Drug War No More
Fernando Brito
A Mexican soldier destroying opium poppies in Navalato, Sinaloa State.
By IOAN GRILLO
Published: November 27, 2013
After covering drug trafficking and violence in Latin America since
2001, I look through endless photos and videos and ask myself what would
be its single most iconic image — one that people could look at in a
hundred years and understand.
A victim of drug violence, which has taken 60,000 lives in Mexico in six years.
Is there a lone picture from the past 13 years that can illustrate
60,000 drug war deaths in Mexico in six years, and tens of thousands
more in Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia and Brazil? Is there an image that
can sum up the complex web that links drug consumption in places like
my hometown in England to coca growing in the Andes?
I look at pictures of soldiers burning coca crops and marijuana leaves,
which evoke the war on drugs in its most fundamental expression:
uniformed troops triumphantly destroying the declared enemy (a plant). I
remember the mountain of cash in a Mexico City mansion from the world’s
biggest-ever drug cash bust, $207 million, showing it’s all about the
money. And I go through images of mothers weeping over the corpses of
their sons and daughters, shot and killed in the crossfire between
soldiers and drug cartel assassins, a scene repeated on the streets of
Ciudad Juárez, Acapulco, Tegucigalpa, Medellín. Perhaps these last
images best illustrate the tragedy. The pain of humans losing loved ones
to violence stands out beyond all else.
But the search poses a more rudimentary question. Will people a hundred
years from now look back at Latin America’s drug wars as an archaic
conflict, now solved? Or will they be suffering from the same cycle of
massive drug markets in the United States and Europe and brutal cartel
violence south of the Rio Grande?
As we enter 2014, we are in the midst of a fundamental shift in thinking
on drug policy across the Americas. It’s the biggest change in
direction since the region started down the road to prohibition with the
Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of 1914. That U.S. law kickstarted the Latin
American drug trade in the form of traffickers smuggling opium poppies
north from Mexico’s Sierra Madre.
As the American drug market grew through the hippie Summer of Love and
the cocaine disco generation, the U.S. war on drugs became more intense,
as did the pressure on Latin American governments to fight supply.
Subsequent generations of cartels became ever more violent; we went from
talking about a war on drugs to drug wars, culminating in Mexico’s
bloodbath, which is perhaps the most costly drug war in world history.
But the discussions on the issue are shifting course at breakneck speed.
For decades, any talk of drug legalization was viewed by politicians
across the hemisphere as a toxic vote-loser, pooh-poohed by pundits as a
nonstarter. Now, active or former presidents of Uruguay, Brazil,
Argentina, Bolivia, Guatemala, Colombia and Mexico are all calling for a
rethink of prohibitionist policies.
The 2012 ballots in Washington State and Colorado, which became the
first places in the world to legalize marijuana for recreational use,
left seismic fault lines, as did the White House call to recognize that
choice. Uruguay’s 2013 congressional vote to legalize marijuana in an
entire country confirmed the snowball effect. Several countries,
including Mexico and Colombia, have also decriminalized possession of
small quantities of hard drugs — a policy that Washington used to
oppose loudly but on which it now is largely silent.
While it’s impossible to deny the change in conversation, Latin America
still has a formidable path ahead if it wants to escape the cycle of
violence. Though the White House voices little enthusiasm for its war on
drugs abroad, it continues to underwrite military-led eradication
programs and clampdowns. Low-intensity wars simmer on in
marijuana-growing mountains in Mexico, Central American city centers and
coca-growing Colombian valleys. And cartels financed by drugs have
diversified to a horrific portfolio of crimes, including kidnapping and
extortion.
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