For war-weary Central Americans, a drug deal never took so long... (Published at The Daily Caller)
Guatemalans esperando un milagro. (Founders' Porch) |
The Obama
administration’s foreign policy is often criticized for its perceived post-American
internationalism, but US drug policy suggests that the all-American realism of days
past lives on. Consider the perspective,
for example, of Special UN envoy Kofi Annan. Last week he cleared up any
confusion about the international community’s efforts to orally persuade
Syria’s dictatorship to stop being a dictatorship, explaining,
“The evidence shows that we have not succeeded.” Yet meanwhile, over a year
after Annan called on the US to consider drug legalizations in a Global Commission
on Drug Policy Report,
evidence such as lectures by the US drug czar
to Central American leaders shows that when it comes to the War on Drugs, the
international community has been no less unsuccessful in changing the mind of
the leader of the international community itself.
"Making
drugs more available,” US drug czar Gil Kerlikowske said
last year, “will make it harder to keep our communities healthy and safe.” This
Panglossian optimism must puzzle people in Central America, where there are
less and less communities to “keep” safe. Indeed, the homicide rates
per 100,000 people have risen over the last decade in Guatemala, El Salvador,
and Honduras to 41, 66, and 82 (the world’s highest) respectively, with the US “healthy”
indeed at less than 5. The discovery
of 49 bodies on a Mexican highway one morning last May is only one of the more
recent reminders of the viciousness of this best of all possible drug wars, most
of those bodies going unidentified because of “the lack of heads, hands, and
feet.” Just last weekend exasperated protestors marched
against the drug-fueled insecurity and impunity in Guatemala, “a good place to
commit murder, because you will almost certainly get away with it,” as one UN
official has described
this drug-corridor state.
DEA Administrator
Michele Leonhart put it more bluntly last month in congressional testimony
when she called the “antidrug mission” an “essential element to the national
health and security of the U.S. and interests abroad.” Certainly it is an
essential element to the DEA’s budgetary health, but the interests of our Latin
American allies seem not to have made the cut. For their part, a generation of
pro-legalization leaders has finally found their voice: The presidents of both Colombia
and Costa Rica
have floated legalization in recent months, and Guatemala’s newly elected
President Otto Perez Molina openly supports
legalization, even at the cost of significant political capital. Yet when he
spoke out boldly against the Drug War at Latin America’s World Economic Forum
last April, he found his once like-minded counter-parts from El Salvador,
Honduras, and Nicaragua had jumped ship, a consequence (Cato’s Juan Carlos Hidalgo
speculates)
of US pressure. With Mexico’s newly-elected president on the fence,
this is one time when US leadership from behind would be preferable.
History, however,
has taught Central Americans to be cautious of US leadership. Guatemalans
remember that in 1954, our regional “interests” meant installing a
dictatorship, setting the stage for decades of atrocities which a 1999 international
commission
would walk back to US meddling. Yet ironically, the violence of this era,
during which the US illegally blocked regional weapons shipments, is a fraction
of today’s violence, to which the US actually injects weapons with its either corrupt
or embarrassingly incompetent ATF programs.
They weep for legalization. (Founders' Porch) |
One wonders
if a nation $15.8 trillion in debt has the luxury to be funding strategically
contradictory programs. Does USDA sync
with DEA? Maybe not, but DEA certainly talks with SOD and CNTOC, and sometimes cross-checks
with ATF, and fuses with OCDDETF, which syncs with SICA. Though even
then, as Fast and Furious has shown, Mexico gets left in the dark, and every border
killing leaves US agents terrified of a bureaucratic miscommunication a la
George Tenet after 9/11: “I wonder if it has anything to do with this guy
taking pilot training.”
For an
administration so wary of blowback when it comes to standing by Iranian
protestors or merely green-lighting a Turkish humanitarian corridor in Syria,
it might think twice about the consequences of a perceived imperial drug policy.
When the masses begin chanting “Fuera DEA,” the inescapable irony will be that self-interested
realism was never in US interest at all. Political interests are another story,
which makes New Jersey governor Chris Christie’s risky statement
in support of reforming drug policy earlier this week particularly welcome.
Perhaps this is a road best paved by the politically buffered, such as former
presidents. But Central America’s leaders are ready now, and we ought not keep
them waiting.
No comments:
Post a Comment