Pubdate: Fri, 03 Apr 2009 Source: Tennessean, The (Nashville, TN) Copyright: 2009 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/SITES/OPINION/submit-editor.shtml Website: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mexico U.S. MUST ACKNOWLEDGE ROLE IN MEXICAN VIOLENCE Today's Topic: Drugs, Guns Flow In Cartel War While authorities on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border wring their hands over complicated ways of quelling the violence among Mexican drug cartels, some of the factors in the issue are not complicated at all. What is the violence about? Money. What is the money for? Drugs. Where is the demand for drugs? The United States. How is the violence committed? Guns. Where are the guns coming from? The United States. The horrific deaths may be occurring in Mexico, but the United States is playing a very integral role in the conflict. Thus far, most of the violence has been among the drug runners, like the old gangland adage that they only kill each other, not the general public. But since 2006, more than 6,300 people have died from the intense unrest. There have been reports that the violence is spilling over into the United States, but a congressional committee heard this week that those reports are largely exaggerated. But that still means thousands of people are being killed, and it means steps are necessary to solve the problem of drug wars in Mexico near the United States border. It's not just some humanitarian issue for this country. The United States is responsible for the demand for the drugs, as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton publicly acknowledged recently. The U.S. also is supplying the weapons that are being smuggled into Mexico, and they are often the kinds of assault weapons that were part of a ban that expired in 2004. Drug thugs do like those assault rifles, which are described as military grade. So the United States cannot simply say it's Mexico's problem and let Mexico deal with it. This country has a large degree of responsibility for the bloodshed. The Obama administration has announced plans to send more resources to the border. President Obama is expected to visit Mexico April 16, where presumably the border problems will be discussed. Gov. Rick Perry of Texas has asked for 1,000 National Guard troops to be put at the border. Thousands of Mexican soldiers are on the other side of the border. The El Paso district attorney, Jaime Esparza, insists that the U.S. side of the border is safe. (2 of 2) Whenever anyone suggests assault weapons should be banned there is a cry from the National Rifle Association that it means the government wants to take everyone's guns away, and the problem is a lot of people buy into that argument. Advertisement Gun proponents are far better at injecting fear that Second Amendment rights will be taken away than they are at explaining exactly why assault weapons are needed in the hands of American citizens. Solutions to the violence in Mexico will be difficult to come by, but one piece that might very well help is to subtract assault weapons from the picture. The ban on 19 types of semiautomatic weapons that expired in 2004 should be revived. Addressing the gun smuggling alone will probably not end the violence in the Mexican drug wars. But the debate over guns might help draw into focus the fact that the United States must come to grips with its culpability in the violence. It's just not good enough to say it's bad guys killing each other. Thousands of lives are worth saving. Ignoring the problem is not a solution. There is, after all, a border between what is right and what is wrong. Whenever anyone suggests assault weapons should be banned there is a cry from the National Rifle Association that it means the government wants to take everyone's guns away, and the problem is a lot of people buy into that argument. Gun proponents are far better at injecting fear that Second Amendment rights will be taken away than they are at explaining exactly why assault weapons are needed in the hands of American citizens. Solutions to the violence in Mexico will be difficult to come by, but one piece that might very well help is to subtract assault weapons from the picture. The ban on 19 types of semiautomatic weapons that expired in 2004 should be revived. Addressing the gun smuggling alone will probably not end the violence in the Mexican drug wars. But the debate over guns might help draw into focus the fact that the United States must come to grips with its culpability in the violence. It's just not good enough to say it's bad guys killing each other. Thousands of lives are worth saving. Ignoring the problem is not a solution. There is, after all, a border between what is right and what is wrong. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin