Sniper rifles flowing to Mexican cartels show a decade of U.S. failure(washingtonpost.com) |
Sniper rifles flowing to Mexican cartels show a decade of U.S. failure(washingtonpost.com) |
We'd create an economic boom from the farming of hemp to new drug manufacturing companies. As other countries loosen up, we might even have an export economy.
Stability in Mexico could make our neighbor a more attractive manufacturing and trade partner.
The old generation that believed in drug wars is dying or dead. It's time to change US policy.
I don't even use drugs and I think our position is stupid.
I wish the article had focused more on the overall arms trafficking problem (which is about lots of cheap guns, not a few expensive ones) and the overall government instability problem, and (what the hell) the war on drugs that fuels it. Instead, it has a bunch of pictures of scary looking guns, and feels sensationalized and focused on the wrong thing entirely.
Not particularly different from, well, all news coverage of guns.
The problem is weak southern border security, regardless of what items go through it illegaly - guns, drugs or people.
If that's the problem, why does the US not have the same problem at the Canadian border, which is completely undefended in some places?
Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera (2017) "Los Zetas Inc: Criminal Corporations, Energy, and Civil War in Mexico", p. 228.
https://www.amazon.com/Los-Zetas-Inc-Criminal-Corporations/d...
Without drug revenue, can they sustain their power? Isn't that their primary income source?
If that revenue stream ends, could the police finally flush them out?
Most of the reporting I've seen attributes this wider focus to the splintering of cartels due to the recent Mexican drug war that started after Vincente Fox was elected to be the first non-PRI president in almost a century. While that didn't end collusion it did end the stable relationships the PRI had with particular cartels (research has looked at this on the state level and found that the level of volence correlates with when a state elected non-PRI government). Calderon greatly expanded this conflict and either started or expanded the policy of going after the heads of the cartels in the hopes that arresting or killing them would cause the cartels to collapse. Instead, it caused them to splinter with different groups both incresingly violent in competition with each other as well as looking for new sources of income. It seems like AMLO is trying to return to the old PRI model of unofficially recognizing particular cartels as controlling particular areas (or nearly officially in the Sinaloa Cartel case), but so far it doesn't seem to have changed much.