Narco-Terrorism: the threat to Mexico and the United States.
What should be done?
An Overview
On November 4, 2019, nine members of
the LeBaron family, women and children, American citizens living in Mexico,
were gunned down by Narco-Terrorists in northern Mexico. The Mexican government
suggested that the family was slaughtered due to a case in minstaken identity
but surviving family members and residents of their American Mormon community,
a community that began to settle in
northern Mexico starting in the late 19th century, claim that the
family members were cought in the crossfire of an increasingly violent turf war
between rival gangs. The family contends that one of the gangs wrongfully
believed that the family members who were murdered were working for the rival
gang. (1.)
Drug cartels have reached a tipping
point in terms of their influence in Mexico where their ill-gotten wealth buys
politicians, law enforcement, and other people of influence in Mexican society.
The drug trade in Mexico is now so lucrative that the gangs who monopolize it,
operating as de-facto militias, are now building networks that reach deep into
the United States where they derive immense profits by creating drug-addicts
and by ruining lives, particularly in minority communities. (2.) The underground
economy that has developed as a result, operating in the vicinity of an
estimated $1OO
billion range, money that is generated by drug deals and often existing in the
form of small denominational cash that is often laced with minuscule traces of
cocaine, is rapidly becoming a world-wide problem. The majority of this trade,
and the brunt of its ill social effects, is experienced on the streets of
America's major cities. (3.)
The unprecedented growth in an underground
economy that operates outside the law has infiltrated law enforcement in Mexico
which serves as its base of operation. With such sums of money involved, it is
reasonable to assume that the corruption that has become rampant in Mexico
could and probably already has seeped into the United States as our
politicians, law enforcement institutions, and other spheres of influence could
be compromised, bought and paid for in the same way. The scissor effect is at
play as the illicit and off the books drug money corrupts the corridors of
power, the boardrooms, the gang rivalries on the street, and the negative social
byproducts of the drug trade is leading to an increase in violence and
lawlessness to the degree that it threatens American cities.
The Mexican cartels, emanating out of
Mexico, and with a growing interconnected constellation of alliances and
sub-groups in Latin America and other continents, are more lethal, and are a
more immediate danger to the American political and social system that were
more conventional organized crime families of previous decades. This is due to
the amount of money involved and the use of modern means of communication and
technologies. The
major Mexican cartels operating in the United States include the Sinaloa cartel,
the Jalisco New Generation cartel, the Juarez cartel, the Gulf cartel, Los
Zetas cartel, and the Beltran Leyva Organization. (4.) The drug gangs,
as part of standard operating procedure, partner with American gangs, particularly
the MS-13, to sell drugs to consumers. These interactions help the cartels expand
their influence, the DEA reports, and "insulates Mexican TCOs from direct
ties to street-level drug seizures and arrests made by US law
enforcement." (5.)
It is reasonable to assume, under the
circumstances, that the type of violence that was visited on the innocent LeBaron
family in Mexico, a level of violence that was more ruthless and merciless than
that which was generally visited upon innocent bystanders in the past by
previous organized crime syndicates, will make its way into the United States
if the situation is left unchecked and is therefore allowed to metastasize. The
LeBaron slaughter was the tip of the iceberg, the most publicized in a growing
trend that is victimizing American citizens. This attack should be understood as
an international incident of terrorism against American citizens in a foreign
land. This is a violation of international norms of law and custom and, as
such, the victim nation, the United States, has a legal if not a moral right to
take direct and assertive action in defense of the lives and safety of its own citizens.
Recomendations
The Mexican drug gangs, which serve
as the tip of the spear for the Mexican drug cartels and which serve as the
main point of distribution for the illegal drugs in the United States, and the cartels
themselves, should be declared enemy combatants and, as such, they should be legally
placed in the same category as al-Queada and ISIS. (6.) Once this is done, the
Justice Department, working with local law enforcement and the National Guard,
should begin the painful and difficult process of carefully and methodically conducting
the dangerous mission of rounding up the gang members and sending them to a
prearranged high security prison camp similar to that which exists at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba. The detainees should then be afforded military justice and due
process in a manner that is similar to that of the detainees of Gitmo. In other
words, they should be detained as, essentially, prisoners of war.
The United States military must offer assistance
to the Mexican government in the arrest and detention of the Mexican cartel
members inside Mexico and this could involve direct military intervention by
American special forces. Mexico has reached the point where it is in need of outside
intervention as the cartels have already compromised the Mexican government and
society to such a high degree that Mexico has moved too far in the direction of
becoming a failed lawless state. Such an extreme measure, which is entirely
legal for the United States as the murder of American citizens on Mexican soil
is an act of war according to international law and custom, and in accord with
the Bush Doctrine which was passed by Congress after the terrorist assault on 9/11,
is probably the only way, in the final analysis, that law and order could be restored
in Mexico.
The United States must secure the
US/Mexico border. This might involve building the wall advocated by President
Trump or it might involve a partial wall or no wall at all. Either way, the
border must be secured, the US/Canadian border should be improved, and all
points of entry should be enhanced. By this means, law and order will be protected
and preserved, the drug trade would be substantially reduced, crime rates would
stabilize, and the needless future suffering and the deaths of untold numbers
of Americans would be avoided.
Once the border is secured, once the
Mexican government has assumed control
of its own land, and once the narco-terrorists have been defeated and detained
both in Mexico and in the United States, the United States government should
find itself in a position to take upon itself two bold measures toward normalization
and justice. Those two measures should be a blanket amnesty for all qualified
DACA members who undergo a naturalization process and a blanket presidential pardon
for any American citizen who is incarcerated for a minor drug offence and who
is otherwise qualified for such a pardon.
1. How Mexico’s cartel wars shattered American Mormon’s wary peace, The Washington Post, Kevin Sieff, Nov.
7, 2019
2. The Drug Money Maze, Andelman,
David A. Foreign
Affairs. Jul/Aug 94, Vol. 73 Issue 4, p94-108. 15p.
3. Ibid.
4. These Maps
show how Mexican cartels dominate the US drug market, Woody, Christopher,
Business Insider, Dec. 16, 2016.
5. Ibid
6. Trump Says
U.S. Will Designate Drug Cartels in Mexico as Terrorist Groups, New York Times,
Liam Stack, Kit Semple, Nov. 26, 2019
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