Time to decriminalize marijuana.  CW

BORDER BLOODBATH
MEXICO: WHAT WE NEED TO DO
New York Post


Last updated: 3:51 am
March 27, 2009 
Posted: 2:40 am
March 27, 2009

WHILE Washington fo cused on terrorists half way around the world, a 
narco-terror crisis exploded -- with 8,000 dead in two years -- along our 
border with Mexico. 

Were we blindsided? Only because we closed our eyes on purpose. One 
administration passed the problem on to the next. And the next. 

Are we taking this crisis seriously at last? Let's hope. 

After her disastrous pilgrimage to Beijing, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton 
appears to have gotten a big diplomatic move right: On Wednesday, she 
acknowledged both the seriousness of Mexico's narco-insurgency and our 
complicity as a huge drug consumer and the major source of drug-cartel 
weaponry. 

Our top domestic problem is that this issue's been politicized by extremists on 
both the political left and right. So let's cut through the hot air and look at 
what's happened -- and what we need to do. 

How did it come to this bloodbath? The warning signs were there 15 years ago. 
In 1994, I did an on-the-ground drug-war analysis for the US Southern Command. 
Among the key conclusions: Mexico was headed for a crisis. 

The logic was simple. For five centuries, Latin America has suffered boom-bust 
commodity cycles -- in gold, silver, tin, beef, rubber, oil and, last but not 
least, cocaine. 

All booms lead the countries of origin to overproduce. The end market becomes 
saturated. Where does the surplus go? It's sold at discount rates in the 
transit countries -- which lack the infrastructure to deal with the sudden 
economic distortions and soaring corruption. 

It was obvious that Mexico would become a market-share battleground. It was 
also clear that cocaine's appeal would peak and other drugs would be 
introduced. (Welcome to the toxic world of meth.) 

The Clinton administration simply didn't care. Latin America was a backwater, 
and Mexico (a massive country vital to our security) was an afterthought. 
George W. Bush did come to office with a Latin-America agenda -- only to be 
consumed by 9/11. 

And here we are. Mexico's border cities are killing fields, the Mexican army's 
in the streets (and not always winning) -- and violence is spilling north of 
the border. 

Our bad? Thanks to political biliousness on the hard left and extreme right, 
weapons we sell kill Mexican cops and soldiers, while our own citizens go 
unprotected from ferocious criminals who enter our country illegally. 

What should we do? The medicine's bitter: 

* Decriminalize marijuana. I hate the idea. But marijuana doesn't kill and it's 
not an "inevitable gateway drug." We need to concentrate our resources on the 
killer drugs and the murderers who push them. Make hard-drug smuggling and 
vending crimes with mandatory life sentences. (I wish we could make them 
capital crimes.) 

* Create a serious paramilitary force to control our border: Expand, up-arm and 
legally empower our Border Patrol. Thanks to vile activists, Border Patrol 
agents have gone to prison for wounding drug criminals. We need to authorize 
deadly force and stop second-guessing those who defend us. 

The political left needs to stop protecting criminal aliens. Unfortunately, the 
Obama administration's ballyhooed shift of several hundred Immigration and 
Customs Enforcement agents to the border is a phony trick to appease 
pro-illegal-immigrant activists: It means far less domestic enforcement of 
immigration law. 

The political right needs to accept that, while firmly protecting the 
gun-owning rights of law-abiding citizens, we must crack down fiercely on the 
supply chain that puts automatic weapons in the claws of drug cartels. The 
Founding Fathers wanted to protect our rights of self-defense. They didn't 
intend to equip foreign thugs. 

* Enforce the laws we have. And tighten those laws as necessary. Immigration is 
a great strength for our country, but we have every legal and moral right to 
decide whom we welcome as future Americans. Illegal immigration and narco- 
terror are inextricably intertwined. 

What won't work? A wall -- at least along the eastern half of our border, from 
El Paso to Brownsville. As border expert Dave Danelo points out, we really have 
two borders. First, there's the grisly, out-of-control stretch from El Paso 
west to the Pacific. That's where walls do help. 

But a wall on the southern border of Texas would hand the Rio Grande River to 
Mexico. And law-abiding Hispanic families have lived on both sides of the river 
for centuries, visiting back and forth. They're not the problem. (Been there, 
seen how it works.) The problem is interloping narcos. 

We shouldn't penalize honest citizens just because Los Angeles or San Francisco 
protects gang-bangers from deportation. 

Bottom line? If we want to worsen the problem, keep politicizing it. To solve 
it, ignore the extremists: Empower our officials, punish criminals and 
concentrate on the drugs that kill -- not on busting aging-hippie potheads. 

And help Mexico every way we can. If President Felipe Calderon's brave efforts 
fail, the next president south of the border will be a tool of the 
narco-terrorists. 

Ralph Peters is Fox News' strategic analyst. His book "Looking for Trouble" 
describes his drug-war experiences.




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