Pubdate: Tue, 03 Mar 2009 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Bret Stephens Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mexico IN PRAISE OF MEXICO'S WAR ON DRUGS Complacency and corruption are the real enemies. On a recent trip to Mexico, I asked a family friend -- a professor at the National University -- whether she thought the government was collapsing under the weight of the drug war, which has claimed close to 9,000 lives in the past two years, turned border cities into no-go zones and elicited comparisons between Mexico and Pakistan. "Collapsing?" she said. "It's finally picking itself up." Her point: Mexico's "drug problem" is of very long standing. The rest of the world is only noticing it now because President Felipe Calderon has decided to break with his predecessors' policy of malign neglect of, if not actual complicity in, the drug trade. The Wall Street Journal has been writing about drug trafficking in Mexico for decades. In 1967, an intrepid young reporter named Peter Kann -- later CEO of Dow Jones -- hoofed his way through the high sierra of Sinaloa, on the trail of poppy growers and heroin smugglers. The story he filed then could just as easily have run 40 years later: "In cases where the big traffickers operate with [Mexican] political protection," he wrote, "U.S. agents content themselves with breeding hostility between rival traffickers. 'We'll put the heat on one dealer and then let the word out that his competition is feeding us information about him. It can stir up a little violence,' says one smiling agent." Now fast forward to 1985. In February of that year a DEA agent named Enrique "Kiki" Camarena was abducted outside the U.S. consulate in Guadalajara, horrifically tortured and murdered. His kidnapper was marijuana kingpin Rafael Caro Quintero, who was able to flee Mexico to Costa Rica with the help of officers in Mexico's version of the FBI. Anyone who lived in Mexico in the 1980s, as I did, could just as easily name other drug lords and the politicians who protected and profited from them. It's an old story. At bottom, the problem isn't the drug cartels per se. Much less is it -- and here I can sense the collective blood pressure of the Cato Institute rising -- America's drug laws. The problem is Mexico's record of corrupt, weak and incompetent governance, which has created the environment in which the cartels have hitherto operated with impunity. The same might be said about other countries in Latin America: These states did not become basket cases on account of the drug trade. It is the fact that they were basket cases to begin with that allowed the drug trade to flourish. In a recent op-ed in this newspaper, former presidents of Mexico, Brazil and Colombia called the war on drugs a failure and warned that the "alarming power of the drug cartels is leading to a criminalization of politics and a politicization of crime." They also called for the decriminalization of cannabis and greater emphasis on education and treatment programs. A beguiling argument, wrong on every point. Huge sums already go to drug education and treatment. Decriminalizing pot would do nothing to stem the violence from the illegal traffic of hard drugs. (Decriminalizing hard drugs would also send addiction rates skyrocketing, as the British experience of the 1970s shows, with criminal consequences of its own.) As for the argument about the "criminalization of politics," that story is as old as Latin America itself. All this aside, the plain political fact is that drug legalization in the U.S. is not going to happen as long as a powerful moral and social consensus opposes it. To make the case for it now while Mexico bleeds is an exercise in fecklessness. What Mexico urgently needs are stronger institutions of state, beginning with its army but also including the judiciary and the police. In 2007, the Bush administration agreed to the Merida Initiative (derisively called "Plan Mexico" by its critics, who seem not to have noticed that "Plan Colombia" actually helped Colombia) with the governments of Mexico and Central America. The administration offered to spend about $1.5 billion over three years on counternarcotics efforts. So far only about $300 million has actually been released. To put the numbers in context, an estimated $15 billion flows annually into the coffers of Mexican drug cartels. The Calderon government has vastly increased military and police budgets, but remains vastly outspent by the cartels. Clearly more needs to be done, and if the Obama administration had its foreign priorities straight, the $300 million it now plans to spend to relieve Hamas of its obligations in Gaza would go to our Mexican partners instead. Still, Mexico's achievements have not been negligible. The government has managed to spark power struggles within and among cartels, and the vast majority of Mexico's murder victims are themselves involved in the drug trade. More important, Mr. Calderon has sent the signal that his government will not repeat the patterns of complacency and collusion that typified Mexico for decades. Whatever else might be said about his government, it's a serious one. This does not mean Mr. Calderon will win this war. But for those of us who know Mexico well, it is an astonishing turn, deserving neither of pity nor sagacious snickering, but of respect. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin