Craig GertschBilingual Policy Aide & Master's Candidate in Global Policy at Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs en Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs
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Craig GertschBilingual Policy Aide & Master's Candidate in Global Policy at Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs en Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs
1. NIS REPORT: MEXICAN DRUG WAR
Craig L. Gertsch
Professor Busby
NIS Final Report
December 4, 2015
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NIS Report: Mexican Drug War
In December of 2012, a high-ranking Mexican government
official, the Interior Minister Miguel Ángel Osorio Chong,
issued a scathing rebuke of the previous administration's
policies as a new administration was taking power and promising
to turn the tide against the cartels; he cited a study that
showed seven out of every 10 Mexicans do not feel safe.
Under the previous administration’s strategy, "financial
resources dedicated to security have more than doubled but
unfortunately Mexican crime has increased," Osorio Chong said.
"The rate of increase in homicides places us among the highest
in the world," he said. "In recent years, because of the
violence linked to organized crime, thousands of people have
died and thousands of people have disappeared” (Fabian, ABC News
article).
However, over two years after the Interior Minister
emotionally issued this statement, it was reported (by both US
and Mexican officials, including military and intelligence
personnel) that “the Islamic State terror group is operating a
camp in the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua, just eight
miles from the U.S. border; and coyotes (smugglers) working for
the notorious Juarez Cartel are smuggling Islamic State
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terrorists across the U.S. border through the porous border
between Acala and Fort Hancock, Texas” (Chasmar, Washington
Times).
Report Layout
In an increasingly complex and violent atmosphere, Mexico
faces both old and new issues that could tear the country apart.
How can the international community assist Mexico in mitigating
the violence, corruption, and destabilization that are inflicted
upon Mexican society by transnational criminal cartels? This
report looks at the Mexican Drug War within an international
systems framework, specifically utilizing the concepts of
international organizations, non-state actors, and sovereignty
to examine the conflict. Finally, based upon these
aforementioned concepts, policy implications - mediation,
sanctions, and anti-money laundering regulations - are
discussed, and concluding thoughts are offered about Mexico’s
possible trajectories in the 21st century.
Background
The Mexican Drug War is a violent, ongoing conflict between
the government of Mexico and transnational criminal cartel
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organizations; some officials have noted that Mexico, amid the
endless narcotics violence, poverty, and corruption, has a good
chance of becoming a failed state (Grayson, Narco-Violence and a
Failed State?). In December of 2006, the military and the
administration (who had officials implemented in corruption) of
former President Felipe Calderon officially intervened to squash
cartel-related violence throughout Mexico; the brutal fighting
continues to this day under the administration of President
Enrique Pena Nieto (Malkin, NYT article). It is estimated that
the Mexican cartels make upwards of $65 billion on US illegal
drug sales (not including other illegal activities such as
trafficking humans, selling weaponry, forced labor,
prostitution, kidnapping, ransom, robbery, extortion) each year
(Latin American Herald Tribune article).
Not yet satisfied with current profits or influence,
Mexican cartels are constantly expanding to new countries and
new regions around the world, including North America, Latin
America, Africa, Europe, and now Asia (Harris, CNBC article).
Since the 2006 military intervention, approximately 120,000+
people (including police, women, children, US and Mexican
federal agents) have been killed, with 30,000 persons missing,
and 1.7 million people displaced due to ongoing hostilities
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between the Mexican government and the cartels (Tuckman,
Guardian article).
Concepts - International Orgs, Nonstate Actors, & Sovereignty
The issue of how the international community can assist
Mexico in resolving the negative effects of the transnational
criminal cartels operating within Mexico’s borders can be
applied to various concepts, including international
organizations, non-state actors, sovereignty, governance,
security, and hegemony. In this report, the concepts that will
be focused on are international organizations, non-state actors,
and sovereignty.
International organizations, such as the Organization of
American States in conjunction with the World Bank and the
United Nations, could play an important part in the overall
process and possible resolution to the violence,
destabilization, and corruption that cartels inflict upon
Mexican society. It should be noted that formal international
organizations are often key participants in crucial situations
within the global arena (Abbott, pg. 27).
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While international organizations indeed have their
limitations, there are several positive factors that these
organizations have that could help Mexico more effectively
manage the cartels: assist with coordinating activities among
several players (i.e. Mexico, US, other Latin American nations),
provide a forum for the expression of international norms,
incentivize multiple and antagonistic players to participate
(i.e. possibility of sanctions, mediation, modify
laws/regulations) together who might not regularly cooperate for
collective action (i.e. government, military, cartels,
paramilitary groups), provide a forum of neutrality and
legitimacy, allow for the pooling of resources and expertise
that can lower transaction costs, create systems to gather and
analyze/monitor data outcomes along with the corresponding
ability to enforce rules or targeted sanctions for non-
compliance (although international organizations are severely
limited at times with the authority and ability to truly enforce
consequences on non-compliant actors), provide stable funding to
assist with complex issues, increase capacity to solve complex
and vexing issues in a fair manner, leverage decision-making
powers to foster multilateral agreements, and increase capacity
for centralized coordination to solve complex and vexing issues
like cartel violence and corruption in a transparent manner
(Abbott, pgs. 27-64).
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Even with numerous limitations, “the fact that
international organizations have not been abandoned by states is
a testimony to both their actual value and their perhaps greater
potential” (Abbott, pg. 59). Therefore, international
organizations like the Organizations of American States and the
United Nations clearly have a vital role they could play to help
the country of Mexico truly begin to manage the negative impact
that the cartels have on national and regional communities.
Non-state actors, such as the transnational criminal
cartels, are unfortunately playing an increasingly large
criminal role among not only Mexico’s communities, but also
among communities throughout the region of Latin America and
beyond (Harris, CNBC article). With more open borders and modern
globalization, bad actors such as terrorists, cartels, and human
traffickers have manipulated today’s low barriers to travel,
communication, and trade (Karns, pg. 240).
Although modern nation-states like Mexico are sovereign and
have strong national interests, non-state actors such as the
cartels are increasingly hollowing out states and competing for
the exclusive use of power (i.e. Mexican military vs. cartel
networks) and violence (Cooper, pgs. 16-54). The rapid growth of
non-state actors like the cartels and their extensive influence
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across all aspects of Mexican society seems to impact/lower the
overall strength of Mexico’s sovereignty and
political/governance structures.
Even though “state and non-state actors may have
differentiated responsibilities, ultimately authority rests with
states, and this is the essence of sovereignty; states remain
central to global governance, no matter how much political
authority is decentralized and power diffused among nonstate
actors” (Karns, pg. 277). And thus Mexico, and the entire
region, is caught in the middle of a violent conflict over
drugs, trafficking humans, money, power, and weapons that is
happening between the government of Mexico (i.e. military,
police) and powerful non-state actors (i.e. cartels, criminal
networks, and corrupt government officials).
Policy Implications
Based on the aforementioned conceptual tools of
international organizations, non-state actors, and sovereignty,
there are several implications for policy amidst the context of
resolving the violence and corruption that the cartels commit
against Mexican society and regional countries. There are
various policy implications, such as mediation, sanctions, and
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anti-money laundering regulations that are applicable to this
context of establishing peace and security in Mexico.
An important tool for peaceful conflict settlement,
mediation is “a mode of negotiation in which a third party (i.e.
regional or international organization) helps the parties (i.e.
government, non-state actors) find a solution which they cannot
find by themselves; for mediation to have a chance, a conflict
must be at what is called a ‘ripeness’ stage, when parties see
the costs of continuing the conflict as greater than the
benefits of doing so and hence are more willing to consider
(within the context of sovereignty) some form of settlement”
(Karns, pg. 296). Sometimes mediation is successful, and other
times it is not - it just depends on the specific situation
(Karns, pgs. 296-297).
In this particular case, mediation should occur between the
Mexican government and the cartels to see if both sides could
come to a common understanding and reach a mutual agreement.
Depending on the “ripeness” of the situation, mediation may be
successful. However, since the conflicts in Mexico between the
government and the cartels are increasingly brutal and violent,
it is not clear that attempts to mediate and reach a peace
agreement in the current situation are feasible.
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Sanctions are an increasingly efficient, feasible, and
cost-effective policy tool that is utilized to get other actors
to behave in a particular way. In certain cases, sanctions work;
other times, they are ineffective (Karns, pgs. 310-317).
Sanctions (including the carrot-and-stick model, along with
financial/travel targeted sanctions) are an important
enforcement instrument that serves several purposes: “to coerce
a change of behavior, to constrain access to critical goods and
funds and thereby raise costs and force changes in a target’s
behavior, or to signal and stigmatize targets in support of
international norms” (Karns, pg. 309). While targeted sanctions
have many benefits, there are also drawbacks, including
operational, political, and monitoring difficulties, and
unintended consequences like incentivizing corruption and other
evasive behaviors (Karns, pgs. 316-317).
In this specific case, targeted sanctions can be enacted
against the cartels to induce different, more socially
acceptable behavior. While non-violent, constructive cartel
behavior is the end goal, sanctions must be targeted and
monitored closely enough so that further criminal and evasive
activities are not incentivized.
Another potent policy implication for combating the Mexican
cartels is the necessity to fully understand and disrupt the
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money laundering networks (about $40 billion per year laundered
from US to Mexico) that cartels utilize to fund all of their
criminal activities by pushing for stricter anti-money
laundering regulations (LaSusa, InSight Crime article). These
are the policy implications that are applicable to the context
of stabilizing the civic, political, and economic sectors of
Mexico.
Conclusion
In an ever increasing violent and chaotic atmosphere,
Mexico faces issues that could tear the country apart. How can
the international community best assist Mexico in mitigating the
violence, destabilization, and corruption that are inflicted
upon Mexican society by transnational criminal cartels? This
report looked at the Mexican Drug War within an international
systems framework, specifically utilizing the concepts of
international organizations, non-state actors, and sovereignty
to examine the conflict.
Based upon these aforementioned concepts, policy
implications - mediation, sanctions, and anti-money laundering
regulations - were discussed. Overall, it is likely that of the
recommendations that were examined, that stricter anti-money
laundering regulations (upheld by international organizations
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such as the Organization of American States, United Nations, or
World Bank) will have the most impact (and it may be useful for
future research to compare the newer and more embattled Plan
Mexico with the rather successful Plan Colombia (Boot, Weekly
Standard article) to see if Plan Colombia utilized certain
successful strategies (McDowell, World Bank & IMF Report) to
weaken the power of Colombian cartels, and see if those
strategies could stabilize Mexico) on curtailing the economic
structures of the cartels - which will hopefully lessen the
ability for Mexican cartels to operate or profit from any
illegal activity.
Hopefully, through more research to pinpoint successful
strategies that have worked to decrease cartel violence and by
discovering new/innovative public policy solutions, Mexico can
take a step forward (and not a step back into the quagmire of
increased corruption and violence) and prosper in the 21st
century.
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