EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
U.S. and Mexican Governments Continue to Brush Aside Perspectives of Drug War Victims
On July 8, the “war on drugs” claimed another victim, the songwriter Argentine Facundo Cabral, the victim of an ambush in Guatemala. Cabral, a tireless pacifist, was killed when three carloads of gunmen ambushed the vehicle in which he was riding. This is an irreparable loss to the Argentine and Latin American people.
The victims of this drug war have mostly been anonymous, from the perspective of the global media. But the war has begun to claim some famous people, like Cabral. In Mexico the murder of the son of renowned intellectual Javier Sicilia has led to the emergence of a strong and important social movement calling for an end to the war on drugs. This movement forced President Felipe Calderon to initiate a dialogue with society: an imperfect dialogue but dialogue at least.
Guatamelans marching after murder of Facundo Cabral. The sign on the right says "We weant peace."
Despite this social message, on June 22, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced in Guatemala that the U.S. government would spend nearly $300 million this year helping governments in Central America confront the mafias that smuggle cocaine to American consumers. At the same event, President Felipe Calderon called for more resources from the international community to fund this ill-advised strategy to combat crime. He dismissed the notion of a symbolic contribution, "because this is not about charity,” and asked for an amount equal to the billions of dollars received by criminals to run their operations.
Ironically, the next day, Calderón met with Javier Sicilia in México for a dialogue that seemed to have deaf ears. Sicilia said to the Mexican president, "Watch carefully our faces. Search carefully our names. Hear our words. We represent innocent victims. Do we look like collateral damage or statistics?" He asked Calderón to apologize for the 40,000 deaths caused by the struggle against organized crime. The president responded that he wouldn’t apologize for having pursued the offenders. "Javier, you’re wrong," he said. "I regret not having sent federal forces in earlier."
For more than three decades, the “war on drugs” has been a constant concern for the United States and has shaped relations with various governments in Latin America. Some of them, like Mexico or Colombia, have completely followed U.S. foreign policy, as with Plan Colombia launched in 1999 or the Merida Initiative for Mexico in 2008. Others failed to cooperate with the United States and established independent drug control strategies, like Venezuela, which stopped receiving U.S. financial support in 2005.
Despite these efforts, the strategy has totally failed. In human costs, according to a report of the U.S. Congress, homicides in Latin America have increased from 19.9 per 100 000 people in 2003 to 32.6 per 100 000 people in 2008. In terms of strategy, from 1980 to 2008, the U.S. government has spent $13.1 billion dollars. This money has done little, as the same report notes: “Temporary successes in one country or sub-region have often led traffickers to alter their cultivation patterns, production techniques, and trafficking routes and methods in order to avoid detection.”
Fighting violence with violence only begets more violence. Additionally, it has profoundly damaged the social fabric and has damaged institutions. Public confidence in the army, which has killed civilians as part of "collateral damage," has declined considerably. The same applies to the judiciary. Victims now prefer silence for fear of reprisals or because they consider official complaints to be a waste of time. According to the Report on the Americas, 73 percent of Latin Americans perceive corruption among public officials as a widespread problem.
Governments and policymakers say that they are acting in line with democracy, human rights and public opinion. But, in reality, they are not willing to listen to the demands of society. In the context of the "war on drugs," they are unable to guarantee human rights or even the right to live.
The deaths of Cabral and Juan Francisco Sicilia are not more important than the other casualties of this war. But they have inspired major social reactions. Latin American and U.S. governments must start to listen to these reactions. If they don't, they will have another war on their hands – with their own enraged citizens.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

16 Comments so far
Show AllDrugs are an important source of funds for government organizations like the C.I.A. Plus much "intelligence" can be had through spy's working for governments.
The Drug War, at home and abroad, is a ruse to fund a prison system, and it's also in place for covert population control. In the U.S. the BS about the War on Drugs had many states invest in prisons, and now the infrastructure is in place to incarcerate any persons the Elite Controllers deem to be inconvenient to their agendas.
In 3rd world countries like Columbia, the Drug War keeps a lot of armed guards in place. It's an extension of the agendas revealed by Smedley Butler and John Perkins. Under the guise of the War on Drugs, muscle is in place to protect specific corporate interests. THAT is what it's about... but if they can kill a few radicals, or would-be Leftist organizers in the process, all the better. There certainly have been precedents to suggest what I've delineated. I'm hardly the first to connect the dots...
In an economy increasingly tied to the bankrupt ethos of Disaster Capitalism, rather than do away with all the toxic agents that are causing Cancer rates to rise, it's more financially expedient (i.e. profitable) to build a treating-Cancer infrastructure, with a similar one in place for Diabetes.
Rather than examine the insanity of an obviously racist prison-industrial system, all those operatives, which include judges, lawyers, and local "law" enforcement, prefer to keep the behemoth AS IS, because that insures them jobs. Like the career soldier who knows the battle he's participating in is morally wrong (but prefers to retain his salary and place in the pecking order), he says nothing to alter things. That's largely the role of a great many "law" enforcement agents today. What does law mean in a society that's lost its moral compass and become unhinged from just or fair precepts?
What this nation funds is so ugly and grotesque as to hardly seem possible in a world where people can arguably think and still feel.
Total acuerdo; the corporate monster is out of control, running amok across the Planet ! On the very positive side, great, enormous changes are very close. Cosmic forces are in place; these prophecies have been spoken of in many paths. Those individuals, groups, and even nations, that chose to join the age of sharing and harmony will prosper. Conversely, remaining greedy, imperialistic, or murderous ,will bring much suffering !
siempre por Paz, tiozapata, Mexico
TIO: You and I are in harmony... what you said in this post echoes the final chapter of a book I have nearly completed. I am just tying the loose ends together... it's about a massive healing for the planet, and also includes inter-species communication as a portion of that great work.
So many are already suffering, yet few births take place without rigorous labor pains... that may well characterize the present phase.
Peace to you, too. By the way I have been through Mexico twice and fell in love with Mazatlan... even the name, so magical!
I would like to read your book. Will it be published?
The poster upthread is correct that like the WOT, WODs is money laundering for the DIA, and gun a defense corporations. Case in point. When the US gives or sell 30,000 guns to the cartels.
Somehow this madness must stop. Kudo the the Revs. MLK, Wright.
Let me start by calling for an immediate end to our "war on drugs". Something which I've advocated for decades now. A step that is necessary but far from sufficient. Does anyone imagine that the criminal organizations - the narco-terrorists - in this country and south of the border - will suddenly lay down their weapons, find jobs and become upstanding citizens if the "war on drugs" was ended today? What jobs? We've got big, big problems and the problems are global and not limited to the US and Latin America. With all due respect to the sentiment expressed in this article, we're all victims - not just of the "war on drugs" but of global capitalism's war on humanity and the very planet itself. The war on drugs is merely a symptom of the disease we're suffering, not the disease itself. Curing that - and it's relentless drive for growth - and putting sustainability and social justice ahead of ever more profit and our need to consume ever more "stuff", is going to be necessary to address the "social reactions" referred to in the article.
will they ever learn?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/29/drugs-trade-drugs
Kofi Annan, George Shultz and Richard Branson among those urging public health approach
http://www.globalcommissionondrugs.org/Report
from WAR ON DRUGS REPORT OF THE GLOBAL COMMISSION ON DRUG POLICY
JUNE 2011
Governments and policymakers say that they are acting in line with democracy, human rights and public opinion. But, in reality, they are not willing to listen to the demands of society. In the context of the "war on drugs," they are unable to guarantee human rights or even the right to live.
They aren't acting in anyones interest, cept there own. I agree with you in principle...but...when they make so much money from the illegal trades, why stop it? For instance, Drugs, you hear all the time about it, but who does anything? Guns, who was the no brainers that said...hey lets sell them to the civilians and let them kill each other? There is no democracy or human rights at all, a few years ago, when the American war ships were in Australia, a American personell was found to have kiddy porn on his computer, what happened...the police were told from high up to drop the inquiry because the Americans would deal with it. Swept under the carpet....Public opinion means nothing to these meglomaniacs. They get the proceeds from the war on drugs, so why should they do anything about it? They don't care if you live or die, as long as your a good person, pay your taxes, don't rock the boat and them and their friends get all your money, alive or dead.
For God's sake
We could make so much money if they would just legalize marijuana. I'm really amazed that they play these games. It's money. You'd think they would be all over it. For crying out loud, we are a nation that that sold pet rocks! and all kinds of junk!
Don't just legalise drugs. Make it uncool . Drug use will plummet.
TheWAR On DRUGS?
Perhaps it is waged almost exclusively against certain drug competitors and those groups deemed undesirable to the United States government. (This phenomenon is not unique to the U.S. )
A major reason why drugs are illegal has more to do with the creation and protection of monopolies—than with public health and safety considerations. Otherwise, the government would focus most of its resources on anti-drug education and drug-abuse treatment, instead of arrests and incarcerations. Also, the government would concentrate its interdiction activities on going after both the foreign and domestic high-level traffickers, not the small-time, nickel-and-dime dealers.
If you have a monopoly, then you can control the prices, as well as heavily influence the supply and distribution chains. Tremendous profits are being reaped by the intelligence agencies, the military and certain “protected” businessmen. Also, if the government favors one cartel over another, then the favored one enjoys special, official protection and support. It will rise to the top, and pay tribute ($), in the form of bribes.
(Did you know that marijuana is the largest cash crop in the United States? Annually, it generates approximately $35.8 billion. For example, California’s 8.6 million-pound harvest generates approximately $14 billion. California’s marijuana brings in more money than its grapes, more than tobacco in both North and South Carolina together, as well as more than cotton in Alabama. Nationally, marijuana earns more than wheat and corn combined!)
World-wide, ONE TRILLION DOLLARS per year in illicit drug revenues can make a few people filthy rich, be they foreign or domestic. It also pays for black-ops campaigns, and for off-the-books military-grade weapons and supplies. Furthermore, it buys a lot of support from rebels. Finally, it is an invaluable source of bribe monies paid to influence foreign affairs. For better or for worse, the necessity of some of these activities is rationalized as being in the interests of furthering national security goals.
Remember Air America and the explosion of heroin production and trafficking, during the Vietnam War era? Also, in 2001, Afghanistan produced less than 185 metric tons of heroin per year. However, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), in 2009, Afghanistan produced 7,000 metric tons of opium. It accounted for 93 percent of illicit global opiates production. (Since 2001, yearly Afghan production has been as high as 9,000 metric tons.)
Remember the Iran-Contra Affair: covert drug smuggling operations which were planned and carried out by the U.S. National Security Council and Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North? How about the Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI), the CIA’s official drug-laundering bank? Remember the vast cocaine smuggling ring operating out of Mena, Arkansas while Clinton was governor? And, the U.S. also has Plan Colombia, ostensibly to rid Colombia of cocaine. Instead, it strengthens Mexican drug cartels: NAFTA reward
It simply amazes me that many people don’t find it is highly suspicious that the illicit drug business is able to flourish—year after year—without constantly hearing about major drug busts and seizures. The US enforcement capabilities include the military, DOJ, DEA, FBI, BATF, ICE, state and local police, informants, etc. Curiously, the law enforcement agencies operate utilizing inconsistent policies and [in] actions.*
Ironically, the remarkable efficiency and tremendous success of the illicit drug industry’s supply chain and distribution channels is a business model that even FedEx and UPS would envy. How is it that—year after year—most U.S. metropolitan areas, with populations over 100,000, are consistently saturated with illicit drugs?
Most people either know where to purchase drugs, or have friends, relatives, or co-workers who know. It is intuitively obvious that—if they know then—the police know as well. (Not to digress: It behooves the law enforcement agencies to test their own members. If they were required to submit to periodic, random drug tests, I am substantially certain that a surprisingly high number would fail.) That said, it is somewhat ironic that even the youth of this country are able to buy illicit drugs much easier than cigarettes or alcohol. Illicit drugs are widely available even in U.S. prisons. This is truly a sad condemnation on the so-called "war on drugs"!
These phenomena simply could NOT happen without the secret complicity and cooperation amongst the various military, security, intelligence, and law enforcement agencies—at the highest levels. Also, it necessitates the involvement of certain major banking institutions. This is a scam and a sham of epic proportions.
America, you are being misled—right before your very eyes. For, things are not always what they seem! Don’t blindly believe the mainstream media or the official hype. Think for yourself. Connect the dots and analyze. Look at the long-term patterns. It is intuitively obvious that the evidence is overwhelming, compelling, and indisputable!
-
* This begs the question, “Is the US government truly waging a ‘war on drugs,’ or is it intentionally and surreptitiously facilitating the consolidations of profits and power into the hand of certain groups which it currently favors—for one reason or another?”
Why should anybody think that the US will be able to successfully 'wage war' against illegal drugs? In fact, the US and the rest of the world cannot even wage war successfully against legal, but actually counterfeited medications. The authorities don't even know how big the actual problem is, but it is huge as anybody who has ever bought meds without a prescription over the internet surely knows. Thousands upon thousand of dollars per person can be wasted when what arrives is basically an inert substance, time and time again!
First things first. Before you spend billions and billions of dollars on supposedly fighting illegal drugs, at least governments should be able to regulate the supply of legal medicines first. They have not done that successfully yet.
The illegal drug industrial is too big to fail! The bribery, graft, corruption is funded by the forced contributions, withholding taxes, by taxing labor. The drug cartels cash was used to forestall the economic collapse when in 2007 the cartel deposited $400,000,000,000 $billion into Wachovia bank. The collapse finally came full fledged in 2008 but the Wall St., Wash.,DC Axis of Evil, AoE, criminal conspiracy knew it was coming and took stock market positions to make it happen so they could profit from the stock transactions. Also, it bought time to arrange for the government to finagle a bail out of the banks by using the forced contributions, withholding taxes, by the taxing of labor which funds the USG.