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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NC: Column: Don't Let Drug Policy Ruin Our Ties With Mexico
Title:US NC: Column: Don't Let Drug Policy Ruin Our Ties With Mexico
Published On:1999-12-09
Source:Charlotte Observer (NC)
Fetched On:2008-09-05 13:35:57
DON'T LET DRUG POLICY RUIN OUR TIES WITH MEXICO

If we're not careful, it could undercut prospects for the strong, mutually
supportive trade that has widened so dramatically and productively in the
last decade.

Drug trafficking, mass graves and border provocations are darkening
U.S.-Mexican relations on the very eve of a 21st century destined to test
whether the world's developed and developing countries can coexist - and
prosper - together.

Across the globe, there are few places where the contrasting societies meet
as close-up and in such significant numbers as San Diego-Tijuana and El
Paso- Ciudad Juarez - human settlements bisected by national borders. If
these communities can work together, maybe the larger worlds they represent
can too.

But what has the media focused on recently?

First, a series of minor but highly irritating incidents in or near Tijuana
- - Americans detained following auto crashes, or in one case a Marine who
blundered into Mexico with two weapons in his car trunk and was then
arrested and held for 13 days.

Then, near Ciudad Juarez, the chilling reports of 100 or more buried bodies
of victims of that area's ruthless drug cartel.

And then news stories about dramatic escalation of cocaine and marijuana
seizures along the border and Mexico's Pacific coast. Clear implication:
The Mexicans are doing little to stop a ruinous, rising flood of illegal
substances into the United States.

All this has provided incendiary fodder for border city talk show hosts
demonizing our partner Mexico as a dangerous place to visit, a haven for
mass murderers and the evil land responsible for drugs corrupting American
society.

But stop and think: There'd be little Mexican drug trade, fewer mafia
warlords and blood-curdling murders, if American citizens weren't buying
drugs in massive quantities.

The United States' ferocious "war on drugs" catches just 10 to 15 percent
of shipments. This "war" is a palpable failure.

And check its side effects. Criminalization of drug possession has driven
prices sky-high. Quick profits have tempted thousands of poor Americans
into illicit drug-selling. Drug prosecutions have put as many as 1 million
people in prisons. The drug war has placed many of our inner-city
neighborhoods on the roster of the most dangerous places on earth.

If we're not careful, this disastrous drug policy, breeding suspicion and
violence, used to justify severe, Cold War-like security checks at border
cross points, could start to undercut prospects for the strong, mutually
supportive trade ties widened so dramatically and productively in the last
decade.

What a terrible way to start a new, global century!

Relations are currently all the more strained by an upcoming Mexican
presidential election that's prompted some Mexican politicians to beat a
nationalist drum. Mexico City has withdrawn key officials - Consul General
Luis Herrera-Lasso in San Diego, for example - who had worked hard to ease
tensions and work out border incidents in a muted fashion.

With luck, the Mexican political shifts won't undermine the model of
bi-national citistate collaboration that emerged in San Diego-Tijuana in
the '90s. Both U.S. and Baja California border agencies were
professionalized as Herrera-Lasso and U.S. Attorney Alan Bersin in San
Diego created a law-abiding atmosphere contrasting sharply to near chaos at
crossing points early in the decade.

San Diego and Tijuana mayors, city managers and department heads began to
convene regularly. Today they have a 24-hour electronic emergency link and
coordinate on water plans, anti-pollution measures, library and arts
exchange programs, as well as police. All this is "real and live - not just
symbols," says San Diego Mayor Susan Golding.

The '90s also saw major progress on treatment of sewage flowing from
Tijuana into the United States. Close to 1,000 maquiladora manufacturing
plants, run by global corporations, now prosper in Tijuana, some using
University of California at San Diego research. Tijuana may be Mexico's
most prosperous city.

There's lots left to do, says Charles Nathanson, executive director of the
San Diego Dialogue group that's helped orchestrate constructive
across-the-border conversations.

In a very positive move, the California legislature just authorized $2.5
million to study the feasibility of a joint U.S.-Mexico aqueduct to pump
sorely needed Colorado River water from the Imperial and Mexicali Valleys
to the coast.

On the energy front, U.S. and Mexican firms have forged a partnership to
build a natural gas line to a Rosarito power plant, which now burns a
terribly polluting oil sludge.

It's time for a "quiet compact," says Nathanson - the U.S. side providing
low-interest loans and technical assistance to build critical missing
infrastructure on the Mexican side. Mexico would agree to give its
municipalities along the border vital powers they now lack - including the
right to borrow money on the bond markets, with the fiscal discipline that
would bring.

We're joined at the hip with Mexico. Together, we can create a powerfully
positive global model.
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