Drug War Position Paper
Drug War Position Paper
Drug War Position Paper
Michael Basmajian
American Foreign Policy
Professor Laura Reed
TA: Kate Mooney
4/6/11
The Mexican Drug War is a violent conflict between rival drug cartels that has spurred
atrocity and is of major concern to the United States. In December of 2006, Mexican president
Felipe Calderón launched a military offensive against the drug gangs that dominate the streets.
Since then, violence and drug trafficking have increased and penetrated the border, terrorizing
our own people. The influence of these Mexican drug cartels has been rising, and their continued
operations threaten the Mexican state. The United States cannot allow for the drug cartels to
continue their increasingly powerful and violent operations. Combating the drug cartels with
violence has only begat more violence. Providing funds to Mexico has not worked, and sending
ground troops into Mexico would be a mistake. Because the vast majority of drug cartel profit is
generated through the trafficking of cannabis (better known as marijuana), the best course of
action for the United States to take is to legalize cannabis and bring the business into a legitimate
Due to its geographic location, illegal drug trafficking has long been a problem for the
state of Mexico. The first drug cartel of Mexico was a man named Miguel Gallardo who was
known as “The Godfather.” In the 1980s, Gallardo controlled all of the major trafficking across
the border of Mexico and the United States. In 1987, he split up his operations to make them
more efficient and secure. After Gallardo was arrested in 1989, the newly independent cartels
The first real retaliation by the Mexican government against the drug cartels was the
December 2006 military offensive. This effectively began the Mexican Drug War. President
Calderón mobilized thousands of troops to occupy territories controlled by the cartels. Their
mission was, and still is, to actively pursue, incarcerate, and kill the central leadership that runs
the drug rings. Despite United States partnership with Mexico to provide aid and assistance, this
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offensive has been largely ineffective. The war has been reciprocated by the drug cartels and
violence has been increasing and spreading. In total, there have been 34,000 people, mostly
civilians including women and children, killed in the past five years and according to Mexican
government figures, last year was the bloodiest so far, with 15,273 drug-related killings (Hillary
Clinton Backs Mexico Drug War). These troubling numbers illustrate the magnitude of the
violence in Mexico, which has been steadily increasing and has spilled over the border and
Despite government efforts, the power of the drug cartels in Mexico permeates Mexican
society. The drug cartels openly recruit members with the promise of good wages and protection
and use fear to hinder the influence of their opposition (Ellingwood, Wilkinson). Politicians have
been assassinated and journalists often do not report on the increasing drug related crime due to
threats (Johnson). Since the Drug War was waged in 2006, 66 journalists have been murdered
between and another 12 have gone missing (Goodman). One Mexican reporter commented, “We
just don't cover the violence anymore. It's too dangerous for us” (Goodman). The fear that
journalists, politicians, and regular citizens are forced to live in is a horrible threat to democracy
and has severely weakened the Mexican state. Mexico has further been weakened by a faltering
economy, directly stemming from the drug cartels. The violence has severely damaged Mexico’s
once blossoming tourism industry as the cartels pose an increasing threat to civilians which has
grown significantly with the drug cartels’ acquisition of advanced weaponry. While the drug
cartels get many of their low caliber weapons from the United States, they receive heavy artillery
such as anti-tank missiles, armor piercing ammunition, high-powered automatic weapons, and
grenade launchers from Central America and overseas (Ellingwood, Wilkinson). Their massive
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profits from the drug trade have allowed them to overcome the monopoly of violence that the
Corruption has permeated the Mexican public sector and is a putting the security of the
state in jeopardy. President Calderón has proposed a police reform plan to eliminate 2,000 local
police departments due widespread corruption in relation to the drug cartels. In addition,
politicians and other Mexican officials have been arrested on charges of corruption (Ellingwood,
Wilkinson). Unfortunately for the state of Mexico, the military is just as corrupt. At least five
Mexican generals, one of which was the country's top anti-drug official, have been imprisoned
financed criminal organization that works in direct correspondence with the drug cartels.
While the Mexican drug cartels traffic many drugs, cannabis is their primary product of
transport into the United States. The profits of the drug cartels are largely because of the United
States citizen’s appetite for cannabis (and other drugs to a much lesser extent). It is essential in
the understanding of the Mexican Drug War to understand the American Drug War, especially
Cannabis has been used legally for centuries. The first American law regarding cannabis
(hemp) required every farmer to grow it due to its versatile usability (The Union). The reason
that cannabis was outlawed in the United States was based on corporate greed and xenophobia.
William Randolf Hearst, who owned a large chain of newspapers, wanted to protect the timber
industry which he was heavily invested in. Hemp was a threat to the timber industry, so he
spread fear and racism towards minorities through his newspapers to make people cannabis and
associate is with violence (Guither). This “reefer madness” led to the 1937 Marijuana Tax Stamp
Act that federally outlawed cannabis. Then, in 1972, President Nixon ignored a comprehensive
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scientific report which concluded that cannabis is not a harm to public safety and recommended
cannabis to be decriminalized, and began the War on Drugs (Moore). Although several states
have legalized medical marijuana or decriminalized small amounts, cannabis remains federally
criminalized despite the overwhelming body of evidence that cannabis poses little harm to
society.
The stakes for the United States in regards to the Mexican Drug War are dangerously
high. The United States-Mexico border is of great geopolitical significance. Mexico is one of two
states that share a border with the United States. The length of the border is nearly 2,000 miles
(3,169 km), and is the most frequently crossed international border in the world. Despite the high
level of enforcement and patrol along the border, there is a huge amount of land that is
The violence and influence of the Mexican drug cartels has spread beyond the Mexican
border and has spilled into United States territory. Currently, the United States Justice
Department considers the Mexican drug cartels as the greatest organized crime threat to the
United States (Napolitano). In Tucson, Arizona, three quarters of home invasions investigated by
the police were linked to drug trafficking and violent incidents even farther from the border in
Georgia and Alabama have been linked to the Mexican drug cartels (Jentleson, 385). The
Mexican drug cartels are currently operating and trafficking drugs in over 230 American cities,
endangering the security of our citizens (Meyers). Our own citizens, most of which were simply
caught in the crossfire, have been killed by this conflict. The Mexican drug cartels are as much
The proximity of Mexico to the United States, by default, creates investment for a safe
and secure Mexican state that will not threaten the security of the United States. Unfortunately,
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the drug cartels have become more powerful than the Mexican government in many cities across
Mexico. Some experts here in the United States have even gone as far as to call some Mexican
cities such as Ciudad Juárez, “failed cities” (Baxter). This poses a major threat for the national
security of the United States. When a state’s major cities are becoming “failed cities,” it is of
legitimate concern to United States that if there is not a fundamental change in the current
discourse, Mexico is on the path to becoming a failed state. With the United States engaged in a
global war on terror, and with the United States-Mexican border already vulnerable, having a
failed state for a neighbor is extremely dangerous and threatens our national security.
In addressing policies that the United States should implement, there are essentially three
courses of action to consider. The first course of action is to continue funding the Mexican
government’s effort to combat the drug cartels militarily and up border security. The second
option is to deploy ground troops into strategic locations of Mexico where drug cartel operations
are organized and implemented. The third, and best course of action, is to fully legalize cannabis,
terminating illegal demand for the drug, therefore significantly defunding the cartels and
The first policy option is to essentially continue the current discourse by continuing to
redirect funds to Mexico to combat illegal drug smuggling and attempting to strengthen border
security. In March of 2009, President Barack Obama outlined plans to deploy more than 500
federal agents to the border and redirect $200 million to combat smuggling of illegal drugs,
money and weapons, then in May of 2010, Obama ordered 1,200 National Guard troops to help
boost security along the United States-Mexico border (Werner, Billeaud). This option is fairly
intuitive and straightforward, yet has yielded little to no results. The drug cartels continue to
succeed by using their profits from cannabis and other drugs to purchase weapons and evade
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detainment across the border. Increasing aid to Mexico to combat the drug cartels will be a waste
of United States’ funds. The drug cartels currently bring in $23 billion every year, and increased
funding has not lessened their profit margin (Roig-Franzia). With widespread corruption in the
Mexican public sector, it is likely that much of the aid is lost or misused. While deployment of
more troops to the border will help to curb some of the smuggling, because of the massive size of
the border, any deployment of troops short of a full military operation will be more of a publicity
act against the cartels, rather than a serious effort to stop their criminal trafficking.
The second policy option for the United States to combat the Mexican drug cartels is the
deployment of ground troops into Mexican territory to take out the cartels by force. This option
would involve sending troops into “failed cities” such as Ciudad Juárez. While this option may
yield results, it is an extremely dangerous option to consider. The United States is currently
involved in heavy military operations in Afghanistan, Iraq, and now Libya. Adding another war
front to the United States’ foreign policy would be a serious mistake. Not only would it be
monetarily costly, it would wear our military thin, resulting in less overall cohesion of forces and
success of military operations. It is always best to employ non-military policy options before
resulting to force. We have already seen the deadly effects of combating the drug cartels with
force. Calderón’s 2006 military offensive has failed to show any progress in the fight against the
drug cartels and has only resulted in thousands of civilian casualties. The United States cannot
afford to risk the deadly results that would come from the deployment of troops into Mexico.
With the nation already in serious debt and facing many challenges overseas, it is in the best
national interest of the United States to keep our military forces focused on our objectives in the
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The best policy option for the United States to take is to remove the primary source of
profit for the Mexican drug cartels from the underground market by legalizing, taxing, and
regulating cannabis for adults. While the drug cartels do profit from trafficking drugs besides
cannabis such as cocaine and methamphetamine, cannabis is their primary source of profit.
While the exact percentage of their profits that are derived from cannabis is difficult to calculate,
the United States Office of National Drug Control Police estimates that around 60% of the
cartel’s income is made through sale of cannabis in the United States (ONDCP). Other sources
such as Arizona's Attorney General Terry Goddard estimate that cannabis accounts for up to 70%
of the drug cartels’ profits (Edwards, Webster). Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said recently in
a Mexican news interview that the United States cannot legalize drugs as a means of fighting the
drug cartels because “there is just too much money in it” (Tencer). Clinton’s response illustrates
the intellectual bankruptcy of prohibition. The reason that there is so much profit from
trafficking illegal drugs is the fact that they are illegal. The United States should take this money
out of the hands of criminals. Legalizing and regulating cannabis would eliminate the demand for
the drug because cannabis consumers in the United States would be able to access it from a safe,
legitimate source. Introducing cannabis into the free market would diminish the superficially
inflated price that prohibition has generated. The cartels would not be able to compete with the
free market because the market would determine the price and regulations would be able to
ensure the quality of the product. This loss in profits would be devastating for the drug cartels.
Without the enormous source of revenue that they acquire from cannabis, they will be unable to
continue to purchase heavy weaponry and become significantly weak to the possible point of
failure.
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It is said that those who fail to learn from history are destined to repeat it. Lessons from
the Prohibition of alcohol in the United States from 1919 to 1933 can be applied to the current
develop. Alcohol prices skyrocketed because of the risk that the mafia took for production and
distribution. Mobsters such as the notorious Al Capone took control of the industry and
transformed it into a violent criminal enterprise. Only after Prohibition was repealed in 1933 was
Al Capone’s criminal organization was forced out of business. Capone went on the run and was
captured and brought to justice. The United States must learn from this era in history. The
prohibition of cannabis has been just as harmful as the prohibition of alcohol, if not more so.
Bringing cannabis into the legitimate market will not only defund the drug cartels to near the
point of collapse, it could potentially bring some of the largest Mexican drug cartels to justice.
The prohibition of cannabis has been a complete failure. Every year, the United States
spends around $40 billion dollars trying to eliminate the supply of drugs, and every year the
United States arrests 1.5 million of its citizens for drug possession, incarcerating 500,000 of
them (Economist). Despite these extraordinary efforts to diminish both the supply and demand of
illegal drugs, the United States has failed to lessen usage rates. There is little to no correlation
between the severity of drug laws and the incidence of drug use (Economist). The United States
cannot continue to treat cannabis consumers and otherwise law abiding citizens as criminals.
Cannabis has been a part of American culture, and indeed the culture of humans in general for a
long time, and just as it was ignorant to believe that criminalizing alcohol would make it
disappear, it is ignorant to believe that cannabis will disappear any time soon. It is time to admit
that the prohibition of cannabis is a mistake, and implement a policy of legalization, taxation,
and regulation.
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While policy options such as combating the Mexican drug cartels militarily are
excessively costly, legalizing cannabis would not cost the United States government a dime. In
fact, such policy will generate billions of dollars in revenue to the state. In addition to raising
billions of dollars in tax revenue, legalizing and regulating cannabis will open an entire new
sector of jobs. Perhaps most importantly, the legalization of cannabis will open up the industry of
industrial hemp to the United States. Allowing the hemp industry to thrive will produce over
25,000 types of products that range from paper to fuel to textiles to medicine to food (Hemp
Facts). In this time of economic hardship, the United States needs to raise new sources of
revenue and open new job sectors. Furthermore, legalizing cannabis will help reprioritize our law
enforcement towards violent crime, and free up space in our courts and prison systems. The
For some, cannabis is still a taboo issue, and many are refuse to acknowledge legalization
as a viable option. A common argument against legalizing marijuana to combat the Mexican
drug cartels is that the cartels would simply focus more on hard drugs and continue to thrive.
This would not be the case because no other illegal substance has the demand that cannabis does
in the United States. Cannabis is the number one cash crop of the United States, valued at over
$35.8 billion, almost $13 billion above corn (Venkataraman). The usage rates of hard drugs such
as cocaine and methamphetamines are not even close to that of cannabis. Another concern is that
the drug cartels will continue to traffic cannabis regardless of legalization. This would also not
be the case because the cartels would not be able to compete with the free market. There is no
underground demand for alcohol, tobacco, or any other legal substance, and there would not be
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Some argue that the negative health effects and societal implications of legalizing
cannabis will outweigh any potential effects that the policy will have on the Mexican Drug War.
While cannabis is a Schedule I drug under federal law, the drug is actually quite safe. In addition
to studies that show that cannabis is not a harm to public safety, there are many confirmed
medical uses and many more to be discovered. Cannabis is not physically addictive, and is has
no lethal dosage; there are no known deaths directly attributed to cannabis (Erowid). Although
cannabis has some negative effects associated with the act of smoking, it is much safer than legal
substances such as alcohol and tobacco. Many skeptics of legalization, especially parents, are
concerned with the implication on youth. However, regulation of cannabis will make it more
difficult for youth to obtain. Teenagers have consistently reported that cannabis is much easier to
obtain than alcohol or cigarettes (Califano). Controlling the market for only adults will curtail
underage use of the substance. While there may initially be a small rise in overall usage of the
drug, the usage level will dip back down, and the regulation of cannabis will not have a harmful
effect on society. Following the implementation of this policy, the United States should invest in
factual drug education, free from fear tactics and propaganda, to help citizens make informed
The legalization, taxation, and regulation of cannabis in the United States is the best
policy option to defeat the drug cartels and end the Mexican Drug War. While it is likely that
legalizing cannabis will not fully destroy the drug cartels, it will weaken them to the point where
their influence will not be as prevalent in Mexican society, and Mexican military and police
force will be far more able to properly dismantle their criminal enterprises. More and more
individuals are waking up to the reality that the prohibition of cannabis has been a failure on all
fronts. Even former Mexican President Vicente Fox, amongst a series of former Latin American
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Presidents, has come out in favor of legalization (Grillo). The only way to stop the expanding
destructive influence of the drug cartels is to eliminate cannabis, their primary source of funding,
from the underground market. The United States cannot allow for the casualties of this conflict to
continue rising, and let Mexico become a failed state. Legalizing, taxing, and regulating cannabis
will succeed in vastly diminishing the control that the drug cartels have over the Mexican state,
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Works Cited:
“Hillary Clinton backs Mexico drug war” BBC News. January 24, 2011.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-12264674
Ellingwood, Ken; Wilkinson, Tracy. “Mexico Under Seige” Los Angeles Times. March 15,
2009.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-arms-race15-
2009mar15,0,229992.story
Johnson, Gary. “Legalize Marijuana to Stop the Drug Cartels” Huffington Post. August 26, 2010.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gary-johnson/legalize-marijuana-to-sto_b_696430.html
Goodman, Sandy. “Mexico Drug War a Lost Cause” Huffington Post. March 10, 2011.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gary-johnson/legalize-marijuana-to-sto_b_696430.html
Moore, George. “Marijuana and Social Policy” Schaffer Library of Drug Policy.
http://druglibrary.net/schaffer/Library/studies/nc/ncrec.htm
Napolitano, Janet. “Testimony of Secretary Janet Napolitano before Senate Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs Committee, Southern Border Violence: Homeland Security Threats,
Vulnerabilities, and Responsibilities” United States Department of Homeland Security. March
25, 2009.
http://www.dhs.gov/ynews/testimony/testimony_1237993537881.shtm
Jentleson, Bruce. “Mexico” American Foreign Policy. New York, London: W.W. Norton &
Company, Inc. 2010.
Meyers, Dev. “Mexican Cartels Operate in 230 American Cities” Examiner. March 23 2010.
http://www.examiner.com/cannabis-revolution-in-national/mexican-cartels-operate-230-
american-cities
Baxter, Samuel. “Mexico’s Drug Cartel War” The Real Truth. February 10, 2009.
http://www.realtruth.org/articles/090203-005-americas.html
Werner, Erica; Billeaud, Jacques. “Troops to the Mexican border” Boston.com May 25, 2010.
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http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2010/05/25/obama_set_to_send_1200_t
roops_to_us_mexico_border/
Roig-Franzia, Manuel. “Mexican Drug Cartels Move North” The Washington Post. September
20, 2007.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/19/AR2007091902442.html
“ONDCP Statement on Mexican Drug Trafficking Organization Profits from Marijuana” Office
of National Drug Control Policy. September 16, 2010.
http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov/news/press10/mjrevenue.pdf
Edwards, David; Webster, Stephen. “Arizona AG: Marijuana Legalization Could Curb Mexican
Drug Cartel Warfare” The Raw Story. February 27, 2009.
http://rawstory.com/news/2008/Arizona_AG_Marijuana_legalization_possible_way_0227.html
Tencer, Daniel. “Why can’t the US legalize drugs?” The Raw Story. February 7, 2011.
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/02/07/clinton-legalize-drugs-too-much-money/
Venkataraman, Nitya. “Marijuana Called Top U.S. Cash Crop” ABC News. December 18, 2006.
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/story?id=2735017&page=1
“10 Things Every Parent, Teenager & Teacher Should Know about Marijuana” Erowid.
December 12, 1990.
http://www.erowid.org/plants/cannabis/cannabis_flyer1.shtml
Grillo, Ioan. “Mexico's Ex-President Vicente Fox: Legalize Drugs” Time. January 19, 2011.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2040882,00.html
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