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Notes -
Help me understand an argument about the US-Mexico relationship
A friend and old-coworker recently posted in a group chat an article quote
They think that if that were to happen “both the general population and government unofficially would side with the narcos (for different reasons).” Radicalization and bad things would follow. Firstly, I thought these things already happened. Was Sicaro not just exaggerated for effect, but complete fiction?
We diverted for a bit into the politics of Mexico under the cartels. It was fun to be reminded that there still are areas not even the military will go into without cartel approval, that AMLO used to visit El Chapo’s mother regularly, that any information given to federal agencies or even directly to the president was pretty much immediately relayed to the cartels. Apparently, cartel-unfriendly political candidates are routinely assassinated. So the state seems to have been completely captured by the cartels. They have also deeply infiltrated the local and federal law enforcement agencies. The cartels have their own military equipment, intelligence agencies maybe, air force?, submaries (not armed though I hope?)
Still, even without local police or federal government involvement (who I understand most are assets of or actual narcos) I assumed the DEA/CIA/FBI still did shit to keep things in check, at least around the border and inside the US. Well actually, cartels are expanding into Colorado these days.
Enter Trump's executive order Designating Cartels and Other Organizations as Foreign Terrorist Organizations and Specially Designated Global Terrorists.
My friend was incensed, thinks that any action by special forces would be war, that the Mexican people and government will rally around the cartels, there would be terrorist attacks and sabotage by cartels/Mexican immigrants.
I’m afraid here is where I lost my cool a little bit. Paraphrasing:
I guess what I want to know is, Am I The Asshole?
Obviously violating Mexico's sovereignty would be an act of war. But of course we also violated Pakistan's sovereignty to get bin Laden and they didn't choose to go to war over it.
The United States has a lot of leverage over Mexico. I would not be surprised if any military operations run against the cartels happened with the nominal cooperation of the Mexican government. I am pretty sure already cooperate with the Mexican government against the cartels using military assets (Coast Guard) and civilian ones (DEA, including I think boots on the ground) so the real difference from what I see it is that Trump might do stuff like airstrikes and SOF raids that are higher visibility than sharing intel and joint law enforcement work.
Worth noting that the Mexican government might benefit considerably from being "forced to accept" the United States eradicating the cartels. What I find most interesting, though, is what I rarely see talked about: the anti-China angle. Isn't a lot of the really bad stuff like fentanyl manufactured at industrial capacity in China and then shipped to Mexico and smuggled into the US? (Can someone more knowledgable than me chime in?) It seems like stopping that pipeline should be the priority, and if Mexico won't cooperate portside the US Navy can probably do it without violating their sovereignty through VBSS actions.
If it's true that a lot of the hard drugs are Chinese manufactured and we don't start stopping shipping offshore that will tell you something (not sure exactly what, but something!)
The Mexican government has extremely weak control over its security apparatus by industrialized country standards. Individual Mexican marine corps commanders and senior police personnel would need to be brought onboard.
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