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Mexico's Forever War
Mexico's Forever War by Kevin Casas-Zamora in Foreign Policy, 22 Dec 2010
Kevin Casas-Zamora is a senior fellow in Foreign Policy and in the Latin America Initiative at Brookings. Most recently, Casas-Zamora served as Costa Rica’s vice president, as well as minister of national planning and economic policy. Casas-Zamora has authored several studies on political finance, elections, citizen security, and civil-military relations in Latin America. http://www.foreignpolicy.com/article..._s_forever_war Well worth read. he posits that Mexico's problems are less an issue of ungoverned territory and more an institutional culture of corruption. While I agree, I would even go a step further and say that the culture of corruption is part of the Mexican culture in general, not just the government. Until they fix that, nothing will really change. They are treating the symptom rather than the cause. |
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There are huge problems in Mexico. I don' think that Mexico is capable of solving them. I think Calderon doesn't really want to solve them or doesn't know how to solve them so he is taking the political route and parading his very narrow accomplishments while lying that its getting better. (Wow, sounds a lot like our own *cough* president's strategy). This is disconcerting because we share a border with this caustic nation, and our population is laced with a growing number of its illegal immigrants. They have grown up in a corrupt, cartel run society, how many generations of them will it take before our own towns then cities become just like home for them? Methinks its already begun. Respectfully, Hand |
Excellent article, sinjefe, and the guy nails it:
"Mexico's problem is not territorial control, but the penetration of public institutions -- particularly law enforcement institutions -- by organized crime. This is a problem that cannot be solved by any military contingent, no matter how large, committed, or effective. It requires instead nothing short of rebuilding law enforcement institutions and intelligence agencies." |
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The state is just as corrupt. As Casas-Zamora states "98% of crimes go unpunished". Crimes are levied and prosecuted at all levels (local, state, national). 98% of crimes unpunished means that the institution does absolutely nothing against these criminal networks. thus, all the rhetoric by politicians, on both sides, and the few military operations you do hear about, where a kingpin is taken down or killed, are the only window dressing they have for their campaign. |
This quote is what I agree most with:
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Mexico was a bubble waiting to burst all along, and what it needs right now is a cultural revolution from the ground up, that replaces the current system. The 38,000 deaths last year are proof enough that the current War against Organized Crime is not working as well as they paint it to be. Thank you for the article Sir, a great read. |
Sinjefe's title is correct: Forever War
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This is an excerpt from Crime Wars: Gangs, cartels and US National Security by Bob Killebrew and Jennifer Bernal:
Mexico – its government and its voters – will shortly face two critical choices: either to fight on with increasing casualties but a long-term chance of success, or to come to a tacit agreement with the cartels, as in the past. Whether Calderón and his successors can or will politically sustain a decadeslong, bloody fight to root out corruption in the Mexican state and to reestablish the rule of law is a matter of grave concern for the United States. A decision to tolerate the cartels amounts to abdication of some essential functions of government in exchange for a reduction in violence against the state – but not all violence, as the intra-cartel wars have been more costly in lives than the state-versus-cartel conflict. President Calderón recently called on Mexican policymakers to renew the debate on legalizing drugs as a way to curtail the power of the cartels; how this will play out in Mexican politics has yet to be determined.49 A third option – to favor some cartels over others, and permit or assist a dominant cartel to emerge – would have the advantage of diminishing violence while reserving the state’s options for some future conflict.50 It is not clear, though, whether such a policy would be politically sustainable. Full document available at: http://www.cnas.org/files/documents/...ewBernal_3.pdf Bottom line: If we were smart, we would militarize our southern border. |
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