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28 Feb 2012 22:48 - 28 Feb 2012 23:06 #77408
by chairman
Some regional leaders say it could bring peace and much-needed tax revenue, but both they and supporters of the drug war are missing the real problem.
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Last edit: 28 Feb 2012 23:06 by
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28 Feb 2012 22:52 #77409
by chairman
Last week, the president of Guatemala joined former and current presidents of Colombia and Mexico in expressing interest in considering the regional legalization of the drug trade. The U.S. State Department immediately expressed its disfavor, but the question is out in the open now. The issue of whether to legalize drugs -- and thus reject the U.S. model of "war" against drugs -- threatens to consume the next Summit of the Americas, an April meeting of Western Hemisphere Heads of State in Colombia.
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28 Feb 2012 22:57 #77413
by chairman
Since Mexico declared its own war against drugs and drug cartels in 2006, over 50,000 civilians, police, journalists, judges, and soldiers have died. Several cartel kingpins have been arrested or killed, but organized crime is as potent as ever, and there's no indication of a significant drop in the volume of narcotics flowing into the United States. And the Mexican state is suffering mightily for its effort. Despite years of training and hundreds of millions of dollars in police and military modernization and professionalization, there are still episodes like Tuesday's jail break in Nuevo Laredo, where prison officials appear to have helped Zetas cartel gunmen kill 44 inmates -- all members of a rival cartel -- and help 30 Zetas escape. It's depressing
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28 Feb 2012 23:02 #77418
by chairman
In Guatemala, the drug war looks even worse. The Guatemalan national budget for public security is $420 million and its military budget is $160 million. The value of the narcotics smuggled through Guatemala each year is in the range of $40 to 50 billion -- about equal to the national GDP -- and that does not include the money made from smuggling weapons, people, and other contraband. In just three years, it appears that the Sinaloa and the Zetas Mexican cartels have come to control as much as 40 percent of the country's territory. They grow poppy, process cocaine and methamphetamines, and run training camps for their new recruits, who include members of Guatemala's elite special forces unit.
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28 Feb 2012 23:05 #77419
by chairman
- Ralph Espach directs the Latin American Affairs Program at CNA, a public policy research organization in Alexandria, Virginia.
theatlantic.com
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28 Feb 2012 23:07 #77420
by chairman
Guatemala and other Central American states are understandable worried their drug wars will come to resemble Mexico's, but with far fewer national resources to support the fight, much weaker police and military forces, and far less help from the United States. In 2011, the U.S. gave $180 million to Mexico for military and police assistance, but only $16 million to Guatemala and around $6 million each to Honduras and El Salvador.
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28 Feb 2012 23:09 #77422
by chairman
So, naturally, the option of legalizing the drug trade, and thus avoiding a further drug war, sounds appealing. Though the Guatemalan government hasn't presented any specific idea or plan, the conventional interpretation would be to legalize personal drug consumption as well as small batch sales and to tax them; to focus on drug use prevention and treatment, instead of criminalizing addicts; and then to focus security efforts against organized crime and violence, instead of constantly watching for, chasing, and interdicting drug shipments.
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28 Feb 2012 23:10 #77423
by Nargis
its already legal - for the CIA and FBI to run their fronts and make money to fuel arms deals and wars....
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28 Feb 2012 23:32 #77433
by mapoui
legalising drugs takes out a pillar on which american domination of the region and of the world rests.
they will loose a whole lot man. they will fight tooth and nail to keep legalisation off the books. they will loose influence and power to diminate governments.
thei will also loose a painstakingly constructed pillar of word govenment throuh the UN....that has established and police international drug laws, deh have gotten most countries to sign onto
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Should Central America Legalize Drugs?
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