"Business is Booming" - Wall Street's Role in Narco-trafficking
by Mike Whitney
Imagine
what your reaction would be if the Mexican government agreed to pay
Barack Obama $1.4 billion to deploy US troops and armored vehicles to
New York, Los Angeles and Chicago to conduct military operations, set up
check points, and engage in fire-fights that end up killing 35,000 US
civilians on the streets of American cities.
If the Mexican government treated the United
States like this, would you consider them a friend or an enemy? But--the thing is--this is exactly how the US is treating Mexico, and it's been going on since 2006.
America's Mexican policy--The Merida
Initiative--is a real nightmare. It's undermined Mexican sovereignty,
corrupted the political system, and militarized the country. It's also
resulted in the violent deaths of thousands of mostly poor civilians.
But Washington doesn't give a hoot about "collateral damage" as long as
it can sell more weaponry, strengthen its free-trade regime, and sluice
more drug profits into its big banks. Then everything is just Jim-dandy.
There's no point in dignifying this butchery by
calling it a "War on Drugs"? That's nonsense. What we're seeing is a
giant powergrab by big business, big finance and the US Intel services.
Obama is merely doing their bidding, which is why--not
surprisingly--things have gotten a lot worse under his administration.
Obama has not only stepped up the funding for Plan Mexico (aka--Merida)
but also deployed more US agents to work undercover while US drones
carry out surveillance duty. Get the picture? This isn't some little
drug bust; it's another chapter in America's War on Civilization.
Here's an excerpt from an article in Counterpunch by Laura Carlsen that gives a little background:
"The drug war has become the major vehicle of
militarization in Latin America. It's a vehicle funded and driven by the
U.S. government and fueled by a combination of false morals, hypocrisy
and a lot of cold, hard fear. The so called "war on drugs" is really a
war on people, especially youth, women, indigenous peoples and
dissidents. The drug war has become the main way for the Pentagon to
occupy and control countries at the expense of whole societies and many,
many lives.
Militarization in the name of the drug war is
happening more quickly and more thoroughly than most of us probably
anticipated under the Obama administration. The agreement to establish
bases in Colombia, later suspended, sent out one of the first signals of
the strategy. And we've seen the indefinite extension of the Merida
Initiative in Mexico and Central America, and even, sadly, war boats
sent to Costa Rica, a nation with a history of peace and no army......
The Merida Initiative funds U.S. interests to
train security forces, provide intelligence and war technology, give
advice on reforming the justice and penal systems and promoting human
rights–all in Mexico. (The Drug War Can't Be Improved, It Can Only be
Ended, Laura Carlsen, Counterpunch)
If it looks like Obama is doing his best to turn
Mexico into a military dictatorship, it's because he is. Plan Mexico is
a sham that conceals the administration's real motives, which is to
make sure that the lavish profits from the drug trade end up in the
right people's pockets. That's what this is all about, big money. And
that's why the death toll has soared while the Mexican government's
credibility has hit it's lowest ebb in decades. US policy has turned
large swaths of the country into killing fields and it's only getting
worse.
Check out this interview with Charles Bowden who
describes what life is like for the people who live at Ground Zero in
the drug war; Juarez, Mexico:
"This is in a city where people live in
cardboard boxes sometimes. Ten thousand businesses have given up and
closed in the last year. Thirty to sixty thousand people from Juárez,
mainly the rich, have moved across the river to El Paso for safety,
including the mayor of Juárez, who likes to bunk in El Paso. And the
publisher of the newspaper there lives in El Paso. Somewhere between
100,000 and 400,000 people simply left the city. A lot of the problem is
economic, not simply violence. At least 100,000 jobs in the border
factories have vanished during this recession because of the competition
from Asia. There’s 500 to 900 gangs there, estimates vary.
So what you have is about 10,000 federal troops
and federal police agents all marauding. You have a city where no one
goes out at night; where small businesses all pay extortion; where
20,000 cars were officially stolen last year; where 2,600-plus people
were officially murdered last year; where nobody keeps track of the
people who have been kidnapped and never come back; where nobody counts
the people buried in secret burying grounds, and they, in an unseemly
way, claw out of the earth from time to time. You’ve got a disaster. And
you have a million people, too poor to leave, imprisoned in it. That’s
the city."(Charles Bowden, Democracy Now)
This isn't about drugs; it's about a crackpot
foreign policy that supports proxy-armies to impose order through
police-state repression and militarization. It's about expanding US
power and beefing up profits on Wall Street.
Here's more background from author Lawrence M. Vance at the The Future of Freedom Foundation:
"An undisclosed number of U.S. law-enforcement
agents work in Mexico... The DEA has more than 60 agents in Mexico.
There are in addition 40 Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, 20
Marshal Service deputies, and 18 Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives agents, plus agents from the FBI, Citizen and Immigration
Service, Customs and Border Protection, Secret Service, Coast Guard, and
Transportation Safety Agency. The State Department also maintains a
Narcotics Affairs Section. The United States has also provided
helicopters, drug sniffing dogs, and polygraph units to screen
law-enforcement applicants.
U.S. drones spy on cartel hideouts, and U.S.
tracking beacons pinpoint suspect’s cars and phones. U.S. agents track
beacons, trace cell-phone calls, read e-mails, study behavioral patterns
of border incursions, follow smuggling routes, and process data about
drug dealers, money launderers, and cartel bosses. According to a former
Mexican anti-drug prosecutor, U.S. agents are not restricted from
eavesdropping on anyone in Mexico by U.S. laws that require judicial
authority as long as they are not on U.S. territory and not bugging
American citizens. ("Why Is the U.S. Fighting Mexico's Drug War?"
Laurence M. Vance, The Future of Freedom Foundation)
http://www.fff.org/comment/com1105q.asp
Good God, the place is crawling with US Intel
agents. This isn't foreign policy; it's another US occupation. And,
guess who's raking in the big cashola on this sordid little scam?
Wall Street. That's right, the big banks are
getting their cut just like they always do. Take a look at this excerpt
from an article by James Petras titled "How Drug Profits saved
Capitalism" at Global Research. It's a great summary of the objectives
that are shaping the policy:
"While the Pentagon arms the Mexican government
and the US Drug Enforcement Agency enforces the “military solution”,
the biggest US banks receive, launder and transfer hundreds of billions
of dollars to the drug lords’ accounts, who then buy modern arms, pay
private armies of assassins and corrupt untold numbers of political and
law enforcement officials on both sides of the border....
Drug profits, in the most basic sense, are
secured through the ability of the cartels to launder and transfer
billions of dollars through the US banking system. The scale and scope
of the US banking-drug cartel alliance surpasses any other economic
activity of the US private banking system. According to US Justice
Department records, one bank alone, Wachovia Bank (now owned by Wells
Fargo), laundered $378.3 billion dollars between May 1, 2004 and May 31,
2007 (The Guardian, May 11, 2011). Every major bank in the US has
served as an active financial partner of the murderous drug cartels...
The Drug Traffickers, the Banks and the White House
If the major US banks are the financial engines
which allow the billion dollar drug empires to operate, the White House,
the US Congress and the law enforcement agencies are the basic
protectors of these banks.....Laundering drug money is one of the most
lucrative sources of profit for Wall Street; the banks charge hefty
commissions on the transfer of drug profits, which they then lend to
borrowing institutions at interest rates far above what – if any – they
pay to drug trafficker depositors. Awash in sanitized drug profits,
these US titans of the finance world can easily buy their own elected
officials to perpetuate the system.
("How Drug Profits saved Capitalism" , James Petras, Global Research)
Repeat: "Every major bank in the US has served as
an active financial partner of the murderous drug cartels..."
The War on Drugs is a fraud. This isn't about
interdiction; it's about control. Washington provides the muscle so the
banks can rake in the big doe. One hand washes the other, just like the
Mafia.