“We will not allow any foreign government to intervene in our territory, much less with armed forces,” AMLO told US neocons.
Relations between US and Mexican lawmakers plumbed new lows this week, as a coterie of Republican senators, congressmen and a former attorney general called for direct US military intervention against Mexico’s drug cartels. They included Lindsey Graham, who has lent his support to every single US military intervention and regime change operation since becoming senator in 2003. Together with John McCain, he helped lay some of the ground work for the NATO-Russia proxy war in Ukraine, famously telling Ukrainian soldiers: “your fight is our fight”.
Setting the Stage for US Military Intervention
Now, Graham wants to introduce legislation to “set the stage” for U.S. military force in Mexico, saying it is time to “get tough” on the southern neighbour’s drug cartels and prevent them from bringing fentanyl across the border. The senator’s intervention came just days after four US citizens were kidnapped in the northern Mexican city of Matamoros, two of whom were killed. It is not yet clear why the kidnapping place, but all four of the victims had lengthy rap sheets for drug offences. Whether that has any bearing on the crime has not been confirmed.
Graham added he would “introduce legislation to make certain Mexican drug cartels foreign terrorist organizations under U.S. law and set the stage to use military force if necessary.” Graham escalated tensions on Thursday by describing Mexico as a “narcostate”. His words elicited a furious response from Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador (AMLO for short), who said (translated by yours truly):
Once and for all, let’s set our position straight. We will not allow any foreign government to intervene in our territory, much less with armed forces. And from today we will begin an information campaign for Mexicans and Hispanics that live and work in the United States to inform them of what we are doing in Mexico and how this initiative of the Republicans, besides being irresponsible, is an insult to the Mexican people and a lack of respect to our independence and sovereignty. And if they do not change their attitude and continue using Mexico for electoral propaganda… we are going to recommend not voting for this party.
This would be no small matter, given that 34.5 million Hispanic Americans were eligible to vote in 2022’s mid-terms, making Latinos the fastest-growing racial and ethnic group in the U.S. electorate. According to Pew Research, the number of Hispanic eligible voters increased by 4.7 million between 2018 and 2022, accounting for 62% of the total growth in U.S. eligible voters during that time. And AMLO has significant influence over this demographic. But that is unlikely to have much of an effect on the Republican neocons pushing for direct US intervention against Mexican drug cartels.
They include, all too predictably, Senators Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio. Also on board are Reps. Dan Crenshaw and Stephen Walts, who in January presented a joint resolution in Congress seeking authorisation for the “use of United States Armed Forces against those responsible for trafficking fentanyl or a fentanyl-related substance into the United States or carrying out other related activities that cause regional destabilization in the Western Hemisphere.”
Mexico’s “Narco-Terrorists”
Also along for the ride is former Attorney General (under both George HW Bush and Donald Trump), whom the late New York Times columnist William Safire used to refer to as “Coverup-General Barr” for his role in burying evidence of then-President George H.W. Bush’s role in “Iraqgate” and “Iron-Contra.” In an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal, Barr likened Mexico’s “narco-terrorists” to Isis and calls Reps. Crenshaw and Waltz’s joint resolution a “necessary step”:
What will it take to defeat the Mexican cartels? First, a far more aggressive American effort inside Mexico than ever before, including a significant U.S. law-enforcement and intelligence presence, as well as select military capabilities. Optimally, the Mexican government will support and participate in this effort, and it is likely to do so once they understand that the U.S. is committed to do whatever is necessary to cripple the cartels, whether or not the Mexican government participates.
Barr called AMLO the cartel’s “chief enabler” for refusing to wage war against the cartels with quite the same zeal as his predecessors:
“In reality, AMLO is unwilling to take action that would seriously challenge the cartels. He shields them by consistently invoking Mexico’s sovereignty to block the U.S. from taking effective action.”
Bizarrely, Barr makes this claim even as the US and Mexico are quietly intensifying their military cooperation. As the investigative journalism website Contralinea reports, one of the millions of documents leaked in a massive cyberattack on the Mexican Secretariat of National Defense (Sedena), in October revealed the extent to which the US and Mexican armed forces are deepening their collaboration on “shared security challenges” such as combating organised crime, arms, drugs and people trafficking.
According to the leaked GANSEG document, the objective going forward of the Armed Forces of Mexico and the United States is to interact (emphasis my own) “closely, efficiently and in an orderly manner to strengthen bilateral military cooperation in matters of protection and regional security, evaluating existing bilateral mechanisms in order to work with a common strategic vision.”
The tactical-strategic bilateral military cooperation framework will also involve trilateral meetings between the defence ministers of Mexico, the United States and Canada. But that apparently isn’t enough for certain Republican neocons, who want the US government and military to take matters into their own hands.
While the growing influence of Mexico’s drug cartels is clearly a matter of vital import, not just for Mexico and the US but for the entire American continent, direct, overt US intervention on Mexican soil will make things a darn sight worse. If US citizens are worried about migrants amassing at the border, just wait until the US army begins ramping up the chaos and bloodshed in Mexico.
Also, conspicuously (albeit not surprisingly) absent from the debate in Washington is the central role US arms manufacturers and dealers play in facilitating a large part of the drugs-related violence on both sides of the border. Nor, of course, is their any reckoning with the now-indisputable failure of the US War on Drugs in stemming the flow of narcotics to the US. Even the NY Times recently ran an op-ed declaring that the global war on drugs had been a “staggering failure”.
Strange Praise
Things got decidedly weird when Barr singled out Felipe Calderón Hinojosa as the only Mexican president that actually confronted the drug cartels — an absurd claim. After all, the man Calderón personally handpicked to serve as security minister during his presidency, Genaro García Luna, was recently found guilty by a New York court of taking millions of dollars in bribes from Mexico’s biggest crime group, the Sinaloa drug cartel. García Luna is one of the highest-ranking Mexican officials ever to be convicted of having ties to drug trafficking.
The AMLO government is currently weighing up whether to seek Calderon’s extradition from Spain, where he recently qualified for a premium visa. Barr’s bizarre praise for Calderón prompted speculation from AMLO that perhaps Barr is offering his legal services to Calderón:
I don’t know what’s up with William Barr, because imagine saying that when García Luna, Calderón’s right-hand man, is on trial and has been shown to have protected the Sinaloa Cartel. So why is Barr saying this? I kept thinking: could it be that – since he is working as a defence lawyer again – he is going to take Calderón’s case? They are going to hire him as a lawyer for Calderón, or for those who are responsible – here [in Mexico] and there [in the United States] – because García Luna can still spill the beans.
The good news is that for the moment the Biden administration is reluctant to up the ante, arguing it would have minimal benefits. Plus, Mexico, the US’s second largest trading partner, is a key node in Washington’s plan to pivot away from its third largest, China, and bring its production base closer to home.
“Designating these cartels as [foreign terrorist organizations] would not grant us any additional authorities that we don’t really have at this time,” press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at a briefing with reporters. “The United States has powerful sanctions authorities specifically designated to combat narcotics trafficking organizations and the individuals and entities that enable them. So, we have not been afraid to use them.”
The bad news is that the US government’s position could change at any time, especially if it becomes politically expedient to do so. The drug war seems destined to play an important role in next year’s elections, and the Republicans are determined to extract as much political capital as possible from the issue.
Other Reasons for Tensions
But souring relations between the US and Mexico have to do with a lot more than just the illicit drug trade. As I reported way back in June 2021, in The Empire Strikes Back Against Mexican President AMLO, the AMLO government has helped to improve the lives of many of Mexico’s rural and urban poor who were essentially hung out to dry by previous administrations, and he is done so without embarking on an uncontrolled state spending spree, as US political scientist Ian Bremmer notes in his article, “Advantage Mexico”:
Even after the pandemic, Mexico’s debt-to-GDP ratio still stands at a healthy 50%, because the leftist López Obrador, aka AMLO, has confounded critics by both expanding the country’s tax base and keeping government spending in check.
You would think that would be a good thing for most US conservatives. Yet former George W Bush speechwriter (and one of the “intellectual” architects of the Iraq war) David Frum actually criticised AMLO for being “a strange kind of leftist,” who “has actually cut social spending” and has “done nothing to enforce tax collection.” The second point is an outright lie, since one of the first things the AMLO administration did was to begin strong-arming domestic and global corporations into finally settling their decades-long tax debts.
It has also done other positive things that have have hurt the profits of some of the world’s largest corporations and threatened the power base and fortunes of some of Mexico’s political and financial elite. A few examples:
- It passed one of the strictest food labeling laws on the planet, in a desperate bit to halt Mexico’s obesity epidemic, much to the horror of global food and beverage companies. The United States, EU, Canada and Switzerland, home to some of the world’s biggest food companies, tried to derail the new legislation. But to no avail.
- The government has sharply increased the minimum wage, which for decades had been one of the lowest in Latin America. It has also lowered the retirement age to qualify for pensions, increased governmental contributions and reduced commissions and reformed housing benefits to assist debtors and halt eviction.
- It has also passed a bill to curtail the outsourcing of personnel to third party firms, which had enabled corporations to skirt health and safety regulations and avoid paying taxes and social security.
- By rolling back some of the sweeping energy reforms unleashed by AMLO’s predecessor Enrique Peña Nieto, the government has tried to reduce the country’s reliance on gasoline imports from the US and strengthen Mexico’s energy independence. A pretty shrewd move given the energy shortages and price surges caused by the Ukraine conflict and subsequent US-EU sanctions.
- AMLO also passed a presidential decree phasing out the use of the herbicide glyphosate, Roundup’s active ingredient, and banning the cultivation and importation of genetically modified (GM) corn. That was in December 2020. In recent weeks it has watered down the legislation somewhat, yet this week the US and Canada still demanded formal talks with Mexico in a bid to pressure Mexico into abandon the ban completely.
- It has nationalised Mexico’s abundant deposits of lithium, a metal that is vital for the rapidly growing e-mobility industry.
In foreign affairs AMLO has also charted a more independent course. As Jacobin magazine’s Kurt Hackbarth reported in 2021, “Mexico has exchanged its former slavish devotion to Washington for a rigorous defense of its own national sovereignty. It has reined in the actions of US intelligence agencies, refused to recognize Juan Guaidó in Venezuela, called a coup a coup in Bolivia, bucked the Organization of American States, and sent a plane to rescue Evo Morales.”
Since then it has refused to support US-EU sanctions on Russia or recognise Peru’s “usurper” President Dina Boluarte. AMLO has repeatedly used his morning press conferences to call out US meddling in Latin America as well as Washington’s persecution of Julian Assange, whom AMLO described as “the best journalist of our time.” He is now leading the international campaign against the US blockade of Cuba, whom AMLO has also invited to join an anti-inflation alliance of Latin American countries.
Suffice to say, none of these things will have gone down well in the Oval Office. Last December, on the occasion of the bicentennial of US-Mexico relations, Former US Ambassador to Mexico Roberta Jacobsen accused AMLO of “goading Washington, whether by inviting leaders of Cuba or Venezuela, making comments on the Statue of Liberty or on our human rights situation.” The thorniest issue remains, of course, the Russia-Ukraine conflict. “It is frustrating that Mexico does not pronounce itself in favor of [Ukrainian] sovereignty,” said the former US Ambassador.
The political, economic and intellectual elite on both sides of the Rio Grande are now up in arms about the AMLO administration’s plans to shake up Mexico’s National Electoral Institute (INE), which includes slashing the institute’s budget by 80%. Both David Frum, who purportedly coined the expression “Axis of Evil”, and Anne Applebaum, whose Polish husband famously thanked the US on Twitter for sabotaging the Nordstream pipelines before quickly deleting the tweet, penned pieces warning of the grave threat posed to democracy by AMLO’s “plan B” proposals.
Frum accused AMLO of “scheming to end the country’s quarter-century commitment to multiparty liberal democracy”:
He is subverting the institutions that have upheld Mexico’s democratic achievement—above all, the country’s admired and independent elections system. On López Obrador’s present trajectory, the Mexican federal elections scheduled for the summer of 2024 may be less than free and far from fair.
Yet as INE itself reported this week, most Mexicans support the main reforms proposed by AMLO. Ninety-three percent of respondents to an INE survey said they support plans to reduce the amount of public funds funnelled to political parties; 87% endorse reducing the number of deputies and senates at the federal level; 78% agree that electoral advisers and magistrates should be elected by direct vote; 74% agree with cuts to public funding of INE.
The survey seems to show that public sentiment is far removed from the postures of the opposition party leaders, as an article in El País notes. And that is perhaps no surprise given INE’s excessive spending, particularly on executive perks, as well as its long history of looking the other way as electoral crimes are committed, reports Hackbarth:
In his 2012 campaign for president, Enrique Peña Nieto of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) spent some thirteen times the legal campaign spending limit, according to a congressional analysis, including cash-for-favors money from the Brazilian construction firm Odebrecht. In Operation Safiro, PRI governors from seven states diverted some Mex$650 million (US$35.8 million) into their party’s 2016 electoral campaigns.
In the 2018 presidential campaign, a cabal of businesspeople and intellectuals illegally spent millions in online campaigns out of an operations center in what became known as Operation Berlin, for the Mexico City street where the center was named. In the recently concluded trial of Genaro García Luna (the former secretary of public security in the administration of Felipe Calderón who was found guilty in US federal court of colluding with the Sinaloa cartel), a former finance minister for the state of Coahuila testified to diverting millions from state coffers into campaigns and the purchase of favorable media coverage, including the triangulation of funds for García Luna himself. In all these cases — and many more — the INE, together with the rest of Mexico’s electoral machinery, saw no evil, heard no evil, or applied slaps on the wrist that did nothing to undo the underlying crimes.
AMLO’s proposed “Plan B” could end up being blocked by Mexico’s Supreme Court anyway. In the meantime, tensions between US and Mexican lawmakers continue to rise. Ironically, this is all happening as trade between the US and Mexico also hits record highs — testament to just how symbiotically dependent the two countries have become.