Text Browser Navigation Bar: Main Site Navigation and Search | Current Page Navigation | Current Page Content
U.S. Army War College >> Strategic Studies Institute >> Publications >> Mexico's Narco-Insurgency and U.S. Counterdrug Policy
U.S. Army War College >> Strategic Studies Institute >> Publications >> Details
Authored by Dr. Hal Brands.
In late 2007, the U.S. and Mexican governments unveiled the Merida Initiative. A 3-year, $1.4 billion counternarcotics assistance program, the Merida Initiative is designed to combat the drug-fueled violence that has ravaged Mexico of late. The initiative aims to strengthen the Mexican police and military, permitting them to take the offensive in the fight against Mexico’s powerful cartels. As currently designed, however, the Merida Initiative is unlikely to have a meaningful, long-term impact in restraining the drug trade and drug-related violence. Focussing largely on security, enforcement, and interdiction issues, it pays comparatively little attention to the deeper structural problems that fuel these destructive phenomena. These problems, ranging from official corruption to U.S. domestic drug consumption, have so far frustrated Mexican attempts to rein in the cartels, and will likely hinder the effectiveness of the Merida Initiative as well. To make U.S. counternarcotics policy fully effective, it will be imperative to forge a more holistic, better-integrated approach to the “war on drugs.”

Venezuela as an Exporter of 4th Generation Warfare Instability

Mexico's "Narco-Refugees": The Looming Challenge for U.S. National Security

Adapting, Transforming, and Modernizing Under Fire: The Mexican Military 2006-11

China-Latin America Military Engagement: Good Will, Good Business, and Strategic Position
The Promise and Pitfalls of Grand Strategy
Dilemmas of Brazilian Grand Strategy
Crime, Violence, and the Crisis in Guatemala: A Case Study in the Erosion of the State
Dealing with Political Ferment in Latin America: The Populist Revival, the Emergence of the Center, and Implications for U.S. Policy