE GRINGOS MAKES FUN OF YOU AND ALL YOUR FAMILIA IDIOTAS!!!!

RANDY, WALTER, JAMES, JOHN, HENRY AND HAROLD ALL MESKINS WITH GRINGO NAMES PINCHES LAMBIACHES Y LAMBISCONES...

CHARO DAYS STARTED AS A JOKE FROM LOS GRINGOS...

LETS START A HILLBILLY OR REDNECK DAYS!!

Anonymous said...




La justicia esta en mis ganchos al higado y patadas al culo, Juan!


Eldelasprietas


Anonymous said...

En Mexico the government is part of the cartel. Why the hell are we kidding ourselves?

Anonymous said...

Juan, you’re a newsman. Write about Roy de las Chanclas. His ethics violation is on the agenda tomorrow.

Anonymous said...

Quit giving so much money to Mexico. Force them to provide for their people. I am tired of supporting all these losers.

Anonymous said...

Winfield Scott would be proud.

Anonymous said...

I know this is off topic but I am so elated I had to put in this comment now,
since it was just on Channel 5 news. McAllen is dumb enough to hire our
worst superintendent we have ever had. Gutierrez is the only finalist for the McAllen position - good riddance! Wethout now will be able to operate better with out him as a do-nothing supt. Maybe it is now time to bring Hope back to BISD to work as hard as it was doing when we still had Hope down here. Hope will bring us back on track with knowledge and expertize!

BRING HOPE BACK TO BISD!!!!!!!! To all board members, especially those have worked with Hope at their back and bring BISD to a quality district.

Anonymous said...

Joe Biden invited all illegal aliens into this country promising them food stamps, housing, welfare checks, SSI, medical assistance to list a few, in return for votes. So whose the idiot here?

Anonymous said...

Someone on this blog believes in miracles.

Anonymous said...

This morning Biden was asked by Univision reporter Andrea Sambuccetti why he had sent 2 aircraft carriers to Israel. His response was that he had not sent anything. He went on to state that his son Hunter had sold them to Israel without his permission while he was asleep.

rita