Pubdate: Thu, 26 Mar 2009 Source: Rebel Yell, The (U of NV at Las Vegas, NV Edu) Copyright: 2009 The Rebel Yell Contact: http://www.unlvrebelyell.com/letters_to_the_editor.php Website: http://www.unlvrebelyell.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1362 Author: Chelsea Milko WAR ON DRUGS BEING LOST, OVERHAUL NEEDED Narcotics-Related Violence Shows Systemic Failure In Drug Fight Take a look at the havoc in Cuidad Juarez, Mexico, a lawless no-mans-land situated across the Rio Grande from El Paso, Texas. It is the capital of the Mexican-monopolized North American illegal drug business and an exploding assemblage of murderous warlords and foot soldiers. The human and economic cost of the drug gang firefights is staggering. The body count for 2008 was upwards of 6,000 that included traffickers, police, soldiers and innocent civilians. The most tragic victims of the bloodshed are the teenage boys from the broken, impoverished barrios, which serve as incubators of crime and violence. Lured by the status and power that comes with cartel membership, they are recruited to become little daring assassins, or "sicaritos." The towns and cities of Mexico are overrun with narcotic syndicates engaged in disastrous turf wars whose gangsters mercilessly gun down opposition and torch business storefronts. Drug-related murders may or may not have hit American border towns like El Paso hard enough to warrant a troop surge of sorts. Today, Gov. Rick Perry of Texas will again entreat Department of Homeland Security Chief Janet Napolitano to order 1,000 National Guard members to defend the U.S.-Mexico border. She and President Barack Obama have both talked of this issue with tempered neutrality and not the firm attitude the worsening situation demands. Beefing up border patrol operations can only stop U.S. markets from being flooded with cocaine, heroine and marijuana for so long. The blood spilt in Mexico's narco-mafia war will soon trickle into the U.S. and place an inestimable strain on law enforcement authorities. And with the narcotics industry as agile and resilient as ever, traffickers will find new smuggling routes. This is a bi-national security dilemma and not enough is being done, especially in Mexico. A joint initiative to regulate arms sales, coordinate intelligence gathering and arm counter-insurgency personnel with sophisticated equipment would ideally subdue violence in an institutionally sound country. But Mexico is certainly not that. Its fragmented federal government, despite President Felipe Calderon's pledge to end organized crime, is teeming with bribed police officers and a compromised judicial system. It seems like no failsafe solution exists to give the dream for a drug-free world any tangibility. Choking off the drug supply by rounding up kingpins will leave a power vacuum for the thuggish middlemen to fill. And exacting harsh punishment does nothing to seal up the permeable U.S.-Mexico border. Prohibition does nothing to curb demand and cram down the street price in consumer countries. In fact, it shifts production to places like Afghanistan and opens up new export markets in newly industrialized nations. Arguments from pro-retaliation camps who want to see cartels crumble and their lords imprisoned are moralistic and myopic. It is time for policy reassessment. It is time to scrap what is not working and welcome unconventional and controversial approaches to the table. What I am going to say next will be an uncomfortable suggestion to some. So I urge you, reader, to keep an open mind. The unending violence on the streets and ever-present legislative deadlock in the halls of government is giving new traction to the case for drug legalization. The champions of the policy change to legalize drugs point to the illegal market with its rising death tolls and heavy incarceration rates. They also argue that the current system incentivizes black market trade for designer drugs contaminated with dangerous chemicals. Regulating of the quality of wholesale quantities of narcotics would ensure street drugs are not cooked up in basement labs and cut with poisonous chemicals. Decriminalizing narcotics in bullet-riddled countries where the streets run red with the blood of young men and the police parade around like drug lords with badges is an unpalatable option. Initially, affording access to new consumers will create new addicts. Eventually, decriminalization will shift the focus of funding from punitive and reactionary measures to educational approaches which address underlying demand. International drug policy is in a messy situation. The flawed efforts to suppress supply and cut demand are debased by righteous fear. And it appears that when the appropriate formula becomes a matter of supply and demand, the human element is forgotten altogether. Regardless of how calculated the response is or how holistic the intervention, suffering will abound and criminality will thrive. Drug legalization may be rife with complicated loopholes and ethical ambiguity. But it may be the only approach that can end the violence fueled by renegade cartels and subversive law enforcement officers. It may be able to repair the war-torn neighborhoods of Northern Mexico and arm children with a future and not with guns - because the way we are fighting the war on drugs is not working. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin