He’s itching to do it
The Republicans in Congress are also very, very thirsty for a shooting war. Normally, they’d be agitating for something in the middle east, maybe China, maybe even Ukraine. But since Trump took over they have to pretend that they’re pacifist isolationists. So Mexico it is, at least at first. I wrote about this earlier, based on a lot of reporting by Rolling Stone. They are taking about a “soft invasion” in which they drop in Special Forces to “take out” the leaders of the cartels. (The other option is an actual invasion force at the border.)
They just published an update:
Rolling Stone talked to half a dozen former special operations soldiers and intelligence agents to see what this saber-rattling might look like in practice. On paper, they argued it was an easy operation to dismantle the cartel leadership, something that our military — particularly units like SEAL Team Six and Delta Force — has mastered after two decades of war in Iraq and Afghanistan. To a man, all said they’d volunteer for the mission.
But Carolyn Gallaher, a professor studying guerrilla and paramilitary violence at American University’s School of International Service, calls the idea folly. She researched cooperation between U.S. and Mexican law enforcement in the mid-2000s and says one takeaway from the Mexicans was that it was a mistake to target cartel leaders.
“All you do is create a succession crisis,” she says. “And a succession crisis in a drug cartel looks different than a succession crisis in, like, [Rupert] Murdoch’s empire, right? It’s basically settled with violence.”
Case in point: After Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, a longtime leader of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, was taken into custody in July, rival factions have been clashing in the state of Sinaloa.
Trump’s proposal is doubling down on a failed strategy, Gallaher says.“You have to go back and think of a new strategy,” Gallaher tells me. “And going and killing capos is not only not a new strategy, but it is the most failed part of the strategy on both sides of the border.”
Mexico has already said it will not accept an “invasion” by U.S. forces, with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum describing the strategy as “entirely a movie.”
RS quotes a former Green Beret saying that this is the only way to defeat the cartels and that the Mexican government would be on board in back channels. Ok.
Plans presented to Trump have included airstrikes on cartel infrastructure, assassinating cartel leaders, and training Mexican forces, Rolling Stone reported. The scheme would most likely include covert operations and patrols just over the border to stem the flow of drugs across the frontier.
“That sounds a whole lot like what we did in Afghanistan for 20 years unsuccessfully,” says a former Marine officer who worked with special operations in Afghanistan.
The former Marine officer says the Hollywood part is attractive, pointing to Harrison Ford’s Clear and Present Danger as a movie that tickles the imagination.
“Who doesn’t want to throw a satchel charge into an underground drug lab?” he says, laughing. “That’s super sexy stuff that we sign up to do. But if you’re going to door-kick, you know what people forget is that gunfighting ultimately comes down to guns in the fight.”
Some experts say that cartels are actually very competent paramilitaries saying, “such a move would not just force the American military into another quagmire; it would drop them into a morass up to their metaphorical waist.” Others pooh-pooh this notion insisting that they are no match for US Special Forces.
I really felt like I was in the middle of a Hollywood studio pitch meeting as I was reading this. It’s absurd. Regardless of the relative competence of cartels and Special Forces, the consequences of these operations could be extremely dire:
The real fear is that the violence wouldn’t stay confined to south of the border. A Green Beret-turned-CIA operator says past administrations considered using CIA Ground Branch — hybrid intelligence agents and commandos usually made up of former special operations soldiers — to combat the cartels, but the fear of cartel retribution against the operators and their families in the U.S. made it too risky. But the bigger danger could be to the estimated 1.6 million U.S. citizens living in Mexico, All Source News tells me.
Americans in Mexico as targets for terror campaigns?” asks All Source News.
There are a LOT of Americans living and working in Mexico. To think they wouldn’t go this way is insane. But I suppose the Trump administration probably thinks they get what they ask for if they live in a shithole country.
Apparently, most of the special forces people argue for a Plan Columbia type of operation which is based upon cooperation with the government and working through the local security forces, not dropping Rambo into the country to mow down cartel leaders. It’s a very expensive operation and would take a long time and I suspect Trump just wants some exciting video and the chance to thump his chest so anything covert is unlikely to be on his agenda.
RS concludes by pointing out that we should know by now that our desire to shoot out way to a quick victory is a fools game:
“If it’s to kill the cartel, how do you know when you’ve accomplished the mission?” the former Marine officer says. “What’s the metric that these people are going to use that says, oh yeah, we’ve achieved a victory? We’re not fighting an army. We’re fighting poverty. Let’s fight desperation. Let’s fight hopelessness.”
That starts with determining an end state — something the United States didn’t do during its last foreign adventures.
The country’s longest Forever War isn’t Iraq or Afghanistan. It’s the War on Drugs and it looks as though Trump and his cronies are intent upon turning it into a hot war. This is very bad news.