Reason Magazine
The 5 Dumbest Things the Obama Administration Has Said About Mexico's Drug War
How the Obama administration talks to its neighbors about drugs.
Mike Riggs | April 18, 2012
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Despite campaign promises to scale back the war on drugs, Obama has been a hardliner since the first day of his administration. Nowhere is this more obvious than in the talking points the Obama administration has used to justify its proxy war with Mexico's drug traffickers, which has wreaked havoc on our southern neighbor. Unlike in the U.S., where Obama is careful to sound open-minded and compassionate about the effects of the drug war, when it comes to Mexico, the American position is defined by vulgarity, condescension, dishonesty, and nonchalance.
Read five of the worst, if not the five worst statements made by the Obama administration about Mexico's drug war below.
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Who said it: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State
Why she’s wrong: Dozens of news organizations cited Clinton’s (and Obama’s) claim that American guns are the weapons of choice in Mexico’s drug war, but that’s simply not true. “Many of the weapons are stolen from the Mexican military and police, often by deserters,” Jacob Sullum wrote in 2009. “Some are smuggled over the border from Guatemala; others come from China by way of Africa or Latin America. Russian gun traffickers do a booming business in Mexico.” Additionally, “the futile effort to stop Americans from consuming politically incorrect intoxicants is the real source of the violence in Mexico, since prohibition creates a market with artificially high prices and hands it over to criminals.”
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Who said it: Leon Panetta, director of the CIA
Why he's wrong: While the drug war in Mexico has been outrageously deadly, the highest publicly available estimate of drug war casualties during the presidency of Felipe Calderon, tallied by NGOs and journalists, is roughly 50,000. The Mexican government says even that number is too high. Either Panetta knows something the Mexican government doesn't know, or the director of America’s biggest intelligence agency mistated the number of people killed in a U.S.-backed war by a factor of three.
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Who said it: Joe Biden, vice president of the United States
Why he's wrong: A couple of reasons. The first is that the real “myths” associated with legalization, as demonstrated by Portugal, are the ones being spread by the White House and its agencies. Second, while the legalization debate may “always” occur in countries destabilized by drug war violence, it doesn’t occur only in those countries. The debate over prohibition is alive and well, for instance, in the United States, where violence is historically low. The president’s drug control strategy, heinous as it is, even admits that violence isn’t the only negative externality of the war on drugs. There’s also the effect on employment, education, and family stability.
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Who said it: William Brownsfield, assistant secretary, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, U.S. State Department
Why he's wrong: A world in which human beings can freely recreate in ways that do not harm their neighbors is not objectively disgusting or repulsive. Drug use dates back to antiquity and will likely accompany us to the end of time. It's arguably not worth shedding blood over.
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Who said it: Michele Leonhart, director of the Drug Enforcement Administration
Why she's wrong: In 2011, the Child Rights Network in Mexico estimated that nearly 1,000 children had been killed in drug-related violence between 2006, when Felipe Calderon ramped up the Mexican drug war, and 2010. In 2011, a drug-related casino bombing in Mexico killed 52 people, most of them elderly. So it's not just cartel fighters killing each other. But even if it were—calling them "animals" doesn't reflect well on Obama's "compassionate" drug policy.
Mike Riggs is an associate editor at Reason magazine.
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