World Watch
April 3, 2009 1:01 PM

Mexico's Dangerous Illegal Economy

By
Lara Logan
Topics
World Watch
(CBS)
When I first saw the images of bloodied bodies and heard the tales of severed heads coming out of Mexico, I was riveted. It reminded me of Iraq, the shock value of chopping off heads and leaving the bodies on display, as powerful in Mexico as it was on the streets of Baghdad or Mosul or Falluja.

But when I went to Mexico, what I discovered was even more disturbing, as unsettling as the savage nature of the violence is to anyone.

It's not as dramatic, but just as dangerous. And it was explained to me like this:

Mexico has two economies – the legal economy and the illegal one. The problem is that Mexico's illegal economy, (fueled by drug trafficking) is worth billions – far more than the legal economy.

And where you have two economies, you have two states, each with a ruling power. Those in charge of Mexico's legal state, the officially elected government, are not as powerful as those in charge of Mexico's illegal narco-state – the drug cartels.

Not only do the drug cartels enjoy vastly greater revenues and wealth than the government – they can choose how to spend their money with no regard to civil considerations. They do not have to worry about health care or education or the people that elected them. They spend only to ensure their hold on power continues. They serve only themselves.


Photos: Mexico Border Violence
Drug-related violence along the U.S.-Mexico border has spiked in recent months(Photo: AP)

And one of the main ways in which they serve their own interests is weapons. The drug cartels are better armed, and better equipped than Mexico's army and police.

So you have an illegal state co-existing with the official state, but it is more powerful, richer and vastly better armed, accountable to no one.

While the Mexican army stands accused of human rights abuses and Mexican police and officials are discredited by corruption, the drug cartels chop off people's heads, murder and kidnap at will and dissolve people in acid … with no one to hold them to account.

Until Mexican President Felipe Calderon decided he was going to be the one to do this and has been using the army – and U.S. intelligence assets – to some effect against the cartels.

He has taken down some of their most powerful leaders. What remains to be seen is what it will take to bring down an entire cartel – if that is even possible. And how quickly leaders are being replaced, so far appears to limit the effectiveness of the government strategy.

The possibility remains that it will work over time, if the pressure is relentless … and if President Calderon survives.

But the Mexican war on drugs will never be won as long as the focus remains on weapons coming from the U.S. and nothing is done about the weapons flooding into Mexican ports from the black markets of Latin America, China and Russia.

Much is being made of the fact that the U.S. is supposedly responsible for 90 percent of the weapons fuelling Mexico's drug war.

That is the official statistic being peddled by the Mexican government – their foreign minister, Patricia Espinosa, repeated it when I sat down to interview her the day before U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, quoted the same statistic on her first official visit.

The problem with that statistic is that it is only partially true.

There is a word missing – and that word is "traced."

The U.S. is responsible for over 90 percent of the traced firearms found in Mexico, but the vast majority of guns recovered in Mexico are not sent back to the U.S. to be traced because they are obviously made somewhere else.

Mexico is a virtual arms bazaar with weapons, like their illegal drugs, pouring into Mexican ports. And most importantly, the most powerful weapons like rocket propelled grenades, hand grenades and fully automatic assault weapons – are all illegal in the U.S. These are not weapons that can be bought over the counter in Texas and smuggled illegally into Mexico.

Yet these are the weapons being used to the most deadly effect by the drug cartels, these are the weapons that make them more of a force than the Mexican police and army – these are the weapons at the heart of the bloodshed threatening the legitimate state.

So while the U.S. is right to take responsibility for its part in the drug violence, the problem will not be resolved by looking solely to the U.S.

Mexican authorities have to look at their own ports, and the routes from the ports across their country to the U.S. border. The cocaine being smuggled into the U.S. across the Mexican border has often travelled across Mexico to get there. More effort needs to be made to stop it along the way.

And more attention needs to be given to the growing power of the narco-state that is using its influence to undermine the official state. Journalists have been paid (and threatened) to plant stories of human rights abuses by Mexican soldiers in the media. There is obviously a campaign underway to undermine the authority of the Mexican government – but less obvious, the campaign to undermine the government's credibility.

This is what makes the legitimate Mexican state so vulnerable.

And it's what makes Mexico's drug problem even more urgent.

Add a Comment See all 36 Comments
by patriot2381 April 11, 2009 8:48 AM EDT
So... NAFTA does not help Mexico or USA after all is said and done.
Reply to this comment
by MaineiacinAK April 8, 2009 6:31 PM EDT
Yeah but, Obama and Hillary said so. Don't expect these folks who don't know anything about firearms and support Obama without question to believe anything but the Party Line.
Reply to this comment
by leopard_colony April 6, 2009 4:14 PM EDT
Yes, weapons going south to Mexico do come from our country. But from our MILITARY, not gun shops. Cartels are buying real assault weapons, rockets, grenades,etc. Not the castrated copies of assault weapons in gun stores. Here is the evidence:

First Secretary of State let slip that machine guns (assault weapons), rocket launchers, and grenades were going south. Only the military is allowed to possess functional weapons such as these. See:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_world/2009/03/26/2009-03-26_secretary_of_state_hillary_clintons_call.html

Second examination of captured arms shows US Military origin. See:
http://www.10news.com/news/19071202/detail.html#-
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/04/02/myth-percent-guns-mexico-fraction-number-claimed/

Further there is evidence that military weapons are coming from South America, which may include US Military arms:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-arms-race15-2009mar15,0,229992.story
Reply to this comment
by MaineiacinAK April 5, 2009 10:21 PM EDT
Be just as sick and dead if you eat at Dunkin Donuts and McDonald's every day. That's why I don't do drugs or eat there even weekly. I like being healthy and alive.
Reply to this comment
by MaineiacinAK April 5, 2009 10:20 PM EDT
Not necessarily time to regain our streets and sanity, but definitely time to stop trying to prevent idiots from being idiots.

Let them go. Legalize all of it. Nothing related to drugs should be illegal. Want to die? Go for it. Want to screw yourself up, and be sick? Go for it. We shouldn't be putting people in jail to prevent them from doing themselves in. Let them go.

For a few years, we'll have to pick some bodies up from various places, wherever they happen to drop. Then that will slow down and we'll be better off than we've been in many years. We'll still have to occasional bum around to look at, to serve as an example for the kids... "See? Hey, look at the high junkie over there, staggering around and laying here and about. Do drugs, end up there. Simple."

Tired of spending time and resources trying to keep those who should likely be allowed to kill themselves alive. Leave them to it.
Reply to this comment
by msmabuse April 5, 2009 11:11 AM EDT
http://www.youtube.com/user/squawkboxnoise

Soon we may see Obama?s Mandatory Volunteerism Plan come to light. Sound oxymoronic doesn?t it? Mandatory Volunteer?
Somehow last week both houses of congress pushed forward an expansion of the Americorps national service plan. If you recall last year, the Obamassiah proposed a civilian national security force that?s ?just as powerful, just as strong, just as well-funded? as the U.S. military.
The legislation included this language: ?a workable, fair, and reasonable mandatory service requirement for all able young people.? In other words, start the goose stepping when they?re young, and expand the boots on the street. That?s right, Obama wants his own civilian army of young people. Does that ring any historical bells with anyone? How about the guy with the funny moustache?
Reply to this comment
by PacificGatePost April 4, 2009 10:51 PM EDT
THE WAR ON DRUGS IS A WAR ON OUR OWN SOCIETY

Prohibition strains the Constitution and The War on Drugs has been a misguided failure. END IT.

http://pacificgatepost.blogspot.com/2009/04/war-on-drugs-time-for-change.html

Time to regain control of our streets and our sanity.
Reply to this comment
by MaineiacinAK April 4, 2009 8:13 PM EDT
Talk about misleading statements!

"not U.S.-style mall shootings, schoolyard massacres or road rage "

Buddy. Best learn some things before you go making a public fool of yourself.

Here's a nice source of information for you:

http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/cius_04/offenses_reported/violent_crime/murder.html

Go there, and come back here and repeat that foolishness. Road rage shootings, school shootings, and shopping mall shootings, while sensational and definitely gratifying to gun grabbers so they can dance in the blood screeching, "We told you! We told you!", and "Why don't you care? Why won't you give up those icky guns?"

The facts are:

The vast majority of murders involve other crimes, and other criminals. Drug shootings in cities are rampant. We're suffering the same things Mexico is, and in numbers that area as great. Fact is, that scum is spreading across the border. We've had numbers of home invasions, kidnappings, and drive by shootings related to Mexican drug traffickers in the border communities.

Be better off if people in cities would learn to not shoot each other as well. Most of us seem to get along pretty good here in Maine and Alaska. We don't shoot each other in great numbers, and neither does anyone else in this country.

80 MILLION people own somewhere between 250 and 900 MILLION firearms in the United States. I'd say we're a pretty peaceable and law abiding group of people as a whole.
Reply to this comment
by roblin2005 April 4, 2009 3:23 PM EDT
"uncontrollable breeding", american_11-2009

I am not sure how this statement affects the argument of the posted article, however let me try to decipher a counter argument. Perhaps if Mexico had more gay marriages and more children born to single welfare parents out of wedlock, then they could control the breeding. Perhaps they have better "breeding" stock?

Furthermore, does the welfare environment that handily supports single parent families also support an environment of drug use and abuse?

So, is Mexico created a welfare state for single, unwed mothers to have children out of wedlock, then they could possibly cut down on the "uncontrollable breeding." And if this environment promoted a drug culture of drug use and abuse, then Mexico could keep the drugs in Mexico and not have to send them to the US?
Reply to this comment
by chusanroad April 4, 2009 2:42 PM EDT
A previous commenter made a somewhat misleading claim that "...the murder rate in Mexico is considerably higher than that in the U.S."

True, the latest comprehensive data available from the United Nations Survey of Crime report Mexico's overall murder rate as 13 per 100,000 people, compared with 4 per 100,000 in the United States. However, an estimated 90 percent of Mexico's murders are specifically drug-related ? not U.S.-style mall shootings, schoolyard massacres or road rage ? and concentrated in five of its 31 states, leaving the rest of the country freer of crime than most of the United States.

While alarmists admonish travelers to avoid Mexico at all costs, people actually returning from vacations in Mexico tell a different story. Last month, Funjet Vacations surveyed more than 900 tourists who visited between October 2008 and March 2009; 97 percent said they would return and 90 percent said they felt "safe and secure."

I am one of those travellers who recently drove 6,000 miles over a four week period in Central Mexico with my wife and two children. "Safe and secure" is what we felt in all but the border crossing towns. In those instances it was "eyes wide open" and "daylight only." Kinda like a tourist in New York City.
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